منابع مشابه
An Inordinate Fondness of Rarity
In evolutionary biologist circles, J.B.S. Haldane’s quip to a theologian that from his studies, he has learned God has an ‘‘inordinate fondness of beetles’’, is a perennial favorite to quote, misquote and modify, even though it’s unclear whether the encounter ever actually happened. The point was simply that, but for the vagaries of evolution, beetles were among the most diverse groups of speci...
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Why do some groups of organisms, like beetles, have so many species, and others, like the tuataras, so few? This classic question in evolutionary biology has a deep history and has been studied using both fossils and phylogenetic trees. Phylogeny-based studies have focused on tree balance, which compares the number of species across clades of the same age in the tree. These studies have suggest...
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Most known insect species are involved in chemically mediated plant–insect multi-trophic interactions, and recent syntheses point to a substantial gap in our understanding of trophic interaction diversity, especially in the tropics. One approach to filling this gap is to examine relationships between genomic, metabolomic, taxonomic, and trophic interaction diversity via quantifying and comparin...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Systematic Biology
سال: 2013
ISSN: 1076-836X,1063-5157
DOI: 10.1093/sysbio/syt067