Cladogenesis - Search results - Wiki Cladogenesis
There is a page named "Cladogenesis" on Wikipedia
Cladogenesis is an evolutionary splitting of a parent species into two distinct species, forming a clade. This event usually occurs when a few organisms... |
cladogenesis. Speciation includes the actual separation of lineages, into two or more new species, from one specified species of origin. Cladogenesis... |
coined in 1957 by the biologist Julian Huxley to refer to the result of cladogenesis, the evolutionary splitting of a parent species into two distinct species... |
and geologically rapid events of branching speciation called cladogenesis. Cladogenesis is the process by which a species splits into two distinct species... |
Uniformitarianism/Catastrophism Speciation Allopatric Anagenesis Catagenesis Cladogenesis Cospeciation Ecological Hybrid Non-ecological Parapatric Peripatric Reinforcement... |
Diversification in a Continental Radiation of Birds: Climbing Adaptations and Cladogenesis in the Furnariidae". The American Naturalist. 179 (5): 649–666. doi:10... |
transformed (anagenesis) into a successor, or split into more than one (cladogenesis). Pseudoextinction is difficult to demonstrate unless one has a strong... |
a transition is called anagenesis; he posited that, if the opposite, cladogenesis, could not be proven, a scientist was free to assume an anagenetic process... |
civilization clad- branch Greek κλάδος (kládos) clade, cladistics, cladogenesis, cladogram, heterocladic clam- cry out Latin clamare acclaim, claim,... |
members of a crown group to be extant, only to have resulted from a "major cladogenesis event". The first definition forms the basis of this article. Often,... |
development, and leaf margin. Molecular clock analyses have supported initial cladogenesis in Antarctica-Australasia 82 mya from a Doryanthaceae ancestor. The distribution... |
inference. 1952, William Wagner's ground plan divergence method 1953, "cladogenesis" coined 1960, "cladistic" coined by Cain and Harrison 1963, first attempt... |
evolved into H. erectus which evolved into modern humans (by a process of cladogenesis). He further said that there was a major evolutionary leap between A... |
on 18 February 2006. Zhaxybayeva, Olga; Peter Gogarten, J. (2004). "Cladogenesis, coalescence and the evolution of the three domains of life" (PDF). Trends... |
Formation (United States) in time and space, and finds evidence supporting cladogenesis as a means of increasing diplodocine diversity over time, as well as... |
modern-day species are not only the product of evolutionary dichotomies (cladogenesis), the splitting of an ancestral lineage into two (Tree of Life metaphor)... |
Zootaxa. 1025: 1–94. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.1025.1.1. Dubatolov VV (2006) Cladogenesis of tiger-moths of the subfamily Arctiinae: development of a cladogenetic... |
distinct species. The biologist Orator F. Cook coined the term in 1906 for cladogenesis, the splitting of lineages, as opposed to anagenesis, phyletic evolution... |
proliferation without any seemingly significant changes in complexity (cladogenesis). Sociocultural evolution is "the process by which structural reorganization... |
stability followed by episodic bursts of evolutionary change via rapid cladogenesis. It is contrasted (below) to phyletic gradualism, a more gradual, continuous... |