Detailed information for reference 1918

 Regier, J.C. and J.W. Shultz (1997) Molecular phylogeny of the major arthropod groups indicates polyphyly of crustaceans and a new hypothesis for the origin of hexapods. Molecular Biology and Evolution 14(9): 902–913. PDF is 1.6MB

 

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2007-08-08 N. Dean Pentcheff moved remarks to abstract

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Reference ID 1918
Reference type journalarticle
Authors Regier, J.C.
Shultz, J.W.
Publication Year (for display) 1997
Publication Year (for sorting) 1997
Title Molecular phylogeny of the major arthropod groups indicates polyphyly of crustaceans and a new hypothesis for the origin of hexapods
Secondary Title Molecular Biology and Evolution
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Volume 14
Issue 9
Pages 902–913
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Abstract
Abstract: A phylogeny of the arthropods was inferred from analyses of amino acid sequences derived from the nuclear genes encoding elongation factor-1-alpha and the largest subunit of RNA polymerase II using maximum-parsimony, neighbor-joining, and maximum-likelihood methods. Analyses of elongation factor-1-alpha from 17 arthropods and 4 outgroup taxa recovered many arthropod clades supported by previous morphological studies, including Diplopoda, Myriapoda, Insecta, Hexapoda, Branchiopoda (Crustacea), Araneae, Tetrapulmonata, Arachnida, Chelicerata, and Malacostraca (Crustacea). However, counter to previous studies, elongation factor-1-alpha placed Malacostraca as sister group to the other arthropods. Branchiopod crustaceans were found to be more closely related to hexapods and myriapods than to malacostracan crustaceans. Sequences for RNA polymerase II were obtained from 11 arthropod taxa and were analysed separately and in combination with elongation factor-1-alpha. Results from these analyses were concordant with those derived from elongation factor-1-alpha alone and provided support for a Hexapoda/Branchiopoda clade, thus arguing against the monophyly of the traditionally defined Atelocerta (Hexapoda + Myriapoda).
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Reference Contributor Tag rwetzer
Last Changed Wed Dec 5 10:57:34 2012