2018
DOI: 10.1002/ajb2.1041
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A roadmap for global synthesis of the plant tree of life

Abstract: Providing science and society with an integrated, up-to-date, high quality, open, reproducible and sustainable plant tree of life would be a huge service that is now coming within reach. However, synthesizing the growing body of DNA sequence data in the public domain and disseminating the trees to a diverse audience are often not straightforward due to numerous informatics barriers. While big synthetic plant phylogenies are being built, they remain static and become quickly outdated as new data are published a… Show more

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Cited by 38 publications
(31 citation statements)
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“…For the five best-sampled families (Euphorbiaceae, Fabaceae, Passifloraceae, Brassicaceae, Cucurbitaceae), only 21.95% to 40.56% of species have one of the five loci. Hence, no large (> 1,000 species) family of rosids exceeds 45% species coverage, and most are below 30% coverage (Table S2), consistent with molecular sampling patterns across the angiosperms (Eiserhardt et al 2018, Folk et al, 2018).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 57%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…For the five best-sampled families (Euphorbiaceae, Fabaceae, Passifloraceae, Brassicaceae, Cucurbitaceae), only 21.95% to 40.56% of species have one of the five loci. Hence, no large (> 1,000 species) family of rosids exceeds 45% species coverage, and most are below 30% coverage (Table S2), consistent with molecular sampling patterns across the angiosperms (Eiserhardt et al 2018, Folk et al, 2018).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 57%
“…34% estimated from Hinchliff et al, 2015) have any type of DNA data in GenBank (see also Folk et al, 2018), and after a series of filtering steps, our topology represents only 16.25% of all rosid species recorded in OTT (Table 1). This relative sampling level (less than 20%) typifies most major clades of flowering plants (Eiserhardt et al, 2018; Folk et al, 2018).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As one example, Eiserhardt et al. () provide a vision for the future of green plant phylogenetics that will lead to a global phylogenetic synthesis and an integrated, open, and continually updated green plant tree of life; we enthusiastically endorse their recommendations.…”
Section: Moving Forwardmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With recent advances in generating very large phylogenetic trees (e.g., Smith and O’Meara, 2012; Stamatakis, 2014; Hinchliff et al, 2015; Nguyen et al, 2015; Smith and Brown, 2018; Eiserhardt et al, 2018), and in analytical methods (Nee et al, 1994a,b; Pybus and Harvey, 200; Paradis et al, 2004; Alfaro et al, 2009; Stadler, 2011; Pennell et al, 2014; Rabosky, 2014; Morlon et al, 2016; Höhna et al, 2016), assessing macroevolutionary patterns for globally distributed clades with available biodiversity information has become common (e.g., Jetz et al, 2012; Morlon, 2014; Scholl and Wiens, 2016; Magallón et al, 2018; Rabosky et al, 2018; Upham et al, 2019). Analyses of diversification rates have shed light on potential drivers of diversity gradients across wide phylogenetic and geographic scales (Jetz et al, 2012; Rabosky et al, 2018; Landis et al, 2018).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%