2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.tree.2012.04.012
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Coalescent-based species delimitation in an integrative taxonomy

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Cited by 738 publications
(694 citation statements)
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“…Delimiting species and clarifying the phylogenetic relationship among taxa are crucial objectives in systematics, both of which are important for enumerating and understanding the origins of biodiversity and implementing conservation management strategies (Myers et al, 2013;Fujita et al, 2012;O'Meara, 2010;Sites and Marshall, 2004;Wilson, 2003). For taxon delimitation, a species concept and the criteria to define the species boundaries are necessary.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Delimiting species and clarifying the phylogenetic relationship among taxa are crucial objectives in systematics, both of which are important for enumerating and understanding the origins of biodiversity and implementing conservation management strategies (Myers et al, 2013;Fujita et al, 2012;O'Meara, 2010;Sites and Marshall, 2004;Wilson, 2003). For taxon delimitation, a species concept and the criteria to define the species boundaries are necessary.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…molecular, morphological, ecological, and behavioral) for taxonomy is expected to reduce subjectivity in delimiting taxa (Dayrat, 2005;Leaché et al, 2009;Padial et al, 2010;Schlick-Steiner et al, 2010;Yeates et al, 2011). However, in situations where cryptic species with indistinct morphological and ecological properties are present, integrative methods will not yield a clear result since different types of data may yield discordant conclusions (Fujita et al, 2012;Wiens and Penkrot, 2002). Coalescent models, which describe the evolutionary processes of populations by tracing alleles back to their most recent common ancestor in a mathematical and probabilistic framework (Kingman, 2000;Wakeley, 2008) have been recommended for species delimitation and species tree inference (Fujita et al, 2012;O'Meara, 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…For example, if we consider the genotypes of E. canadensis, there are four different species trees that are compatible with the mtDNA phylogeny and these species trees contain different numbers of population demographic parameters (Figure 3). Bayesian or 24 maximum likelihood approaches can be used to evaluate the fit of parameter estimates from gene trees to those expected from different species trees (Fujita et al, 2012).…”
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confidence: 99%