Bryophyta
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Subject Areas on Research
- Approximate Bayesian Computation Reveals the Crucial Role of Oceanic Islands for the Assembly of Continental Biodiversity.
- Bryophyte diversity and evolution: windows into the early evolution of land plants.
- Community analysis reveals close affinities between endophytic and endolichenic fungi in mosses and lichens
- Comparative transcriptomics of fungal endophytes in co-culture with their moss host Dicranum scoparium reveals fungal trophic lability and moss unchanged to slightly increased growth rates.
- Differential gene expression associated with fungal trophic shifts along the senescence gradient of the moss Dicranum scoparium.
- Distribution and phylogenetic significance of the 71-kb inversion in the plastid genome in Funariidae (Bryophyta).
- Efficient purging of deleterious mutations in plants with haploid selfing.
- Endemism in the moss flora of North America.
- Generation-biased gene expression in a bryophyte model system.
- Horizontal transfer of an adaptive chimeric photoreceptor from bryophytes to ferns
- Macroecological patterns of genetic structure and diversity in the aquatic moss Platyhypnidium riparioides.
- Metapopulation extinction thresholds in rain forest remnants.
- Multiple paternity and sporophytic inbreeding depression in a dioicous moss species.
- Organellomic data sets confirm a cryptic consensus on (unrooted) land-plant relationships and provide new insights into bryophyte molecular evolution.
- Phylogenetic evidence of a rapid radiation of pleurocarpous mosses (Bryophyta).
- Phylogenetic structure in the Sphagnum recurvum complex (Bryophyta) in relation to taxonomy and geography.
- Phylogeographic structure and cryptic speciation in the trans-Antarctic moss Pyrrhobryum mnioides.
- Phytochrome diversity in green plants and the origin of canonical plant phytochromes
- RNA-based analyses reveal fungal communities structured by a senescence gradient in the moss Dicranum scoparium and the presence of putative multi-trophic fungi.
- Resolution of the ordinal phylogeny of mosses using targeted exons from organellar and nuclear genomes.
- Selection is no more efficient in haploid than in diploid life stages of an angiosperm and a moss.
- Selective sweeps and intercontinental migration in the cosmopolitan moss Ceratodon purpureus (Hedw.) Brid.
- Short-term N2 fixation kinetics in a moss-associated cyanobacteria
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Keywords of People
- Wray, Gregory Allan, Professor of Biology, Evolutionary Anthropology