File:Hexapoda phylogenetic tree.png
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DescriptionHexapoda phylogenetic tree.png |
English: Phylogenetic tree of Hexapoda. Hexapoda (insects and their six-legged relatives) comprise more than half of all described species and dominate terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems. The tree shown is from a maximum likelihood analysis of 8 genes, calibrated by 89 fossils. Membership of major clades is denoted by coloration of the ring (grey: Entognatha, black: basal insects, cyan: Palaeoptera, magenta: Polyneoptera, green: Paraneoptera, red: Holometabola). Changes in branch coloration denote diversification shifts identified using TurboMEDUSA. Branch colors identify regions of the tree with the same underlying diversification model. Symbols at shifts denote a net upshift (diamond) or down shift (circle). Coloration of symbols reflects the robustness of the shift event across 500-scaled samples taken from the post-burin MCMC chain (black: shift recovered in >80% of samples, grey with black outline: recovery >50%, grey with pale outline: recovery >30%, pale grey: recovery<30%). Black rings are shown at 100 Ma increments from the present. |
Date | Published: October 2, 2014 |
Source | Rainford JL, Hofreiter M, Nicholson DB, Mayhew PJ (2014) Phylogenetic Distribution of Extant Richness Suggests Metamorphosis Is a Key Innovation Driving Diversification in Insects. PLoS ONE 9(10): e109085. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0109085 http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0109085 |
Author | James L. Rainford , Michael Hofreiter, David B. Nicholson, Peter J. Mayhew |
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current | 17:45, 12 June 2016 | ![]() | 4,100 × 3,822 (7.13 MB) | Was a bee (talk | contribs) | {{Information |Description={{en|1=Phylogenetic tree of Hexapoda. Hexapoda (insects and their six-legged relatives) comprise more than half of all described species and dominate terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems. The tree shown is fr... |
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