BRIDGING THE “BEECH-GAP”: NEW ZEALAND INVERTEBRATE PHYLOGEOGRAPHY IMPLICATES PLEISTOCENE GLACIATION AND PLIOCENE ISOLATION

Volume: 55, Issue: 11, Pages: 2170 - 2180
Published: Nov 1, 2001
Abstract
The existence of areas of lower endemism and disjunction of New Zealand biota is typified byNothofagus beech trees (hence ''beech-gap'') and have been attributed to a variety of causes ranging from ancient fault-mediated displacement (20-25 million years ago) to Pleistocene glacial extirpation (,1.8 million years ago). We used cytochrome oxidase I and 12S mtDNA sequence data from a suite of endemic invertebrates to explore phylogeographic depth...
Paper Details
Title
BRIDGING THE “BEECH-GAP”: NEW ZEALAND INVERTEBRATE PHYLOGEOGRAPHY IMPLICATES PLEISTOCENE GLACIATION AND PLIOCENE ISOLATION
Published Date
Nov 1, 2001
Journal
Volume
55
Issue
11
Pages
2170 - 2180
Citation AnalysisPro
  • Scinapse’s Top 10 Citation Journals & Affiliations graph reveals the quality and authenticity of citations received by a paper.
  • Discover whether citations have been inflated due to self-citations, or if citations include institutional bias.