Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 45
pro vyhledávání: '"Cyrille Delmer"'
Autor:
Katie E Davis, Sammy De Grave, Cyrille Delmer, Alexander R D Payne, Steve Mitchell, Matthew A Wills
Publikováno v:
Davis, K, De Grave, S, Delmer, C, Payne, A, Mitchell, S & Wills, M 2022, ' Ecological transitions and the shape of the decapod tree of life ', Integrative and Comparative Biology, vol. 62, no. 2, pp. 332-344 . https://doi.org/10.1093/icb/icac052
Synopsis Understanding the processes that shaped the distribution of species richness across the Tree of Life is a central macroevolutionary research agenda. Major ecological innovations, including transitions between habitats, may help to explain th
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::de81d1769673bccb053ed82d921d2570
https://purehost.bath.ac.uk/ws/files/236903878/icac052.pdf
https://purehost.bath.ac.uk/ws/files/236903878/icac052.pdf
Autor:
Benjamin Padilla-Morales, Katie Davis, Chloe Barnes, Aldo Carillo Muñoz, Oscar García-Miranda, Daniel Castillo-Morales, Gustavo Wapper Barragán, Andrea Nieto López, Huseyin Kilili, Cyrille Delmer, Martin Serrano-Meneses, Matthew Wills, Araxi Urrutia
Sexual selection has long been thought to promote speciation, but evidence is inconclusive. In Odonata - which includes dragonflies and damselflies-, wing pigmentation has been found to be influenced by sexual selection. Past evidence shows that wing
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::7414d7421120390e932d289d873e9e12
https://doi.org/10.22541/au.166134985.56454193/v1
https://doi.org/10.22541/au.166134985.56454193/v1
Publikováno v:
PLoS ONE, Vol 10, Iss 10, p e0140110 (2015)
While supertrees have been built for many vertebrate groups (notably birds, mammals and dinosaurs), invertebrates have attracted relatively little attention. The paucity of supertrees of arthropods is particularly surprising given their economic and
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/4a84145801df44bc87fb0b4d9abc2933
Publikováno v:
Communications Biology, Vol 1, Iss 1, Pp 1-8 (2018)
Chufei Tang and Katie E. Davis et al. show that an elevated atmospheric CO2 promotes the speciation rates of mosquitoes. They demonstrate that climate change can expedite the evolution of mammalian disease vectors, potentially increasing vector−pat
Publikováno v:
Communications Biology
Mosquitoes are of great medical significance as vectors of deadly diseases. Despite this, little is known about their evolutionary history or how their present day diversity has been shaped. Within a phylogenetic framework, here we show a strong corr
Publikováno v:
Communications biology. 1
Understanding the processes that shaped the strikingly irregular distribution of species richness across the Tree of Life is a major research agenda. Changes in ecology may go some way to explain the often strongly asymmetrical fates of sister clades
Autor:
Cyrille Delmer
Publikováno v:
Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. 54:561-580
Near the end of the twentieth century, a medium-sized early proboscidean found in Dor El Talha (late Eocene to early Oligocene), Libya, originally identified as a small species of Barytherium, was described as a new species of Numidotherium and desig
Autor:
Marco Ferretti, Cyrille Delmer, Piero Bruni, Yosief Libsekal, Omar Bedri, Marinella A. Laurenzi, Mario Sagri, Laurenzo Rook, Ernesto Abbate, Miruts Hagos
Publikováno v:
Journal of African earth sciences (1994) 99 (2014): 463–489. doi:10.1016/j.jafrearsci.2013.11.001
info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Abbate E.[1], Bruni P.[1], Ferretti M.P.[1], Delmer C. [2], Laurenzi M.A. [3], Hagos M.[4], Bedri O.[5], Rook L.[1], Sagri M.[1], Libsekal Y.[6]/titolo:The East Africa Oligocene intertrappean beds: Regional distribution, depositional environments and Afro%2FArabian mammal dispersals./doi:10.1016%2Fj.jafrearsci.2013.11.001/rivista:Journal of African earth sciences (1994)/anno:2014/pagina_da:463/pagina_a:489/intervallo_pagine:463–489/volume:99
info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Abbate E.[1], Bruni P.[1], Ferretti M.P.[1], Delmer C. [2], Laurenzi M.A. [3], Hagos M.[4], Bedri O.[5], Rook L.[1], Sagri M.[1], Libsekal Y.[6]/titolo:The East Africa Oligocene intertrappean beds: Regional distribution, depositional environments and Afro%2FArabian mammal dispersals./doi:10.1016%2Fj.jafrearsci.2013.11.001/rivista:Journal of African earth sciences (1994)/anno:2014/pagina_da:463/pagina_a:489/intervallo_pagine:463–489/volume:99
The extensive outpouring of the Oligocene Trap basalts over eastern Africa and western Arabia was interrupted by a period of quiescence marked by the deposition of terrestrial sediments. These so-called intertrappean beds are often lignitiferous and
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::7c15f38b3ae5c8b7e1ab82a3814491dd
https://publications.cnr.it/doc/285452
https://publications.cnr.it/doc/285452
Autor:
Wissem Marzougui, Suzanne Jiquel, Monique Vianey-Liaud, Nicolas Vialle, Rodolphe Tabuce, Gilles Merzeraud, Anusha Ramdarshan, Monique Feist, Cyrille Delmer, Laurent Marivaux, El Mabrouk Essid, Hayet Khayati Ammar
Publikováno v:
Journal of African Earth Sciences
Journal of African Earth Sciences, Elsevier, 2013, 87, pp.86-92. ⟨10.1016/j.jafrearsci.2013.07.010⟩
Journal of African Earth Sciences, Elsevier, 2013, 87, pp.86-92. ⟨10.1016/j.jafrearsci.2013.07.010⟩
International audience; Dental and postcranial remains (an atlas, carpus and metacarpus elements, and a part of the pelvic girdle) of an embrithopod mammal are described from Bir Om Ali, Tunisia, a new late Eocene locality. The enamel microstructure
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::966f36f685d9348b44f41fdcb412b179
https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00903435
https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00903435
Autor:
Andrew A. Pitsillides, Cyrille Delmer, Alan Boyde, Thomas B. Hildebrandt, John R. Hutchinson, Charlotte E. Miller
Publikováno v:
Science (New York, N.Y.). 334(6063)
Several groups of tetrapods have expanded sesamoid (small, tendon-anchoring) bones into digit-like structures ("predigits"), such as pandas' "thumbs." Elephants similarly have expanded structures in the fat pads of their fore- and hindfeet, but for t