Results 281 to 290 of about 140,105 (352)

Phylogenomics and revised classification of Lymexyloidea and Tenebrionoidea (Coleoptera: Polyphaga: Cucujiformia)

open access: yesSystematic Entomology, Volume 50, Issue 4, Page 794-812, October 2025.
Using a large‐scale phylogenomic dataset, we provide the robustly supported phylogeny of the wider Tenebrionoid clade, with Lymexyloidea sister to the mordelloid clade (Mordellidae and Ripiphoridae) + remaining Tenebrionoidea. Lymexyloidea contained two newly circumscribed families, each of them with two subfamilies, and both Mordellidae and ...
Jan Batelka   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

Whole genome shotgun phylogenomics resolve the diving beetle tree of life

open access: yesSystematic Entomology, Volume 50, Issue 4, Page 940-974, October 2025.
A new and strongly supported phylogeny of diving beetles (Dytiscidae) is presented using the largest genomic dataset to date. Laccophilinae and Coptotominae + Lancetinae are early diverging lineages excluded from a large monophyletic clade comprising the remaining eight subfamilies. We identify seven remaining problems in the backbone of the phylogeny,
Johannes Bergsten   +4 more
wiley   +1 more source

The world's oldest cerapodan ornithischian dinosaur from the Middle Jurassic of Morocco. [PDF]

open access: yesR Soc Open Sci
Maidment S   +7 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Molecular phylogenetics illuminates the evolutionary history and hidden diversity of Australian cave crickets (Orthoptera: Rhaphidophoridae)

open access: yesSystematic Entomology, Volume 50, Issue 4, Page 975-987, October 2025.
A fossil‐calibrated phylogeny of Rhaphidophoridae revealed Australia at the centre of the radiation of the Southern Hemisphere subfamily Macropathinae, with the Australian biota consisting of at least five separate lineages. Crown‐Macropathinae originated in the Lower Cretaceous (ca.
Perry G. Beasley‐Hall   +6 more
wiley   +1 more source

Intermittent Brittle and Ductile Deformation as Recorded by Dating of Ultramylonites and Pseudotachylytes in Extending Continental Crust (Ivrea‐Verbano Zone, Italy)

open access: yesTerra Nova, Volume 37, Issue 5, Page 277-286, October 2025.
ABSTRACT Mylonites and pseudotachylytes play a crucial role in defining the rheology of extending continental crust. In this context, determining the age of brittle‐ductile deformation is fundamental to understanding the rifting evolution stages. Here, we investigate the Premosello Shear Zone, an extensional structure of the Ivrea‐Verbano lower crust ...
Stefania Corvò   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

The evolution of muscle spindles

open access: yesExperimental Physiology, Volume 110, Issue 10, Page 1401-1421, October 1, 2025.
Abstract Muscle spindles are stretch‐sensitive mechanoreceptors found in the skeletal muscles of most four‐limbed vertebrates. They are unique amongst sensory receptors in the ability to regulate their sensitivity by contraction of the intrafusal muscle fibres on which the sensory endings lie.
Robert W. Banks, Uwe Proske
wiley   +1 more source

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