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Andrew D. Warren
Researcher at Florida Museum of Natural History
Publications - 67
Citations - 2602
Andrew D. Warren is an academic researcher from Florida Museum of Natural History. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nymphalidae & Lepidoptera genitalia. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 67 publications receiving 2264 citations. Previous affiliations of Andrew D. Warren include National Autonomous University of Mexico & University of Florida.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Seasonality and phenology of the butterflies (Lepidoptera : Papilionoidea and Hesperioidea) of Mexico's Calakmul Region
Carmen Pozo,Armando Luis-Martínez,Jorge Llorente-Bousquets,Noemí Salas-Suárez,Aixchel Maya-Martínez,Isabel Vargas-Fernández,Andrew D. Warren,Andrew D. Warren +7 more
TL;DR: The phenology of species with greater relative abundance was analyzed in relation to wingspan as a parameter of adult size and the small and medium-sized groups, taken together, showed variations in species richness.
Journal ArticleDOI
Four hundred shades of brown: Higher level phylogeny of the problematic Euptychiina (Lepidoptera, Nymphalidae, Satyrinae) based on hybrid enrichment data.
Marianne Espeland,Jesse W. Breinholt,Eduardo P. Barbosa,Mirna M. Casagrande,Blanca Huertas,Gerardo Lamas,Mario A. Marín,Olaf H. H. Mielke,Jacqueline Y. Miller,Shinichi Nakahara,Shinichi Nakahara,Shinichi Nakahara,Denise Tan,Denise Tan,Andrew D. Warren,Thamara Zacca,Akito Y. Kawahara,André V. L. Freitas,Keith R. Willmott +18 more
TL;DR: A backbone phylogeny of the Euptychiina based on 106 taxa, 368 nuclear loci, and over 180,000 bps obtained through hybrid enrichment will provide a strong backbone for the analysis of datasets in development that are much more taxonomically comprehensive but have orders of magnitude fewer loci.
Journal ArticleDOI
The evolutionary history of Boloria (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae): phylogeny, zoogeography and larval–foodplant relationships
TL;DR: An analysis of the evolution of larval–foodplant associations shows that although monophagous Violaceae-feeding is the original feeding strategy within Boloria, numerous host-shifts or broadenings of diet have happened, and inherent plasticity in host choice has likely been an important factor in the diversification in alpine and arctic environments by Boloria.
Journal ArticleDOI
Conserved ancestral tropical niche but different continental histories explain the latitudinal diversity gradient in brush-footed butterflies
Nicolas Chazot,Nicolas Chazot,Fabien L. Condamine,Gytis Dudas,Carlos Peña,Ullasa Kodandaramaiah,Pável Matos-Maraví,Kwaku Aduse-Poku,Marianne Elias,Andrew D. Warren,David J. Lohman,David J. Lohman,Carla M. Penz,Phil DeVries,Zdenek Fric,Sören Nylin,Chris J. Müller,Akito Y. Kawahara,Karina L. Silva-Brandão,Gerardo Lamas,Irena Kleckova,Anna Zubek,Elena Ortiz-Acevedo,Elena Ortiz-Acevedo,Roger Vila,Richard I. Vane-Wright,Richard I. Vane-Wright,Sean P. Mullen,Chris D. Jiggins,Chris D. Jiggins,Christopher W. Wheat,André V. L. Freitas,Niklas Wahlberg +32 more
TL;DR: In this article, a phylogeny of Nymphalidae is presented, showing that the modern pattern of species richness emerged from dynamics of dispersal and diversification that varied through time and across regions, and that global climate change throughout the Cenozoic probably played a major role in generating the biodiversity pattern.
Journal Article
Animal biodiversity: An outline of higher-level classification and taxonomic richness
Zhi-Qiang Zhang,John Na Hooper,Rob W. M. Van Soest,Andrzej Pisera,Andrea L. Crowther,Seth Tyler,Stephen Schilling,William N. Eschmeyer,Jon D. Fong,David C. Blackburn,David B. Wake,Don E. Wilson,DeeAnn M. Reeder,Uwe Fritz,Mike Hodda,Roberto Guidetti,Roberto Bertolani,Georg Mayer,Ivo de Sena Oliveira,Jonathan M. Adrain,Roger N. Bamber,Adriano B. Kury,Lorenzo Prendini,Mark S. Harvey,Frédéric Beaulieu,Ashley P. G. Dowling,Hans Klompen,Gilberto J. de Moraes,David Evans Walter,Qing-Hai Fan,Vladimir Pešić,Harry Smit,Andre V. Bochkov,AA Khaustov,Anne S. Baker,Andreas Wohltmann,Tinghuan Wen,James W. Amrine,P Beron,Jianzhen Lin,Grzegorz Gabrys,Robert W. Husband,Samuel J. Bolton,M Uusitalo,Heinrich Schatz,Valerie M. Behan-Pelletier,Barry M. OConnor,Roy A. Norton,Jason A. Dunlop,David Penney,Alessandro Minelli,William A. Shear,Shane T. Ahyong,James K. Lowry,Miguel Alonso,Geoffrey A. Boxshall,Peter Castro,Sarah Gerken,Gordan S. Karaman,Joseph W. Goy,Diana S. Jones,Kenneth Meland,D. Christopher Rogers,Jörundur Svavarsson,Frans Janssens,Kenneth Christiansen,Sigfrid Ingrisch,Paul D. Brock,Judith Marshall,George W. Beccaloni,Paul Eggleton,Laurence A. Mound,SA Slipinski,Rab Leschen,John F. Lawrence,Ralph W. Holzenthal,John C. Morse,Karl M. Kjer,Erik J. van Nieukerken,Lauri Kaila,Ian J. Kitching,Niels P. Kristensen,David C. Lees,Joël Minet,Charles Mitter,Marko Mutanen,Jerome C. Regier,Thomas J. Simonsen,Niklas Wahlberg,Shen-Horn Yen,Reza Zahiri,David Adamski,Joaquin Baixeras,Daniel Bartsch,Bengt Å. Bengtsson,John W. Brown,Sibyl R. Bucheli,Donald R. Davis,Jurate De Prins,Willy De Prins,Marc E. Epstein,Patricia Gentili-Poole,Cees Gielis,Peter Haettenschwiler,Axel Hausmann,Jeremy D. Holloway,Axel Kallies,Ole Karsholt,Akito Y. Kawahara,Sjaak J C Koster,Mikhail V. Kozlov,J. Donald Lafontaine,Gerardo Lamas,Jean-François Landry,Sangmi Lee,Matthias Nuss,Kyu-Tek Park,Carla M. Penz,Jadranka Rota,Alexander Schintlmeister,B. Christian Schmidt,Jae-Cheon Sohn,M. Alma Solis,Gerhard M. Tarmann,Andrew D. Warren,Susan J. Weller,Roman V. Yakovlev,Vadim V. Zolotuhin,Andreas Zwick,Thomas Pape,Vladimir Blagoderov,Mikhail B. Mostovski,Christian C. Emig,Hendrik Segers,Scott Monks,Dennis J. Richardson +135 more
TL;DR: The kingdom Animalia is estimated to have a total of 1,659,420 described species (including 133,692 fossil species) in 40 phyla as discussed by the authors, including 35,644 species of fishes, 7,171 species of amphibians, 15,507 species of reptiles, 11,087 species of birds, and 16,014 species of mammals.