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Andy Purvis

Researcher at Natural History Museum

Publications -  242
Citations -  36083

Andy Purvis is an academic researcher from Natural History Museum. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biodiversity & Species richness. The author has an hindex of 82, co-authored 231 publications receiving 31371 citations. Previous affiliations of Andy Purvis include American Museum of Natural History & Natural Environment Research Council.

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Phylogenetic supertrees: Assembling the trees of life

TL;DR: Supertrees are estimates of phylogeny assembled from sets of smaller estimates sharing some but not necessarily all their taxa in common, and can retain all or most of the information from the source trees and also make novel statements about relationships of taxa that do not co-occur on any one source tree.
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Preserving the Tree of Life

TL;DR: Phylogenies provide new ways to measure biodiversity, to assess conservation priorities, and to quantify the evolutionary history in any set of species, including ways to prioritize outcomes from evolutionary and ecological processes.
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The predictability of extinction: biological and external correlates of decline in mammals.

TL;DR: Geographical range size, human population density and latitude were the most consistently significant predictors of extinction risk, but otherwise there was little evidence for general, prescriptive indicators of high extinction risk across mammals.
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The fast-slow continuum in mammalian life history: An empirical reevaluation

TL;DR: A comparative analysis of mammalian life histories shows that, for mammals at least, there is not a single fast‐slow continuum, but rather, the speed of life varies along at least two largely independent axes when body size effects are removed.
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Comparative methods for explaining adaptations

TL;DR: The realization that the statistical model against which comparisons are made is a model of how evolution proceeds, forms the basis of a new generation of comparative tests that are grounded properly on phylogenetic reconstruction.