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Bryan T. Drew
Researcher at University of Nebraska at Kearney
Publications - 55
Citations - 2108
Bryan T. Drew is an academic researcher from University of Nebraska at Kearney. The author has contributed to research in topics: Phylogenetic tree & Salvia. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 45 publications receiving 1488 citations. Previous affiliations of Bryan T. Drew include Florida Museum of Natural History & University of Nebraska–Lincoln.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Synthesis of phylogeny and taxonomy into a comprehensive tree of life
Cody E. Hinchliff,Stephen A. Smith,James F. Allman,J. Gordon Burleigh,Ruchi Chaudhary,Lyndon M. Coghill,Keith A. Crandall,Jiabin Deng,Bryan T. Drew,Romina Gazis,Karl Gude,David S. Hibbett,Laura A. Katz,H. Dail Laughinghouse,Emily Jane McTavish,Peter E. Midford,Christopher L. Owen,Richard H. Ree,Jonathan Rees,Douglas E. Soltis,Tiffani L. Williams,Karen Cranston +21 more
TL;DR: This study is the first, to the knowledge, to apply an efficient and automated process for assembling published trees into a complete tree of life, and presents a draft tree containing 2.3 million tips—the Open Tree of Life.
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Salvia united: The greatest good for the greatest number
Bryan T. Drew,Jesús Guadalupe González-Gallegos,Chun-Lei Xiang,Ricardo Kriebel,Chloe P. Drummond,Jay B. Walker,Jay B. Walker,Kenneth J. Sytsma +7 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that the botanical community would be best served by maintaining a broadly defined Salvia, including the five small embedded genera Dorystaechas, Meriandra, Perovskia, Rosmarinus, and Zhumeria as Salvia species.
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Phylogenetics, biogeography, and staminal evolution in the tribe Mentheae (Lamiaceae).
Bryan T. Drew,Kenneth J. Sytsma +1 more
TL;DR: A detailed perspective on the evolution of the tribe Mentheae is presented based on a phylogenetic analysis of cpDNA and nrDNA that is the most comprehensive to date, a biogeographic set of analyses using a fossil-calibrated chronogram, and an examination of staminal evolution.
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An updated tribal classification of Lamiaceae based on plastome phylogenomics
Fei Zhao,Ya Ping Chen,Yasaman Salmaki,Bryan T. Drew,Trevor C. Wilson,Anne-Cathrine Scheen,Ferhat Celep,Ferhat Celep,Christian Bräuchler,Mika Bendiksby,Mika Bendiksby,Qiang Wang,Dao Zhang Min,Hua Peng,Richard G. Olmstead,Bo Li,Chun-Lei Xiang +16 more
TL;DR: This article performed phylogenetic analyses of Lamiaceae to infer relationships at the tribal level using 79 protein-coding plastid genes from 175 accessions representing 170 taxa, 79 genera, and all 12 subfamilies.
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Phylogeny, historical biogeography, and diversification of angiosperm order Ericales suggest ancient Neotropical and East Asian connections.
Jeffrey P. Rose,Thomas J. Kleist,Stefan Löfstrand,Bryan T. Drew,Juerg Schönenberger,Kenneth J. Sytsma +5 more
TL;DR: The results indicate Ericales began to diversify 110 Mya, within Indo-Malaysia and the Neotropics, with exchange between the two areas and expansion out of Indo- Malaysia becoming an important area in shaping the extant diversity of many families.