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Daniel S. Moen

Researcher at Oklahoma State University–Stillwater

Publications -  31
Citations -  1767

Daniel S. Moen is an academic researcher from Oklahoma State University–Stillwater. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biology & Species richness. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 26 publications receiving 1537 citations. Previous affiliations of Daniel S. Moen include North Dakota State University & Stony Brook University.

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Evolutionary and Ecological Causes of the Latitudinal Diversity Gradient in Hylid Frogs: Treefrog Trees Unearth the Roots of High Tropical Diversity

TL;DR: Overall, this study illustrates how two general principles (niche conservatism and the time‐for‐speciation effect) may help explain the latitudinal diversity gradient as well as many other diversity patterns across taxa and regions.
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Why does diversification slow down

TL;DR: It is argued that, despite being currently underemphasized, these alternatives represent biologically plausible explanations that should be considered along with niche differentiation and testing the importance of these alternative hypotheses might yield fundamentally different explanations for what influences species richness within clades through time.
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Missing data and the accuracy of Bayesian phylogenetics

TL;DR: Simulation results suggest that highly incomplete taxa can be safely included in many Bayesian phylogenetic analyses, as long as the overall number of characters in the analysis is large.
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Phylogenetic origins of local-scale diversity patterns and the causes of Amazonian megadiversity

TL;DR: It is found that variation in local richness is not explained primarily by climatic factors, rates of diversification (speciation and extinction) nor morphological variation, and Amazonian megadiversity is linked to the long-term sympatry of multiple clades in that region.
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An expanded phylogeny of treefrogs (Hylidae) based on nuclear and mitochondrial sequence data

TL;DR: A new tree from maximum likelihood analysis is presented, including data for 362 hylid taxa for up to 11 genes (4 mitochondrial, 7 nuclear), including 70 additional taxa and >270 sequences not included in the previously most comprehensive analysis.