E
Ellen E. Strong
Researcher at National Museum of Natural History
Publications - 86
Citations - 4137
Ellen E. Strong is an academic researcher from National Museum of Natural History. The author has contributed to research in topics: Monophyly & Cerithioidea. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 77 publications receiving 3525 citations. Previous affiliations of Ellen E. Strong include Humboldt University of Berlin & University of Minnesota.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The Global Decline of Nonmarine Mollusks
Charles Lydeard,Robert H. Cowie,Winston F. Ponder,Arthur E. Bogan,Philippe Bouchet,Stephanie A. Clark,Kevin S. Cummings,Terrence J. Frest,Olivier Gargominy,Dai G. Herbert,Robert Hershler,Kathryn E. Perez,Barry Roth,Mary Seddon,Ellen E. Strong,Fred G. Thompson +15 more
TL;DR: An overview of global nonmarine molluscan biodiversity and conservation status is provided, including several case studies documenting the diversity and global decline of nonmarinemollusks.
Journal ArticleDOI
Global diversity of gastropods (Gastropoda; Mollusca) in freshwater
TL;DR: The world’s gastropod fauna from continental waters comprises ∼4,000 valid described species and a minimum of 33–38 independent lineages of Recent Neritimorpha, Caenogastropoda and Heterobranchia, but the status of the great majority of taxa is unknown, a situation that is exacerbated by a lack of experts and critical baseline data.
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Revised Classification, Nomenclator and Typification of Gastropod and Monoplacophoran Families
Philippe Bouchet,Jean-Pierre Rocroi,Bernhard Hausdorf,Andrzej Kaim,Yasunori Kano,Alexander Nützel,P. Y. Parkhaev,Michael Schrödl,Ellen E. Strong +8 more
TL;DR: A fully ranked, hierarchical classification summarizes recent advances in the phylogeny of the Gastropoda and Monoplacophora.
Journal ArticleDOI
Character Coding and Inapplicable Data
TL;DR: Coding inapplicables as “?” (reductive coding), although flawed, is currently the best way to analyze data sets that contain inappLicable character states.
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Investigating the Bivalve Tree of Life -- an exemplar-based approach combining molecular and novel morphological characters.
Rüdiger Bieler,Paula M. Mikkelsen,Timothy M. Collins,Emily A. Glover,Vanessa L. González,Daniel L. Graf,Elizabeth M. Harper,John M. Healy,John M. Healy,Gisele Y. Kawauchi,Prashant P. Sharma,Sid Staubach,Ellen E. Strong,John D. Taylor,Ilya Tëmkin,Ilya Tëmkin,John D. Zardus,Stephanie Clark,Alejandra Guzmán,Alejandra Guzmán,Erin McIntyre,Paul Sharp,Gonzalo Giribet +22 more
TL;DR: An analysis of the informativeness of morphological characters showed that sperm ultrastructure characters are among the best morphological features to diagnose bivalve clades, followed by characters of the shell, including its microstructure.