G
Gerrit Hartig
Researcher at University of Münster
Publications - 4
Citations - 195
Gerrit Hartig is an academic researcher from University of Münster. The author has contributed to research in topics: Prosimian & Tarsier. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 4 publications receiving 180 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Genomic and Morphological Evidence Converge to Resolve the Enigma of Strepsiptera
Oliver Niehuis,Gerrit Hartig,Sonja Grath,Hans Pohl,Jörg Lehmann,Hakim Tafer,Alexander Donath,Veiko Krauss,Carina Eisenhardt,Jana Hertel,Malte Petersen,Christoph Mayer,Karen Meusemann,Ralph S. Peters,Peter F. Stadler,Rolf G. Beutel,Erich Bornberg-Bauer,Duane D. McKenna,Bernhard Misof +18 more
TL;DR: The sequencing of a Strepsiptera genome is reported and it is shown that the analysis of sequence-based genomic data, along with genomic metacharacters, clarifies the phylogenetic origin of StrepsIPtera and sheds light on the evolution of holometabolous insect development.
Journal ArticleDOI
Retrophylogenomics place tarsiers on the evolutionary branch of anthropoids.
Gerrit Hartig,Gennady Churakov,Wesley C. Warren,Jürgen Brosius,Wojciech Makalowski,Jürgen Schmitz +5 more
TL;DR: From millions of retroposons, the authors found 104 perfect orthologous insertions in both tarsiers and anthropoids to the exclusion of strepsirrhines, providing conflict-free evidence for the Haplorrhini hypothesis, and none supporting either of the other two positions.
Journal ArticleDOI
Oligonucleotide Primers for Targeted Amplification of Single-Copy Nuclear Genes in Apocritan Hymenoptera
TL;DR: A suite of degenerate oligonucleotide primer pairs for PCR amplification of 154 single-copy nuclear protein-coding genes from Hymenoptera are presented, suitable to address a wide range of phylogenetic questions and to aid rapid species identification via barcoding, as many amplicons contain both exonic and fast-evolving intronic nucleotides.
Journal ArticleDOI
Corrigendum: Retrophylogenomics Place Tarsiers on the Evolutionary Branch of Anthropoids
Gerrit Hartig,Gennady Churakov,Wesley C. Warren,Jürgen Brosius,Wojciech Makalowski,Jürgen Schmitz +5 more
TL;DR: From millions of retroposons, the authors found 104 perfect orthologous insertions in both tarsiers and anthropoids to the exclusion of strepsirrhines, providing conflict-free evidence for the Haplorrhini hypothesis, and none supporting either of the other two positions.