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Kevin de Queiroz

Researcher at National Museum of Natural History

Publications -  340
Citations -  14266

Kevin de Queiroz is an academic researcher from National Museum of Natural History. The author has contributed to research in topics: Clade & Phylogenetic tree. The author has an hindex of 44, co-authored 334 publications receiving 13194 citations. Previous affiliations of Kevin de Queiroz include American Museum of Natural History & University of California, Berkeley.

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Species Concepts and Species Delimitation

TL;DR: A unified species concept can be achieved by treating existence as a separately evolving metapopulation lineage as the only necessary property of species and the former secondary species criteria as different lines of evidence relevant to assessing lineage separation.

The General Lineage Concept of Species, Species Criteria, and the Process of Speciation

TL;DR: This chapter provides a general theoretical context that accounts for both the unity and the diversity of ideas represented by alternative species definitions, and proposes a revised and conceptually unified terminology for the ideas described by contemporary species definitions.
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Contingency and Determinism in Replicated Adaptive Radiations of Island Lizards

TL;DR: This paper examined the evolutionary radiation of Anolis lizards on the four islands of the Greater Antilles and found that the same set of habitat specialists, termed ecomorphs, occurs on all four islands.

Phylogenetic relationships within squamata

TL;DR: Camp, Charles Lewis ; Classification ; Congresses ; NH-Vertebrate Zoology ; Research Associate ; NMNH ; SDR
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The genome of the green anole lizard and a comparative analysis with birds and mammals

TL;DR: Comparative gene analysis shows that amniote egg proteins have evolved significantly more rapidly than other proteins, and an anole phylogeny resolves basal branches to illuminate the history of their repeated adaptive radiations.