M
Manfred Walzl
Researcher at University of Vienna
Publications - 30
Citations - 2926
Manfred Walzl is an academic researcher from University of Vienna. The author has contributed to research in topics: Phylogenetic tree & Phylogenomics. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 30 publications receiving 2519 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Phylogenomics resolves the timing and pattern of insect evolution
Bernhard Misof,Shanlin Liu,Karen Meusemann,Ralph S. Peters,Alexander Donath,Christoph Mayer,Paul B. Frandsen,Jessica L. Ware,Tomas Flouri,Rolf G. Beutel,Oliver Niehuis,Malte Petersen,Fernando Izquierdo-Carrasco,Torsten Wappler,Jes Rust,Andre J. Aberer,Ulrike Aspöck,Ulrike Aspöck,Horst Aspöck,Daniela Bartel,Alexander Blanke,Simon Berger,Alexander Böhm,Thomas R. Buckley,Brett Calcott,Junqing Chen,Frank Friedrich,Makiko Fukui,Mari Fujita,Carola Greve,Peter Grobe,Shengchang Gu,Ying Huang,Lars S. Jermiin,Akito Y. Kawahara,Lars Krogmann,Martin Kubiak,Robert Lanfear,Robert Lanfear,Robert Lanfear,Harald Letsch,Yiyuan Li,Zhenyu Li,Jiguang Li,Haorong Lu,Ryuichiro Machida,Yuta Mashimo,Pashalia Kapli,Pashalia Kapli,Duane D. McKenna,Guanliang Meng,Yasutaka Nakagaki,José Luis Navarrete-Heredia,Michael Ott,Yanxiang Ou,Günther Pass,Lars Podsiadlowski,Hans Pohl,Björn M. von Reumont,Kai Schütte,Kaoru Sekiya,Shota Shimizu,Adam Slipinski,Alexandros Stamatakis,Alexandros Stamatakis,Wenhui Song,Xu Su,Nikolaus U. Szucsich,Meihua Tan,Xuemei Tan,Min Tang,Jingbo Tang,Gerald Timelthaler,Shigekazu Tomizuka,Michelle D. Trautwein,Xiaoli Tong,Toshiki Uchifune,Manfred Walzl,Brian M. Wiegmann,Jeanne Wilbrandt,Benjamin Wipfler,Thomas K. F. Wong,Qiong Wu,Gengxiong Wu,Yinlong Xie,Shenzhou Yang,Qing Yang,David K. Yeates,Kazunori Yoshizawa,Qing Zhang,Rui Zhang,Wenwei Zhang,Yunhui Zhang,Jing Zhao,Chengran Zhou,Lili Zhou,Tanja Ziesmann,Shijie Zou,Yingrui Li,Xun Xu,Yong Zhang,Huanming Yang,Jian Wang,Jun Wang,Karl M. Kjer,Xin Zhou +105 more
TL;DR: The phylogeny of all major insect lineages reveals how and when insects diversified and provides a comprehensive reliable scaffold for future comparative analyses of evolutionary innovations among insects.
Journal ArticleDOI
A Phylogenomic Approach to Resolve the Arthropod Tree of Life
Karen Meusemann,Björn M. von Reumont,Sabrina Simon,Falko Roeding,Sascha Strauss,Patrick Kück,Ingo Ebersberger,Manfred Walzl,Günther Pass,Sebastian Breuers,Viktor Achter,Arndt von Haeseler,Thorsten Burmester,Heike Hadrys,Heike Hadrys,J. Wolfgang Wägele,Bernhard Misof +16 more
TL;DR: It is shown that phylogenomic data can substantially advance the understanding of arthropod evolution and resolve several conflicts among existing hypotheses.
Journal ArticleDOI
Decisive Data Sets in Phylogenomics: Lessons from Studies on the Phylogenetic Relationships of Primarily Wingless Insects
Emiliano Dell'Ampio,Karen Meusemann,Nikolaus U. Szucsich,Ralph S. Peters,Benjamin Meyer,Janus Borner,Malte Petersen,Andre J. Aberer,Alexandros Stamatakis,Alexandros Stamatakis,Manfred Walzl,Bui Quang Minh,Arndt von Haeseler,Ingo Ebersberger,Günther Pass,Bernhard Misof +15 more
TL;DR: It is shown that the analyses of structure and signal within phylogenomic data can protect us from biased phylogenetic inferences due to analytical artifacts, and is also shown that unevenly distributed missing data can be severely misleading by inflating node support despite the absence of phylogenetic signal.
Journal ArticleDOI
Reproductive effort and costs of reproduction in female European ground squirrels
TL;DR: It is assumed that inhibitory effects of lactation on gonadal development may mediate the negative relationship between reproductive effort and subsequent reproductive timing in adults, which is absent in yearlings because they are reproducing for the first time.
Journal ArticleDOI
Take time to smell the frogs: vocal sac glands of reed frogs (Anura: Hyperoliidae) contain species-specific chemical cocktails
Iris Starnberger,Dennis Poth,Pardha Saradhi Peram,Stefan Schulz,Miguel Vences,Jette T. Knudsen,Michael F. Barej,Mark-Oliver Rödel,Manfred Walzl,Walter Hödl +9 more
TL;DR: Strong evidence is found that the gular patch is a gland producing volatile compounds, which might be emitted while calling and suggested that reed frogs might use a complex combination of at least acoustic and chemical signals in species recognition and mate choice.