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Paulette C. Reneau
Researcher at University of Oklahoma
Publications - 6
Citations - 850
Paulette C. Reneau is an academic researcher from University of Oklahoma. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mutation (genetic algorithm) & Monophyly. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 6 publications receiving 775 citations. Previous affiliations of Paulette C. Reneau include Florida A&M University & Western Kentucky University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The tree of life and a new classification of bony fishes.
Ricardo Betancur-R.,Richard E. Broughton,Edward O. Wiley,Kent E. Carpenter,J. Andrés López,Chenhong Li,Nancy I. Holcroft,Dahiana Arcila,Millicent D. Sanciangco,James C. Cureton,Feifei Zhang,Thaddaeus John Buser,Matthew A. Campbell,Jesús A. Ballesteros,Adela Roa-Varon,Stuart C. Willis,W. Calvin Borden,Thaine W. Rowley,Paulette C. Reneau,Daniel J. Hough,Guoqing Lu,Terry Grande,Gloria Arratia,Guillermo Ortí +23 more
TL;DR: A comprehensive molecular phylogeny for bony fishes that includes representatives of all major lineages and the order Perciformes, considered by many a polyphyletic taxonomic waste basket, is defined for the first time as a monophyletic group in the global phylogeny.
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Spatial Covariation of Mutation and Nonsynonymous Substitution Rates in Vertebrate Mitochondrial Genomes
TL;DR: Spatial patterns of among-gene variation in nonsynonymous rates were highly similar between fishes and mammals, suggesting that forces governing mitochondrial gene evolution have remained relatively constant over 450 Myr of vertebrate evolution.
Journal ArticleDOI
Evolutionary divergence of duplicate copies of the growth hormone gene in suckers (Actinopterygii: catostomidae).
TL;DR: Catostomid fishes (suckers) have duplicate copies of the growth hormone gene and other nuclear genes, due to a genome duplication event early in the group’s history, but phylogenetic analysis failed to resolve all sucker GHI and GHII sequences as monophyletic sister groups.
Journal ArticleDOI
Patterns of change over time in darter (Teleostei: Percidae) assemblages of the Arkansas River basin, northeastern Oklahoma, USA
David P. Gillette,Allison M. Fortner,Nathan R. Franssen,Sara Cartwright,Courtney M. Tobler,Jeff S. Wesner,Paulette C. Reneau,Franz H. Reneau,Ingo Schlupp,Edie Marsh-Matthews,William J. Matthews,Richard E. Broughton,Corey W. Lee +12 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that biotic homogenization is unlikely to occur in the absence of immigration, especially if assemblages are subjected to ‘novel disturbances’ such as dam construction and watershed-scale habitat degradation which negatively affect all components of the assemblage.