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Reyjane Patrícia de Oliveira

Researcher at State University of Feira de Santana

Publications -  90
Citations -  520

Reyjane Patrícia de Oliveira is an academic researcher from State University of Feira de Santana. The author has contributed to research in topics: Olyreae & Genus. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 83 publications receiving 404 citations.

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Dismantling Brazil's science threatens global biodiversity heritage

G. Wilson Fernandes, +53 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyze the consequences of such cuts on the Research Program on Biodiversity (PPBio), the largest biodiversity research network in Brazil (626 researchers, nine networks in all Brazilian biomes).
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Museomics resolve the systematics of an endangered grass lineage endemic to north-western Madagascar.

TL;DR: The appendages at the base of the upper floret of Chasechloa have been confirmed as elaiosomes, an evolutionary adaptation for myrmecochory, which highlights the power of NGS technology to analyse relictual or probably extinct groups.
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A molecular phylogeny of Raddia and its allies within the tribe Olyreae (Poaceae, Bambusoideae) based on noncoding plastid and nuclear spacers.

TL;DR: The plastid spacer trnD-trnT and the nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer were sequenced for 37 samples of herbaceous bamboos, including all Raddia species and allied genera, as well as two members of the woody bamboOS, in order to examine their relationships.
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A contribuição da anatomia foliar para a taxonomia de Raddia Bertol. (Poaceae: Bambusoideae)

TL;DR: Leaf anatomy traits had little to do with species delimitation within the genus, sometimes separating only groups of species, and a type of trichome unknown in Bambusoideae was recorded for R. stolonifera R. Oliveira & Longhi-Wagner.
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Morphometrics of herbaceous bamboos of the Raddia brasiliensis complex (Poaceae − Bambusoideae): implications for the taxonomy of the genus and new species from Brazil

TL;DR: Results of the discriminant and cluster analyses show that one group of populations from northern Espírito Santo and southern Bahia showed high differentiation in relation to other areas, and are here considered as the new species R. megaphylla.