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Stefanie M. Ickert-Bond

Researcher at University of Alaska Fairbanks

Publications -  71
Citations -  2549

Stefanie M. Ickert-Bond is an academic researcher from University of Alaska Fairbanks. The author has contributed to research in topics: Monophyly & Phylogenetic tree. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 65 publications receiving 2113 citations. Previous affiliations of Stefanie M. Ickert-Bond include Field Museum of Natural History & Arizona State University.

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Intercontinental disjunctions between eastern Asia and western North America in vascular plants highlight the biogeographic importance of the Bering land bridge from late Cretaceous to Neogene

TL;DR: This review shows a close biogeographic connection between eastern Asia and western North America from the late Cretaceous to the late Neogene in major lineages of vascular plants (flowering plants, gymnosperms, ferns and lycophytes), as well as elements of the relict boreotropical and Neogene mesophytic and coniferous floras.
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Evolution of the Madrean–Tethyan disjunctions and the North and South American amphitropical disjunctions in plants

TL;DR: The authors reviewed advances in the study of two major intercontinental disjunct biogeographic patterns: (i) between Eurasian and western North American deserts with the Mediterranean climate (the Madrean-Tethyan disjunctions); and (ii) between the temperate regions of North and South America (the amphitropical disjunitions).
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Transcriptome sequences resolve deep relationships of the grape family.

TL;DR: The resulting transcriptome phylogeny provides robust support for the deep relationships, showing the phylogenetic utility of transcriptome data for plants over a time scale at least since the mid-Cretaceous, and the pros and cons of transcriptomic data for phylogenetic inference in plants.
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Natural History Collections as Emerging Resources for Innovative Education

TL;DR: For example, the authors proposed to incorporate natural history specimens and their associated data into undergraduate curricula to promote participatory learning and foster an understanding of essential interactions between organisms and their environments.
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Phylogeny and character evolution in Medicago (Leguminosae): Evidence from analyses of plastid trnK/matK and nuclear GA3ox1 sequences

TL;DR: The hypothesis that single-seeded fruits that have arisen more than once in both Medicago and Trigonella, are indeed homoplastic is supported and support for the utility of GA3ox1 sequences for phylogenetic analysis among and within closely related genera of legumes is demonstrated.