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Journal ArticleDOI

Albumin evolution in West Indian frogs of the genus Eleutherodactylus (Leptodactylidae): Caribbean biogeography and a calibration of the albumin immunological clock

Carla Ann Hass, +1 more
- 01 Nov 1991 - 
- Vol. 225, Iss: 3, pp 413-426
TLDR
These immunological data support both a recent classification of Eleutheroductylus based on an analysis of slow-evolving allozyme loci, and the monophyly of the 17 native Jamaican species as indicated by a more comprehensive electrophoretic study.
Abstract
Antisera to serum albumins from five West Indian species of the frog genus Eleutheroductylus were prepared, and the reciprocal immunological distances (IDs) obtained were used to provide a time frame for the evolution of this group in the West Indies. One-way IDS were obtained to 25 additional species within the genus, with emphasis on those from the West Indies. These immunological data support both a recent classification of Eleutheroductylus based on an analysis of slow-evolving allozyme loci, and the monophyly of the 17 native Jamaican species as indicated by a more comprehensive electrophoretic study. This is in contrast to the results of morphological studies supporting multiple invasions of Jamaica by Eleutherodactylus. Within the subgenus Euhyas, IDS ranged from6–27 between Jamaican species, whereas between species on different islands the range was29–67. The subgenus Syrrhophus in southern North America was found to be the sister group to the subgenus Euhyus, a western Caribbean clade. Pelorius, a subgenus restricted to Hispaniola, was found to be the sister group of the subgenus Eleutheroductylus in the West Indies. The largest IDs obtained for West Indian species were those between the two major groups, the subgenera Eleutheroductylus and Euhyas. The albumin immunological clock for Eleutheroductylus was calibrated with three events in the geologic history of the Caribbean: the breakup of the proto-Antilles (65-75 million years before present [mybp]), the emergence of Jamaica (20-30 mybp), and the uplift of the Blue Mountains in Jamaica (5-10 mybp). Immunological distances corresponding to those events yield a calibration of 1 ID=0.60 million years (my), the same as that previously obtained for other groups of amphibians and thus supports the use of albumin immunological distance as a molecular chronometer in the genus Eleutherodactylus

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The biosynthetic pathway of vitamin C in higher plants

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New World direct-developing frogs (Anura: Terrarana): Molecular phylogeny, classification, biogeography, and conservation

TL;DR: New World frogs recently placed in a single, enormous family (Brachycephalidae) have direct development and reproduce on land, often far away from water and most of the 100 informal groups (species series, species groups, and species subgroups) are new or newly defined.
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Rapid evolution to terrestrial life in Jamaican crabs

TL;DR: Molecular evidence is presented that Jamaican land crabs represent a single adaptive radiation from a marine ancestor that invaded terrestrial habitats only 4 million years ago and probably reflects the Mid-Tertiary inundation of that island.
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Major Caribbean and Central American frog faunas originated by ancient oceanic dispersal

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The Evolution of Convergent Structure in Caribbean Anolis Communities

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References
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Journal Article

The Detection of Disease Clustering and a Generalized Regression Approach

Nathan Mantel
- 01 Feb 1967 - 
TL;DR: The technic to be given below for imparting statistical validity to the procedures already in vogue can be viewed as a generalized form of regression with possible useful application to problems arising in quite different contexts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Estimation of average heterozygosity and genetic distance from a small number of individuals

TL;DR: It is shown that the number of individuals to be used for estimating average heterozygosity can be very small if a large number of loci are studied and the average heter homozygosity is low.
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