Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
Participants in the Workshop on the Theory and Application of Cladistic Methodology
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Contents V
- Preface IX
- Contributors XI
- Introduction XV
-
Part I. Philosophical Concerns
- Introduction 3
- 1. Cladistic Theory: Hypotheses That Blur and Grow 5
- 2. The Relevance of Parsimony to Phylogenetic Inference 24
- 3. Monophyly: Its Meaning and Importance 39
-
Part II. Character Evaluation
- Introduction 49
- 4. The Concept of Homology and Its Central Role in the Elucidation of Plant Systematic Relationships 51
- 5. Problems in the Determination of Evolutionary Directionality of Character-State Change for Phylogenetic Reconstruction 71
-
Part III. Cladogram Construction
- Introduction 91
-
Section A. Parsimony Methods
- 6. Applications of the Concepts of Groundplan-Divergence 95
- 7. Quantitative Parsimony 119
-
Section B. Compatibility Methods
- 8. Phylogenetic Trees and Character-State Trees 135
- 9. Evaluating Characters by Character Compatibility Analysis 152
-
Section C. Comparison of Methods
- 10. The Statistical Approach to Inferring Evolutionary Trees and What It Tells Us About Parsimony and Compatibility 169
- 11. Application of Compatibility and Parsimony Methods at the Infraspecific, Specific, and Generic Levels in Poaceae 192
- 12. Cladistic and Other Methods: Problems, Pitfalls, and Potentials 221
-
Part IV. Applications
- Introduction 255
- 13. Considerations in Formalizing a Classification 257
- 14. Cladistics and Biogeography 273
- Appendix: An Introduction to Computer-Assisted Cladistic Analysis 295
- Participants in the Workshop on the Theory and Application of Cladistic Methodology 299
- Author Index 303
- Subject Index 307
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Contents V
- Preface IX
- Contributors XI
- Introduction XV
-
Part I. Philosophical Concerns
- Introduction 3
- 1. Cladistic Theory: Hypotheses That Blur and Grow 5
- 2. The Relevance of Parsimony to Phylogenetic Inference 24
- 3. Monophyly: Its Meaning and Importance 39
-
Part II. Character Evaluation
- Introduction 49
- 4. The Concept of Homology and Its Central Role in the Elucidation of Plant Systematic Relationships 51
- 5. Problems in the Determination of Evolutionary Directionality of Character-State Change for Phylogenetic Reconstruction 71
-
Part III. Cladogram Construction
- Introduction 91
-
Section A. Parsimony Methods
- 6. Applications of the Concepts of Groundplan-Divergence 95
- 7. Quantitative Parsimony 119
-
Section B. Compatibility Methods
- 8. Phylogenetic Trees and Character-State Trees 135
- 9. Evaluating Characters by Character Compatibility Analysis 152
-
Section C. Comparison of Methods
- 10. The Statistical Approach to Inferring Evolutionary Trees and What It Tells Us About Parsimony and Compatibility 169
- 11. Application of Compatibility and Parsimony Methods at the Infraspecific, Specific, and Generic Levels in Poaceae 192
- 12. Cladistic and Other Methods: Problems, Pitfalls, and Potentials 221
-
Part IV. Applications
- Introduction 255
- 13. Considerations in Formalizing a Classification 257
- 14. Cladistics and Biogeography 273
- Appendix: An Introduction to Computer-Assisted Cladistic Analysis 295
- Participants in the Workshop on the Theory and Application of Cladistic Methodology 299
- Author Index 303
- Subject Index 307