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Posted by: CKing at Fri Apr 2 13:48:51 2004 [ Report Abuse ] [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by CKing ] As I said, it is most likely that Hyla eximia is the most basal member of US Hyla and their closest relatives, given its geographic location and morphology and given the virtual certainty that the genus Hyla originated in the neotropics (vs. for example the nearctic or palearctic). Moriarty and Cannatella's tree surprisingly shows Hyla chrysoscelis as the most basal member, which is problematic, since 2 of Hedges' 3 trees show that Hyla eximia is the most basal species (fig. 1a and 1b of Moriarty and Cannatella). Further, Hyla crucifer has traditionally been considered a species of Hyla on the basis of morphology. Yet their maximum likelihood tree has H. crucifer nested deeply within Pseudacris, a group of degenerate hylids with reduced toe pads. That placement is not parsimonious, since it requires an evolutionary reversal for H. crucifer to have descended from an ancestor with reduced toe pads. Their maximum parsimony tree shows that H. crucifer forming an unresolved polytomy with 2 other groups of species traditionally placed in Pseudacris. Moriarty and Cannatella's parsimony tree therefore seems to make more sense than their likelihood tree. Their parsimony tree is also closer to the immunological data, which you dismiss casually because of its age. [ Reply To This Message ] [ Subscribe to this Thread ] [ Hide Replies ]
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