Now showing items 1-11 of 11

    • Zhang, Caifei; Zhang, Taikui; Luebert Bruron, Federico; Xiang, Yezi; Huang, Chien-Hsun; Hu, Yi; Rees, Mathew; Frohlich, Michael W.; Qi, Ji; Weigend, Maximilian; Ma, Hong (Oxford, 2020)
      Asterids are one of the most successful angiosperm lineages, exhibiting extensive morphological diversity and including a number of important crops. Despite their biological prominence and value to humans, the deep asterid ...
    • Acuña Castillo, Rafael; Luebert Bruron, Federico; Henning, Tilo; Weigend, Maximilian (Elsevier, 2020)
    • Luebert Bruron, Federico José; Cecchi, Lorenzo; Frohlich, Michael; Gottschling, Marc; Guilliams, C. Matt; Hasenstab-Lehman, Kristen; Hilger, Hartmut; Miller, James; Mittelbach, Moritz; Nazaire, Mare; Nepi, Massimo; Nocentini, Daniele; Daniele, Dietrich; Olmstead, Richard; Selvi, Federico; Simpson, Michael; Sutorý, Karel; Valdés, Benito; Walden, Genevieve; Weigend, Maximilian (International Association for Plant Taxonomy, 2016)
      he Boraginales are now universally accepted as monophyletic and firmly placed in Lamiidae. However, a consensus about familial classification has remained elusive, with some advocating recognition of a single, widely ...
    • Vasile, Maria Anna; Luebert Bruron, Federico; Jeiter, Julius; Weigend, Maximilian (Wiley, 2021)
      Premise Fruit type and morphology are tightly connected with angiosperm diversification. In Boraginales, the first-branching families, including Hydrophyllaceae, have one- to many-seeded capsules, whereas most of the ...
    • Jeiter, Juliu; Staedler, Yannick M.; Schoenenberger, Juerg; Weigend, Maximilian; Luebert Bruron, Federico José (University Chicago Press, 2018)
      Premise of research.Heliotropiaceae (Boraginales) are morphologically readily defined by their peculiar floral morphology, especially their conspicuous stigmatic heads. Heliotropium L. is the largest genus of the family, ...
    • Acuña Castillo, Rafael; Luebert Bruron, Federico José; Henning, Tilo; Weigend, Maximilian (Academic Press, 2019)
      The Loasoideae is the largest clade in the Loasaceae. This subfamily is widespread throughout the Neotropics and centered in the Andes, presenting an excellent opportunity to study diversification across much of temperate ...
    • Acuña, Rafael; Fliesswasser, Stella; Ackermann, Markus; Henning, Tilo; Luebert Bruron, Federico José; Weigend, Maximilian (Int Assoc Plant Taxonomy, 2017-04)
      Loasaceae, a mostly American group, is one of the largest families of Cornales. In spite of considerable progress over the last 20 years, the relationships of some clades remain controversial, especially in the "South ...
    • Vasile, Maria Anna; Jeiter, Julius; Weigend, Maximilian; Luebert Bruron, Federico José (Taylor & Fracis, 2020)
      This study aimed to examine the systematic position of South American species ofPhacelia(Hydrophyllaceae) andWigandia(Namaceae) and the historical biogeography of Hydrophyllaceae and Namaceae using molecular dating and ...
    • Chacón, Juliana; Luebert Bruron, Federico José; Selvi, Federico; Cecchi, Lorenzo; Weigend, Maximilian (Academic Press, 2019)
      Studies about the drivers of angiosperm clade diversifications have revealed how the environment continuously alters the species chances to adapt or to go extinct. This process depends on complex interactions between abiotic ...
    • Ruhm, Jonathan; Böhnert, Tim; Weigend, Maximilian; Merklinger, Félix F.; Stoll, Alexandra; Quandt, Dietmar; Luebert Bruron, Federico José (Public Library Science, 2020)
      Extreme arid conditions in the Atacama Desert in northern Chile have created a unique vegetation almost entirely restricted to the desert margins along the coast of the Pacific Ocean and the Andean range. In this study we ...
    • Chacón, Juliana; Luebert Bruron, Federico José; Hilger, Hartmut; Ovchinnikova, Svetlana; Selvi, Federico; Cecchi, Lorenzo; Guilliams, C. Matt; Hasenstab-Lehman, Kristen; Sutorý, Karel; Simpson, Michael; Weigend, Maximilian (International Association for Plant Taxonomy, 2016)
      Boraginaceae s.str. is a subcosmopolitan family of 1600 to 1700 species in around 90 genera, and recent phylogenetic studies indicate that the infrafamilial classification as currently used is highly obsolete. The present ...