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Taxonomy, biogeography and evolution of plants

Articles citing this paper

Banksieaephyllum taylorii ( Proteaceae) from the late paleocene of New South Wales and its relevance to the origin of Australia's scleromorphic flora

RJ Carpenter, GJ Jordan and RS Hill
7(4) pp.385 - 392


24 articles found in Crossref database.

Early evidence of xeromorphy in angiosperms: Stomatal encryption in a new eocene species of Banksia (Proteaceae) from Western Australia
Carpenter Raymond J., McLoughlin Stephen, Hill Robert S., McNamara Kenneth J., Jordan Gregory John
American Journal of Botany. 2014 101(9). p.1486
Solar radiation as a factor in the evolution of scleromorphic leaf anatomy in Proteaceae
Jordan Gregory J., Dillon Rebecca A., Weston Peter H.
American Journal of Botany. 2005 92(5). p.789
Genetic divergence among and diversity within two rare Banksia species and their common close relative in the subgenusIsostylis R.Br. (Proteaceae)
Broadhurst Linda M., Coates David J.
Conservation Genetics. 2004 5(6). p.837
Out of Africa: Linked Continents, Overland Migration and Differential Survival Explain Abundance of Proteaceae in Australia
Lamont Byron, He Tianhua, Milne Lynne, Cowling Richard
SSRN Electronic Journal. 2023
Radiation of the Australian flora: what can comparisons of molecular phylogenies across multiple taxa tell us about the evolution of diversity in present–day communities?
Pennington P. T., Cronk Q. C. B., Richardson J. A., Crisp Mike, Cook Lyn, Steane Dorothy
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences. 2004 359(1450). p.1551
Out of Africa: Linked continents, overland migration and differential survival explain abundance of Proteaceae in Australia
Lamont Byron B., He Tianhua, Milne Lynne A., Cowling Richard M.
Perspectives in Plant Ecology, Evolution and Systematics. 2024 62 p.125778
A congruent molecular signature of vicariance across multiple plant lineages
Crisp Michael D., Cook Lyn G.
Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 2007 43(3). p.1106
How old are the eucalypts? A review of the microfossil and phylogenetic evidence
Macphail Mike, Thornhill Andrew H.
Australian Journal of Botany. 2016 64(8). p.579
Silcrete plant fossils from Lightning Ridge, New South Wales: new evidence for climate change and monsoon elements in the Australian Cenozoic
Carpenter Raymond J., Goodwin Matthew P., Hill Robert S., Kanold Karola
Australian Journal of Botany. 2011 59(5). p.399
An assessment of old and new DNA sequence evidence for the paraphyly of Banksia with respect to Dryandra (Proteaceae)
Mast Austin R., Jones Eric H., Havery Shawn P.
Australian Systematic Botany. 2005 18(1). p.75
Proteaceae Leaf Fossils: Phylogeny, Diversity, Ecology and Austral Distributions
Carpenter Raymond J.
The Botanical Review. 2012 78(3). p.261
New species of xeromorphic Banksia (Proteaceae) foliage and Banksia-like pollen from the late Eocene of Western Australia
Carpenter Raymond J., Milne Lynne A.
Australian Journal of Botany. 2020 68(3). p.165
Leaf fossils of Banksia (Proteaceae) from New Zealand: An Australian abroad
Carpenter Raymond J., Jordan Gregory J., Lee Daphne E., Hill Robert S.
American Journal of Botany. 2010 97(2). p.288
Environmental history of an urban wetland: from degraded colonial resource to nature conservation area
Simpson Greg, Newsome David
Geo: Geography and Environment. 2017 4(1).
Fossil leaves of Banksia, Banksieae and pretenders: resolving the fossil genus Banksieaephyllum
Carpenter Raymond J., Jordan Gregory J., Hill Robert S.
Australian Systematic Botany. 2016 29(2). p.126
Leaf Cuticular Morphology Links Platanaceae and Proteaceae
Carpenter Raymond J., Hill Robert S., Jordan Gregory J.
International Journal of Plant Sciences. 2005 166(5). p.843
Cuticular morphology and aspects of the ecology and fossil history of North Queensland rainforest Proteaceae
CARPENTER RAYMOND J.
Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society. 1994 116(4). p.249
How diverse were ferns in the Baltic amber forest?
Sadowski Eva‐Maria, Seyfullah Leyla J., Regalado Ledis, Skadell Laura E., Gehler Alexander, Gröhn Carsten, Hoffeins Christel, Hoffeins Hans Werner, Neumann Christian, Schneider Harald, Schmidt Alexander R.
Journal of Systematics and Evolution. 2019 57(4). p.305
The evolutionary relations of sunken, covered, and encrypted stomata to dry habitats in Proteaceae
Jordan Gregory J., Weston Peter H., Carpenter Raymond J., Dillon Rebecca A., Brodribb Timothy J.
American Journal of Botany. 2008 95(5). p.521
Palaeoendemic plants provide evidence for persistence of open, well‐watered vegetation since the Cretaceous
Jordan Gregory J., Harrison Peter A., Worth James R. P., Williamson Grant J., Kirkpatrick James B.
Global Ecology and Biogeography. 2016 25(2). p.127
Diverse Fossil Epacrids (Styphelioideae; Ericaceae) from Early Pleistocene Sediments at Stony Creek Basin, Victoria, Australia
Jordan Gregory J., Bromfield Kate E., Sniderman J. M. Kale, Crayn Darren
International Journal of Plant Sciences. 2007 168(9). p.1359
Historical biogeography and the origin of stomatal distributions inBanksiaandDryandra(Proteaceae) based on their cpDNA phylogeny
Mast Austin R., Givnish Thomas J.
American Journal of Botany. 2002 89(8). p.1311
New Banksieaeidites species and pollen morphology in Banksia
Mack Charlotte L., Milne Lynne A.
Australian Systematic Botany. 2016 29(5). p.303
The Evolution of Plant Physiology (2004)
Brodribb Tim, Hill Robert S

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