Fr. 71.00

Evolution of the neotropical - Ichthyofaun

English · Undefined

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Rivers and lakes of South and Central America host 6000 fish species representing 30% of the world freshwater fish diversity. Despite an increasing interest from the scientific community in understanding the origin and processes that rose extant diversity to such levels, the biogeography of Amazonian fishes remains largely unknown. Yet, recent molecular studies pointed to the importance of the orogenic activity of the Andes, the marine highstand of the late Miocene, the climatic fluctuations of the Pleistocene or headwater capture events for the dynamic of the Amazonian biodiversity. This knowledge, however, concerns terrestrial biotas thus leaving the evolution of the Amazonian fish communities largely unexplored. In the present contribution, the potential impact of such events on the evolution of Amazonian fishes has been addressed through a combined use of biogeographic, phylogenetic and phylogeographic approaches at several spatial scales.

About the author










Nicolas Hubert, PhD in biogeography, academic cursus ofsystematics and evolution at the ¿Université Paris 6¿, researcherat the IRD, Montpellier.Jean-François Renno, PhD in population genetic, academic cursusof ecology and evolution at the ¿Université Montpellier 2¿,researcher at the IRD, Montpellier.

Product details

Authors Collectif, Nicola HUBERT, Nicolas HUBERT, Jean-François Renno
Publisher Omniscriptum
 
Languages English
Product format Undefined
Released 18.08.2010
 
EAN 9786131520426
ISBN 9786131520426
Series Omn.Univ.Europ.
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > General and comparative literary studies
Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Biology > Zoology

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