Phylogeography and Sex-Biased Dispersal across Riverine Manatee Populations (Trichechus inunguis and Trichechus manatus) in South America
Paula Satizábal(Universidad de Los Andes), Susana Caballero(Universidad de Los Andes), Antonio A. Mignucci‐Giannoni(Center for Advanced Studies on Puerto Rico and the Caribbean), Sebastián Duchêne(Universidad de Los Andes), Dalila Caicedo‐Herrera, Fernando Trujillo(Fundación Santa Fe de Bogotá), Carmen Rosa GARCÍA-DÁVILA(Instituto de Investigaciones de la Amazonía Peruana), Carlos M. Perea-Sicchar(Dirección Regional de Salud del Callao)
Cited by 30
Related Papers
Evolution of river dolphins
|Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences|2001|217
Mitogenome Phylogenetics: The Impact of Using Single Regions and Partitioning Schemes on Topology, Substitution Rate and Divergence Time Estimation
|PLoS ONE|2011|190
Phylogeography, phylogeny and hybridization in trichechid sirenians: implications for manatee conservation
|Molecular Ecology|2006|139
TAXONOMIC STATUS OF THE GENUS<i>SOTALIA</i>: SPECIES LEVEL RANKING FOR “TUCUXI” (<i>SOTALIA FLUVIATILIS</i>) AND “COSTERO” (<i>SOTALIA GUIANENSIS</i>) DOLPHINS
|Marine Mammal Science|2007|132
Captivity Shapes the Gut Microbiota of Andean Bears: Insights into Health Surveillance
|Frontiers in Microbiology|2017|132