Now showing items 1-5 of 5

  • Helm, Conrad; Beckers, Patrick; Bartolomaeus, Thomas; Drukewitz, Stephan H; Kourtesis, Ioannis; Weigert, Anne; Purschke, Günter; Worsaae, Katrine; Struck, Torsten H; Bleidorn, Christoph (Journal article / Tidsskriftartikkel / PublishedVersion; Peer reviewed, 2018)
    Background A median, segmented, annelid nerve cord has repeatedly been compared to the arthropod and vertebrate nerve cords and became the most used textbook representation of the annelid nervous system. ...
  • Helm, Conrad; Beckers, Patrick; Bartolomaeus, Thomas; Drukewitz, Stephan H.; Kourtesis, Ioannis; Weigert, Anne; Purschke, Günter; Worsaae, Katrine; Struck, Torsten H; Bleidorn, Christoph (Journal article / Tidsskriftartikkel / PublishedVersion; Peer reviewed, 2018)
    Background: A median, segmented, annelid nerve cord has repeatedly been compared to the arthropod and vertebrate nerve cords and became the most used textbook representation of the annelid nervous system. Recent phylogenomic ...
  • Cerca, Jose; Meyer, Christian; Stateczny, Dave; Siemon, Dominik; Wegbrod, Jana; Purschke, Günter; Dimitrov, Dimitar; Struck, Torsten H (Journal article / Tidsskriftartikkel / PublishedVersion; Peer reviewed, 2020)
    Morphological stasis or the absence of morphological change is a well-known phenomenon in the paleontological record, yet it is poorly integrated with neontological evidence. Recent evidence suggests that cryptic species ...
  • Cerca De Oliveira, Josè; Meyer, Christian; Purschke, Günter; Struck, Torsten H (Journal article / Tidsskriftartikkel / PublishedVersion; Peer reviewed, 2020)
    The recognition of cryptic species concealed in traditionally established species may reveal new biogeographical patterns and alter the understanding of how biodiversity is geographically distributed. This is particularly ...
  • Cerca De Oliveira, Josè; Purschke, Günter; Struck, Torsten H (Journal article / Tidsskriftartikkel / SubmittedVersion, 2018)
    Many interstitial species were first described as widely distributed, often cosmopolitan or amphi-oceanic, contrasting with descriptions of a sedentary life style and the general absence of pelagic dispersal stages. These ...