• Advances in Legume Systematics 14. Classification of Caesalpinioideae. Part 2: Higher-level classification 

      Bruneau, Anne; Paganucci de Queiroz, Luciano; Ringelberg, Jens J.; Borges, Leonardo M.; Lopes da Costa Bortoluzzi, Roseli; Brown, Gillian K.; Cardoso, Domingos B. O. S.; Clark, Ruth P.; de Souza Conceição, Adilva; Martins Teixeira Cota, Matheus; Demeulenaere, Else; de Stefano, Rodrigo Duno; Ebinger, John E.; Fonseca-Cortés, Andrés; Grether, Rosaura; Huamantupa-Chuquimaco, Isau; Luckow, Melissa; Morales, Matias; Murphy, Daniel J.; Seigler, David S. (Pensoft Publishers, 2024-04-03)
      Caesalpinioideae is the second largest subfamily of legumes (Leguminosae) with ca. 4680 species and 163 genera. It is an ecologically and economically important group formed of mostly woody perennials that range from large ...
    • Precipitation is the main axis of tropical phylogenetic turnover across space and time 

      Ringelberg, Jens J.; Koenen, Erik J.M.; Sauter, Benjamín; Aebli, Anahita; Rando, Juliana G.; Iganci, João R.; de Queiroz, Luciano P.; Murphy, Daniel J.; Gaudeul, Myriam; Bruneau, Anne; Luckow, Melissa; Morales, Matias (BioRxiv, 2022-05-31)
      Early natural historians – Compte de Buffon, von Humboldt and De Candolle – established ecology and geography as two principal axes determining the distribution of groups of organisms, laying the foundations for biogeography ...