About this item
- Title
- Cophylogenetic relationships of penguins and their chewing lice
- Content partner
- Lincoln University
- Collection
- Lincoln University Research Archive
- Description
This thesis examines cophylogenetic relationships between penguins (Sphenisciformes) and their chewing lice (Insecta: Phthiraptera: Ischnocera). Penguins are parasitised by 15 species of lice in two genera, Austrogoniodes and Nesiotinus. Cophylogenetic studies require robust alpha phylogenies for the groups studied. A new louse species parasitizing yellow eyed penguins, Megadyptes antipodes, is described and new host records for Austrogoniodes demersus parasitising Galapagos penguins, Sphenis...
- Format
- Research Paper
- Research format
- Thesis
- Thesis level
- Doctoral
- Date created
- 2003
- Creator
- Banks, Jonathan
- URL
- https://hdl.handle.net/10182/1931
- Related subjects
- Austrogoniodes / coevolution / cophylogeny / cospeciation / failure to speciate / inertia / Ischnocera / mitochondrial DNA / Nesiotinus / Phthiraptera / phylogeny / Spheniscidae / Sphenisciformes / systematics / taxonomy / chewing lice / penguins / Evolutionary Biology / Animals / DNA, Mitochondrial / RNA, Ribosomal / DNA Primers / Bayes Theorem / Sequence Analysis, DNA / Base Sequence / Models, Genetic / Molecular Sequence Data / Host-Parasite Interactions
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Report this itemDigitalNZ brings together more than 30 million items from institutions so that they are easy to find and use. This information is the best information we could find on this item. This item was added on 21 April 2012, and updated 23 September 2024.
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