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Jenny E. E. Smedmark

Researcher at Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences

Publications -  14
Citations -  1078

Jenny E. E. Smedmark is an academic researcher from Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pantropical & Clade. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 13 publications receiving 964 citations. Previous affiliations of Jenny E. E. Smedmark include Stockholm University & Swedish Academy.

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Phylogeny and classification of Rosaceae

TL;DR: Strong support for monophyly of groups corresponding closely to many previously recognized tribes and subfamilies is found, but no previous classification was entirely supported, and relationships among the strongly supported clades were weakly resolved and/or conflicted between some data sets.
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Ancient allopolyploid speciation in Geinae (Rosaceae): evidence from nuclear granule-bound starch synthase (GBSSI) gene sequences.

TL;DR: A nuclear low-copy gene phylogeny provides strong evidence for the hybrid origin of seven polyploid species in Geinae (Rosaceae) and indicates that the hexaploid lineage evolved through two consecutive allopolyploidization events.
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Boreotropical migration explains hybridization between geographically distant lineages in the pantropical clade Sideroxyleae (Sapotaceae)

TL;DR: It is concluded that Sideroxyleae, including the ancestral lineages of Nesoluma, were part of the boreotropical flora and entered the New World via the north Atlantic land bridge and it is suggested that the distribution of extant species resulted from the cooling climate at the end of the Eocene.
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Deep divergences in the coffee family and the systematic position of Acranthera

TL;DR: Nuclear ITS provided structured information at all phylogenetic levels, but the main gain from adding nrITS was the increased resolution and average support values also increased but were generally high also without nr ITS and the increase was not statistically significant.
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Phylogenetic Relationships of Geum (Rosaceae) and Relatives Inferred from the nrITS and trnL-trnF Regions

TL;DR: Morphological characters, notably fruit characters, mapped onto the combined tree show patterns of widespread parallel evolution and reversals—or possibly the effects of reticulations.