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  • (-) WSL Authors = Gugerli, Felix
  • (-) Keywords ≠ amplified fragment length polymorphisms
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Tales of the unexpected: phylogeography of the arctic-alpine model plant <i>Saxifraga oppositifolia</i> (Saxifragaceae) revisited
Winkler, M., Tribsch, A., Schneeweiss, G. M., Brodbeck, S., Gugerli, F., Holderegger, R., … Schönswetter, P. (2012). Tales of the unexpected: phylogeography of the arctic-alpine model plant Saxifraga oppositifolia (Saxifragaceae) revisited. Molecular Ecology, 21(18), 4618-4630. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-294X.2012.05705.x
Chloroplast microsatellites and mitochondrial nad1 intron 2 sequences indicate congruent phylogenetic relationships among Swiss stone pine (Pinus cembra), Siberian stone pine (P. sibirica), and Siberian dwarf pine (P. pumila)
Gugerli, F., Senn, J., Anzidei, M., Madaghiele, A., Büchler, U., Sperisen, C., & Vendramin, G. G. (2001). Chloroplast microsatellites and mitochondrial nad1 intron 2 sequences indicate congruent phylogenetic relationships among Swiss stone pine (Pinus cembra), Siberian stone pine (P. sibirica), and Siberian dwarf pine (P. pumila). Molecular Ecology, 10(6), 1489-1497. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-294X.2001.01285.x
Haplotype variation in a mitochondrial tandem repeat of Norway spruce (&lt;em&gt;Picea abies&lt;/em&gt;) populations suggests a serious founder effect during postglacial re-colonization of the western Alps
Gugerli, F., Sperisen, C., Büchler, U., Magni, F., Geburek, T., Jeandroz, S., & Senn, J. (2001). Haplotype variation in a mitochondrial tandem repeat of Norway spruce (Picea abies) populations suggests a serious founder effect during postglacial re-colonization of the western Alps. Molecular Ecology, 10(5), 1255-1263. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-294X.2001.01279.x
Patterns of genetic variation detected by RAPDs suggest a single origin with subsequent mutations and long‐distance dispersal in the apomictic fern <em>Dryopteris remota</em> (Dryopteridaceae) 
Schneller, J., Holderegger, R., Gugerli, F., Eichenberger, K., & Lutz, E. (1998). Patterns of genetic variation detected by RAPDs suggest a single origin with subsequent mutations and long‐distance dispersal in the apomictic fern Dryopteris remota (Dryopteridaceae) . American Journal of Botany, 85(7), 1038-1042. https://doi.org/10.2307/2446372