Eli Greenbaum, Ph.D.
Affiliations: | University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, United States |
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"Eli Greenbaum"Parents
Sign in to add mentorLinda Trueb | grad student | 2006 | University of Kansas | |
(Molecular systematics of New World microhyline frogs, with an emphasis on the Middle American genus Hypopachus.) |
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Publications
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Nachman MW, Beckman EJ, Bowie RC, et al. (2023) Specimen collection is essential for modern science. Plos Biology. 21: e3002318 |
Greenbaum E, Portik DM, Allen KE, et al. (2022) Systematics of the Central African Spiny Reed Frog Afrixalus laevis (Anura: Hyperoliidae), with the description of two new species from the Albertine Rift. Zootaxa. 5174: 201-232 |
Jaynes KE, Myers EA, Gvoždík V, et al. (2021) Giant Tree Frog diversification in West and Central Africa: isolation by physical barriers, climate, and reproductive traits. Molecular Ecology |
Allen KE, Greenbaum E, Hime PM, et al. (2021) Rivers, not refugia, drove diversification in arboreal, sub-Saharan African snakes. Ecology and Evolution. 11: 6133-6152 |
Greenbaum E, Allen KE, Vaughan ER, et al. (2021) Night stalkers from above: A monograph of Toxicodryas/ tree snakes (Squamata: Colubridae) with descriptions of two new cryptic species from Central Africa. Zootaxa. 4965: zootaxa.4965.1.1 |
Evans BJ, Gansauge MT, Stanley EL, et al. (2019) Xenopus fraseri: Mr. Fraser, where did your frog come from? Plos One. 14: e0220892 |
Portik DM, Bell RC, Blackburn DC, et al. (2019) Sexual Dichromatism Drives Diversification within a Major Radiation of African Amphibians. Systematic Biology |
Portillo F, Branch WR, Tilbury CR, et al. (2019) A Cryptic New Species of Polemon (Squamata: Lamprophiidae, Aparallactinae) from the Miombo Woodlands of Central and East Africa Copeia. 107: 22 |
Engelbrecht HM, Branch WR, Greenbaum E, et al. (2018) Diversifying into the branches: species boundaries in African green and bush snakes, Philothamnus (Serpentes: Colubridae). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution |
WÜster W, Chirio L, Trape JF, et al. (2018) Integration of nuclear and mitochondrial gene sequences and morphology reveals unexpected diversity in the forest cobra (Naja melanoleuca) species complex in Central and West Africa (Serpentes: Elapidae). Zootaxa. 4455: 68-98 |