Austin R. Mast, Ph.D.

Affiliations: 
2000 University of Wisconsin, Madison, Madison, WI 
Area:
Botany Biology, Ecology Biology
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"Austin Mast"

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Thomas J. Givnish grad student 2000 UW Madison
 (Molecular systematics of the subtribe Banksiinae (Banksia and Dryandra; Proteaceae), with insights into the historical biogeography of Australia and the origin of xeromorphic leaf traits.)
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Publications

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Pearson KD, Mast AR. (2019) Mobilizing the community of biodiversity specimen collectors to effectively detect and document outliers in the Anthropocene. American Journal of Botany
Cardillo M, Weston PH, Reynolds ZKM, et al. (2017) The phylogeny and biogeography of Hakea (Proteaceae) reveals the role of biome shifts in a continental plant radiation. Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution
Lacey EA, Hammond TT, Walsh RE, et al. (2017) Climate change, collections and the classroom: using big data to tackle big problems Evolution: Education and Outreach. 10
Mast AR, Olde PM, Makinson RO, et al. (2015) Paraphyly changes understanding of timing and tempo of diversification in subtribe Hakeinae (Proteaceae), a giant Australian plant radiation. American Journal of Botany. 102: 1634-46
Nelson G, Sweeney P, Wallace LE, et al. (2015) Digitization workflows for flat sheets and packets of plants, algae, and fungi. Applications in Plant Sciences. 3
Thiele KR, Weston PH, Mast AR. (2015) Paraphyly, modern systematics and the transfer of Dryandra into Banksia (Proteaceae): A response to George Australian Systematic Botany. 28: 194-202
Uhen MD, Barnosky AD, Bills B, et al. (2013) From card catalogs to computers: Databases in vertebrate paleontology Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 33: 13-28
Mast AR, Milton EF, Jones EH, et al. (2012) Time-calibrated phylogeny of the woody Australian genus Hakea (Proteaceae) supports multiple origins of insect-pollination among bird-pollinated ancestors. American Journal of Botany. 99: 472-87
Sauquet H, Weston PH, Anderson CL, et al. (2009) Contrasted patterns of hyperdiversification in Mediterranean hotspots Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 106: 221-225
Givnish TJ, Millam KC, Mast AR, et al. (2009) Origin, adaptive radiation and diversification of the Hawaiian lobeliads (Asterales: Campanulaceae). Proceedings. Biological Sciences / the Royal Society. 276: 407-16
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