All Stories

  1. Links between Evolution, Development, Human Anatomy, Pathology, and Medicine, with A Proposition of A Re-defined Anatomical Position and Notes on Constraints and Morphological “Imperfections”
  2. Are more diverse parts of the mammalian skull more labile?
  3. Where is the Evo in Evo-Devo (evolutionary developmental biology)?
  4. Origin, Development, and Evolution of Primate Muscles, with Notes on Human Anatomical Variations and Anomalies
  5. Anatomical Network Comparison of Human Upper and Lower, Newborn and Adult, and Normal and Abnormal Limbs, with Notes on Development, Pathology and Limb Serial Homology vs. Homoplasy
  6. On the serial homology of the pectoral and pelvic girdles of tetrapods
  7. Evolutionary developmental pathology and anthropology: A new field linking development, comparative anatomy, human evolution, morphological variations and defects, and medicine
  8. The human brain and face: mechanisms of cranial, neurological and facial development revealed through malformations of holoprosencephaly, cyclopia and aberrations in chromosome 18
  9. Musculoskeletal anatomical changes that accompany limb reduction in lizards
  10. Development, metamorphosis, morphology, and diversity: The evolution of chordate muscles and the origin of vertebrates
  11. Anatomical Network Analysis Shows Decoupling of Modular Lability and Complexity in the Evolution of the Primate Skull
  12. A new heart for a new head in vertebrate cardiopharyngeal evolution
  13. Towards the resolution of a long-standing evolutionary question: muscle identity and attachments are mainly related to topological position and not to primordium or homeotic identity of digits
  14. Anatomical networks reveal the musculoskeletal modularity of the human head
  15. Muscular and Skeletal Anomalies in Human Trisomy in an Evo-Devo Context
  16. Comparative Anatomy of Primates
  17. Cephalic muscles of Cyclostomes (hagfishes and lampreys) and Chondrichthyes (sharks, rays and holocephalans): comparative anatomy and early evolution of the vertebrate head muscles
  18. Specialize or risk disappearance - empirical evidence of anisomerism based on comparative and developmental studies of gnathostome head and limb musculature
  19. Baby Gorilla
  20. Is evolutionary biology becoming too politically correct? A reflection onthe scala naturae, phylogenetically basal clades, anatomically plesiomorphic taxa, and ‘lower’ animals
  21. The Anatomy and Ontogeny of the Head, Neck, Pectoral, and Upper Limb Muscles ofLemur cattaandPropithecus coquereli(Primates): Discussion on the Parallelism Between Ontogeny and Phylogeny and Implications for Evolutionary and Developmental Biology
  22. Comparative Anatomy, Evolution, and Homologies of Tetrapod Hindlimb Muscles, Comparison with Forelimb Muscles, and Deconstruction of the Forelimb-Hindlimb Serial Homology Hypothesis
  23. Do Correlation Patterns Reflect the Role of Development in Morphological Evolution?
  24. Cranial muscle development in frogs with different developmental modes: Direct development versus biphasic development
  25. Development of fore- and hindlimb muscles in GFP-transgenic axolotls: Morphogenesis, the tetrapod bauplan, and new insights on the Forelimb-Hindlimb Enigma
  26. Photographic and Descriptive Musculoskeletal Atlas of Chimpanzees: With Notes on the Attachments, Variations, Innervation, Function and Synonymy and Weight of the Muscles . By Rui Diogo, Juan F. Pastor, Eva M. Ferrero, Mercedes Barbosa, Anne M. Burrow...
  27. Development of fore- and hindlimb muscles in frogs: Morphogenesis, homeotic transformations, digit reduction, and the forelimb-hindlimb enigma
  28. Cranial Muscle Development in the Model OrganismAmbystoma mexicanum: Implications for Tetrapod and Vertebrate Comparative and Evolutionary Morphology and Notes on Ontogeny and Phylogeny
  29. The broader evolutionary lessons to be learned from a comparative and phylogenetic analysis of primate muscle morphology
  30. Photographic and Descriptive Musculoskeletal Atlas of Chimpanzees
  31. First comparative study of primate morphological and molecular evolutionary rates including muscle data: implications for the tempo and mode of primate and human evolution
  32. Photographic and Descriptive Musculoskeletal Atlas of Gibbons and Siamangs (Hylobates): With Notes on the Attachments, Variations, Innervation, Synonymy and Weight of the Muscles . By Rui Diogo, Juan F. Pastor, Eva M. Ferrero, Mercedes Barbosa, Anne M...
  33. “Pollical palmar interosseous muscle” (musculus adductor pollicis accessorius): Attachments, innervation, variations, phylogeny, and implications for human evolution and medicine
  34. New, puzzling insights from comparative myological studies on the old and unsolved forelimb/hindlimb enigma
  35. The Head and Neck Muscles of the Serval and Tiger: Homologies, Evolution, and Proposal of a Mammalian and a Veterinary Muscle Ontology
  36. Comparative Anatomy and Phylogeny of Primate Muscles and Human Evolution . By Rui Diogo and Bernard Wood. Enfield (New Hampshire): Science Publishers; distributed by CRC Press (Taylor & Francis Group), Boca Raton (Florida). $199.95. x + 1025 p.; ill.;...
  37. Evolution and homologies of primate and modern human hand and forearm muscles, with notes on thumb movements and tool use
  38. VIOLATION OF DOLLO'S LAW: EVIDENCE OF MUSCLE REVERSIONS IN PRIMATE PHYLOGENY AND THEIR IMPLICATIONS FOR THE UNDERSTANDING OF THE ONTOGENY, EVOLUTION, AND ANATOMICAL VARIATIONS OF MODERN HUMANS
  39. A Major Reason to Study Muscle Anatomy: Myology as a Tool for Evolutionary, Developmental, and Systematic Biology
  40. Jaw Adductor Muscles across Lepidosaurs: A Reappraisal
  41. En Bloc Removal of the Mandible, the Masticatory Muscles and the Mandibular Nerve in the Chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes, Blumenbach 1799), with a Review and Critique of the Methods Used to Expose the Trigeminal Musculature in Derived Primates
  42. Muscles of Vertebrates: Comparative Anatomy, Evolution, Homologies and Development . By Rui Diogo and Virginia Abdala. Enfield (New Hampshire): Science Publishers; distributed by CRC Press, Boca Raton (Florida). $149.95. xi + 482 p.; ill.; index. ISBN...
  43. Expression of Myosin Heavy Chain Isoforms in the Supraspinatus Muscle of Different Primate Species: Implications for the Study of the Adaptation of Primate Shoulder Muscles to Different Locomotor Modes
  44. Gonorynchiformes and Ostariophysan Relationships: A Comprehensive Review. By Terry Grande, Francisco José Poyato-Ariza, and Rui Diogo
  45. Evolution of the Muscles of Facial Expression in a Monogamous Ape: Evaluating the Relative Influences of Ecological and Phylogenetic Factors in Hylobatids
  46. Gonorynchiformes and Ostariophysan Relationships: A Comprehensive Review . Teleostean Fish Biology. Senior Volume Editor : Terry Grande and Volume Coeditors: Francisco José Poyato‐Ariza and Rui Diogo . Enfield (New Hampshire): Science Publishers. $149...
  47. The Head Muscles of Dipnoans—A Review on the Homologies and Evolution of these Muscles within Vertebrates
  48. Comparative Anatomy, Anthropology and Archaeology as Case Studies on the Influence of Human Biases in Natural Sciences: The Origin of ‘Humans’, of ‘Behaviorally Modern Humans’ and of ‘Fully Civilized Humans’
  49. Photographic and Descriptive Musculoskeletal Atlas of Gorilla
  50. Comparative anatomy, homologies and evolution of the pectoral and forelimb musculature of tetrapods with special attention to extant limbed amphibians and reptiles
  51. Muscles of Vertebrates
  52. En Bloc Removal of the Mandible, the Trigeminal Muscles and the Mandibular Nerve in Humans
  53. Gonorynchiformes and Ostariophysan Relationships
  54. The Epibranchial Organ and Its Anatomical Environment in the Gonorynchiformes, with Functional Discussions
  55. Gonorynchiform Interrelationships
  56. State of the Art of Siluriform Higher-level Phylogeny
  57. A Review of the Cranial and Pectoral Musculature of Gonorynchiform Fishes, with Comments on Their Functional Morphology and a Comparison with Other Otocephalans
  58. Comparative phylogeography of the Yellow River schizothoracine fishes (Cyprinidae): Vicariance, expansion, and recent coalescence in response to the Quaternary environmental upheaval in the Tibetan Plateau
  59. Origin, Evolution and Homologies of the Weberian Apparatus: A New Insight
  60. The head and neck muscles of the Philippine colugo (Dermoptera:Cynocephalus volans), with a comparison to tree-shrews, primates, and other mammals
  61. Teleostean Phylogeny Based on Osteological and Myological Characters
  62. The Origin of Higher Clades: Osteology, Myology, Phylogeny and Evolution of Bony Fishes and the Rise of Tetrapods . By Rui Diogo. Enfield (New Hampshire): Science Publishers. $95.00. xix + 367 p. + 7 pl.; ill.; index. 978‐1‐57808‐437‐1. 2007.
  63. The Origin of Higher Clades. Osteology, Myology, Phylogeny and Evolution of Bony Fishes and the Rise of Tetrapods. Rui Diogo.
  64. The Origin of Higher Clades
  65. Cephalic and pectoral girdle muscles of the clupeiform Denticeps clupeoides, with comments on the homologies and plesiomorphic states of these muscles within the Otocephala (Teleostei)
  66. Comparative anatomy, homologies and evolution of mandibular, hyoid and hypobranchial muscles of bony fish and tetrapods: a new insight
  67. Development of mandibular, hyoid and hypobranchial muscles in the zebrafish: homologies and evolution of these muscles within bony fishes and tetrapods
  68. Homoplasies, Consistency Index and the Complexity of Morphological Evolution: Catfishes as a Case Study for General Discussions on Phylogeny and Macroevolution
  69. Osteology and Myology of the Cephalic Region and Pectoral Girdle of Heptapterus mustelinus, Comparison With Other Heptapterins, and Discussion on the Synapomorphies and Phylogenetic Relationships of the Heptapterinae and the Pimelodidae (Teleostei: Sil...
  70. Osteology and Myology of the Cephalic Region and Pectoral Girdle of Pangasius macronema, With a Discussion on the Synapomorphies and Phylogenetic Relationships of the Pangasiidae (Teleostei: Siluriformes)
  71. Prebiotic world, macroevolution, and Darwin’s theory: a new insight
  72. Age and biogeography of major clades in sturgeons and paddlefishes (Pisces: Acipenseriformes)
  73. Comparative anatomy, homologies and evolution of the pectoral muscles of bony fish and tetrapods: A new insight
  74. MtDNA phylogeny provides evidence of generic polyphyleticism for East Asian bagrid catfishes
  75. Cordelia's Dilemma, Historical Bias, and General Evolutionary Trends: Catfishes as a Case Study for General Discussions on Phylogeny and Macroevolution
  76. Morphological Evolution, Aptations, Homoplasies, Constraints and Evolutionary Trends: Catfishes as a Case Study on General Phylogeny and Macroevolution. By Rui Diogo. Enfield (New Hampshire): Science Publishers. $122.00. x + 491 p; ill.; index. ISBN: ...
  77. Mitochondrial molecular clocks and the origin of the major Otocephalan clades (Pisces: Teleostei): A new insight
  78. Osteology and myology of the cephalic region and pectoral girdle of the South African catfish Austroglanis gilli, with comments on the autapomorphies and phylogenetic relationships of the Austroglanididae (Teleostei: Siluriformes)
  79. Evolutionary convergences and parallelisms: &their theoretical differences and the difficulty &of discriminating them in a practical &phylogenetic context
  80. Osteology and myology of the cephalic region and pectoral girdle of Pimelodus blochii , comparison with other pimelodines, and comments on the synapomorphies and phylogenetic relationships of the Pimelodinae (Ostariophysi: Siluriformes)
  81. Osteology and myology of the cephalic region and pectoral girdle of Pimelodus blochii, comparison with other pimelodines, and comments on the synapomorphies and phylogenetic relationships of the Pimelodinae (Ostariophysi: Siluriformes)
  82. Phylogeny, origin and biogeography of catfishes: support for a Pangean origin of 'modern teleosts' and reexamination of some Mesozoic Pangean connections between the Gondwanan and Laurasian supercontinents
  83. Muscles versus bones: catfishes as a case study for a discussion on the relative contribution of myological and osteological features in phylogenetic reconstructions
  84. Osteology and myology of the cephalic region and pectoral girdle of Batrochoglanis raninus, with a discussion on the synapomorphies and phylogenetic relationships of the Pseudopimelodinae and Pimelodidae (Teleostei: Siluriformes)
  85. Osteology and myology of the cephalic region and pectoral girdle of Schilbe mystus and comparison with other schilbids, with comments on the monophyly and phylogenetic relationships of the Schilbidae (Teleostei: Siluriformes)
  86. On the osteology and myology of the cephalic region and pectoral girdle of Chaca bankanensis Bleeker 1852, with comments on the autapomorphies and phylogenetic relationships of the Chacidae (Teleostei: Siluriformes)
  87. On the osteology and myology of the cephalic region and pectoral girdle of Franciscodoras marmoratus (Lütken 1874), comparison with other doradids, and comments on the synapomorphies and phylogenetic relationships of the Doradidae (Teleostei: Silurifor...
  88. On the osteology and myology of the cephalic region and pectoral girdle of Heteropneustes fossilis (Siluriformes: Heteropneustidae), with comments on the phylogenetic relationships between Heteropneustes and the clariid catfishes
  89. Osteology and myology of the cephalic region and pectoral girdle of Centromochlus heckelii, comparison with other auchenipterids, and comments on the synapomorphies and phylogenetic relationships of the Auchenipteridae (Teleostei: Siluriformes)
  90. Osteology and myology of the cephalic region and pectoral girdle of the Chinese catfishCranoglanis bouderius, with a discussion on the autapomorphies and phylogenetic relationships of the Cranoglanididae (Teleostei: Siluriformes)
  91. OSTEOLOGY AND MYOLOGY OF THE CEPHALIC REGION AND PECTORAL GIRDLE OF BUNOCEPHALUS KNERII, AND A DISCUSSION ON THE PHYLOGENETIC RELATIONSHIPS OF THE ASPREDINIDAE (TELEOSTEI: SILURIFORMES)
  92. On the osteology and myology of catfish pectoral girdle, with a reflection on catfish (Teleostei: Siluriformes) plesiomorphies
  93. Osteology and Myology of the Cephalic Region and Pectoral Girdle of Bunocephalus Knerii, and a Discussion On the Phylogenetic Relationships of the Aspredinidae (Teleostei: Siluriformes)
  94. THE STRUCTURES ASSOCIATED WITH CATFISH (TELEOSTEI: SILURIFORMES) MANDIBULAR BARBELS: ORIGIN, ANATOMY, FUNCTION, TAXONOMIC DISTRIBUTION, NOMENCLATURE AND SYNONYMY
  95. THE ORIGIN AND TRANSFORMATION OF THE PALATINE-MAXILLARY SYSTEM OF CATFISH (TELEOSTEI: SILURIFORMES): AN EXAMPLE OF MACROEVOLUTION
  96. Homologies among different adductor mandibulae sections of teleostean fishes, with special regard to catfishes (Teleostei: Siluriformes)
  97. The Origin and Transformation of the Palatine-Maxillary System of Catfish (Teleostei: Siluriformes): an Example of Macroevolution
  98. The Structures Associated With Catfish (Teleostei: Siluriformes) Mandibular Barbels: Origin, Anatomy, Function, Taxonomic Distribution, Nomenclature and Synonymy
  99. MORPHOLOGICAL DESCRIPTION OF THE CEPHALIC REGION OF BAGRUS DOCMAC, WITH A REFLECTION ON BAGRIDAE (TELEOSTEI: SILURIFORMES) AUTAPOMORPHIES
  100. Morphological Description of the Cephalic Region of Bagrus Docmac, With a Reflection On Bagridae (Teleostei: Siluriformes) Autapomorphies