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Cladistic analysis of morphological characters suggest that Pennatomys is most closely related to a clade, the Nectomys subclade, that includes members of Aegialomys, Amphinectomys, Nectomys, Sigmodontomys, Melanomys, Megalomys (another Antillean rice rat), and possibly Nesoryzomys.
Morphological characters suggest the presence of one species of Sycoscapter.
Except for a similar development style inferred from a reduced membrane covering the young fruiting body of Cudonia species, no obvious morphological characters suggest a relationship between the Cudoniaceae and the Rhytismatales [16].
Many phylogenies based on morphological characters suggest a monophyletic origin for all specialized nectarivorous phyllostomids [ 5, 46, 47].
Furthermore, comparisons of morphological characters suggest that different selection pressures may have acted on G. fultoni males and females across areas of sympatry and allopatry.
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The concordance of molecular characters and more carefully examined morphological characters suggests a future of greater taxonomic stability, as well as the potential to trace the evolutionary history of this ecologically important group using fossils.
There are no morphological characters suggesting that hybridization has taken place.
A single morphological character suggested that Microbiotheria might be closely related to Australian marsupials (Szalay 1982).
Using these morphological characters, we suggest only S. glauca but not S. viridis seed at the NKLE site.
This range of estimates is far more disparate than those based on the fossil record and morphological characters which suggest an Early to Middle Triassic origin time (e.g. [ 9, 26]).
Thus the morphometric data based on traditional taxonomic characters suggest there are just two morphological entities: S. childi and S. australis.
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