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Curriculum Vitae John J. Wiens - Stony Brook University

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<strong>Wiens</strong>-C.V. page 16 of 24<br />

**Cover article<br />

(39) <strong>Wiens</strong>, J. J. 2001. Shape shifters. Time after time, lizards have dropped<br />

their legs in favor of a snakelike body form. Natural History 110:70–75.<br />

(40) <strong>Wiens</strong>, J. J. 2001. Character analysis in morphological phylogenetics:<br />

problems and solutions. Systematic Biology 50:689–699.<br />

(41) <strong>Wiens</strong>, J. J., and J. L. Slingluff. 2001. How lizards turn into snakes: a<br />

phylogenetic analysis of body-form evolution in anguid lizards.<br />

Evolution 55:2303–2318.<br />

(42) <strong>Wiens</strong>, J. J., and T. L. Penkrot. 2002. Delimiting species based on DNA<br />

and morphological variation and discordant species limits in spiny<br />

lizards (Sceloporus). Systematic Biology 51:69–91.<br />

(43) <strong>Wiens</strong>, J. J. 2002. Review of “Patterns of Distribution of Amphibians”<br />

edited by William E. Duellman. Systematic Biology 51:980–981.<br />

(44) Stephens, P. R., and J. J. <strong>Wiens</strong>. 2003. Explaining species richness from<br />

continents to communities: the time-for-speciation effect in emydid<br />

turtles. American Naturalist 161:112–128.<br />

(45) <strong>Wiens</strong>, J. J., and M. R. Morris. 2003. Review of "Sexual Selections" by<br />

Marlene Zuk. Quarterly Review of Biology 78:127.<br />

(46) <strong>Wiens</strong>, J. J. 2003. Incomplete taxa, incomplete characters, and<br />

phylogenetic accuracy: what is the missing data problem? Journal of<br />

Vertebrate Paleontology 23:297–310.<br />

**Invited symposium paper<br />

(47) <strong>Wiens</strong>, J. J., P. T. Chippindale, and D. M. Hillis. 2003. When are<br />

phylogenetic analyses misled by convergence? A case study in Texas<br />

cave salamanders. Systematic Biology 52:501–514.<br />

**Cover article<br />

(48) <strong>Wiens</strong>, J. J. 2003. Missing data, incomplete taxa, and phylogenetic<br />

accuracy. Systematic Biology 52:528–538.<br />

(49) Stephens, P. R., and J. J. <strong>Wiens</strong>. 2003. Ecological diversification and<br />

phylogeny of emydid turtles. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society<br />

79:577–610.<br />

(50) <strong>Wiens</strong>, J. J., and R. E. Etheridge. 2003. Phylogenetic relationships of<br />

hoplocercid lizards: coding and combining meristic, morphometric, and<br />

polymorphic data using step matrices. Herpetologica 59:375–398.<br />

(51) <strong>Wiens</strong>, J. J. 2004. Speciation and ecology revisited: phylogenetic niche<br />

conservatism and the origin of species. Evolution 58:193–197.

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