Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Personal tools

You are here: Home
2177 items matching your search terms.
Filter the results.
Item type



































New items since



Sort by relevance · date (newest first) · alphabetically
Proceedings Reference Macrofauna, rock magnetism and sedimentology in the Etroeungt Limestone (‘Strunian’, Uppermost Famennian) at Avesnelles (northern France)
Located in Library / No RBINS Staff publications
Inproceedings Reference Contexte géologique des sites mésolithiques de la Heid de Fer et de L’Ourlaine à Becco (Theux, Belgique)
Located in Library / No RBINS Staff publications
Inproceedings Reference Modelling eutrophication along the land-ocean continuum of the NEA
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2017
Inproceedings Reference How vertical swimming behaviour affects jellyfish journey?
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2017
Inproceedings Reference Plain Text Do man-made structures impact the connectivity patterns of hard substrate species in the North Sea?
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2017
Inproceedings Reference Where goes the flow? – tracing sole of the North Sea with genomics and otolith shape
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2017
Inproceedings Reference A masculinizing supergene underlies the male dimorphism of Oedothorax gibbosus
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2023 OA
Inproceedings Reference Finding the balance between efficiency and budget: preventive invasive mosquito species (IMS) surveillance
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2023 OA
Inproceedings Reference BopCo, a barcoding facility for organisms and tissues of policy concern, and its role in the identification of vector species
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2022 OA
Inproceedings Reference Solving the missing pieces of the gharial puzzle: new phylogenetic framework combining morphological, molecular, and biostratigraphic data to unravel the evolution of long-snouted crocodylians.
Among the extant crocodylians are two species with long, narrow snouts: Gavialis gangeticus,the Indian gharial and Tomistoma schlegelii, the "false" gharial. These enigmatic species are considered by the IUCN red list as critically endangered and vulnerable, respectively. However, despite this, knowledge of their evolutionary history is lacking. Extensive debate has surrounded the gharials for over four decades and remains unsolved today: the so-called gharial problem. Whereas molecular studies consistently indicate that these two species are sister taxa, morphological studies of both living and fossil taxa find that they belong to distantly related lineages. Moreover, molecular clock estimates indicate a shallow divergence time of 18-31 million years ago. This entirely contradicts the rich fossil record of gharials: in contrast to the modern gharials, these fossil taxa comprise a huge diversity and suggest that tomistomines and gavialines have diverged from each other at least 70 million years ago, prior to the K/Pg mass extinction. European museums, and especially the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, Brussels, comprise rich collections containing many of the oldest fossil gavialoids, crucial to solving the gharial problem. Nevertheless, few modern morphological studies have been performed on these specimens, and their stratigraphic age is often poorly constrained. Therefore, in a new project we will use a multidisciplinary approach to study these specimens, combining morphological study and biostratigraphic analyses using dinoflagellate cysts. Moreover, we will revise the classical methods used by paleontologists to study fossil crocodylians, devising a new phylogenetic framework that makes use of both morphological, molecular, and biostratigraphic data. Here, we will present some of the first preliminary results of this project.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2023