User:Jts1882/cladeN/Crocodiles
The following cladograms were copied from Wikipedia mainspace articles and used to test the Lua module version of the {{clade}} using the test template {{cladeN}}. The cladograms were used to test the template transclusion size of various clade module versions.
Crocodile cladograms.
[edit]Note that the three big trees on this page exceed the template inclusion size (see data on Post-expand include size below) and the four tree on this page doesn't display.
This was a known issue with the big cladograms on the Neosuchia page. The second tree had to be trimmed to get it to fit. The first attempt with Template:CladeN failed with the Neosuchia page, but the optimized version of CladeN now gives a smaller template inclusion size than Template:Clade.
See test Neosuchia page: User:Jts1882/sandbox/test/Neosuchia
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CladeN data.
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Resources used by cladeN without the preprocessing loop:
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Crocodiles
[edit]Crocodyliformes
[edit]Below is a simplified cladogram based on Fiorelli and Calvo (2007).[1]
Crocodylomorpha |
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In 2012, paleontologists Mario Bronzati, Felipe Chinaglia Montefeltro, and Max C. Langer conducted a broad phylogenetic analysis to produce supertrees of Crocodyliformes, including 184 species. The most parsimonious trees were highly resolved, meaning the phylogenetic relationships found in the analysis were highly likely. Below is a consensus tree from the study:[2]
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Neosuchia
[edit]Below is a cladogram showing the phylogenetic relationships of neosuchians from Buscalioni et al., 2011:[3]
Neosuchia |
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In 2012, paleontologists Mario Bronzati, Felipe Chinaglia Montefeltro, and Max C. Langer conducted a broad phylogenetic analysis to produce supertrees of Crocodyliformes, including 184 species. The most parsimonious trees were highly resolved, meaning the phylogenetic relationships found in the analysis were highly likely. Below is a consensus tree from the study:[2]
Neosuchia |
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Note: the Metriorhynchoidea were removed to make the template fit on the page without exceeding transclusion limit (size or depth?). That page uses a different classification, so need to get from old revisions (see April 6 2012)
- ^ Fiorelli LE, Calvo JO. 2007. The first "protosuchian" (Archosauria: Crocodyliformes) from the Cretaceous (Santonian) of Gondwana. Arquivos do Museu Nacional, Rio de Janeiro 65 (4): 417-459.
- ^ a b Bronzati, M.; Montefeltro, F. C.; Langer, M. C. (2012). "A species-level supertree of Crocodyliformes". Historical Biology. 24 (6): 598–606. doi:10.1080/08912963.2012.662680. Cite error: The named reference "BML12" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ Buscalioni, A.D.; Piras, P.; Vullo, R.; Signore, M.; Barbera, C. (2011). "Early eusuchia crocodylomorpha from the vertebrate-rich Plattenkalk of Pietraroia (Lower Albian, southern Apennines, Italy)". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 163: S199–S227. doi:10.1111/j.1096-3642.2011.00718.x.