María P. Martín
Spanish National Research Council
213 Papers
1.1K Citations
María P. Martín is an academic researcher from Spanish National Research Council. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biology & Phylogenetic tree. The author has an hindex of 41, co-authored 203 publications. Previous affiliations of María P. Martín include University of Barcelona & University of Copenhagen Faculty of Life Sciences.
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Papers
Phylogeny Of Cuscuta Subgenus Cuscuta (convolvulaceae) Based On Nrdna Its And Chloroplast Trnl Intron Sequences
Miguel A. García,María P. Martín +1 more
TL;DR: The first phylogenetic study of the subgenus Cuscuta using nuclear ITS rDNA and chloroplast trnL intron sequences is presented and several individuals of particular taxonomic difficulty or wide geographical distribution were sampled.
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Insight into the Cladonia convoluta-C. foliacea (Cladoniaceae, Ascomycota) complex and related species, revealed through morphological, biochemical and phylogenetic analyses
TL;DR: Molecular, chemical and morphological characters and phylogenetic analyses gave evidence to delimit two taxa in the C. convoluta/C.
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Novel One‐Step Synthesis of Porous‐Supported Catalysts by Activated‐Carbon Templating
Jesús Blanco,Alice L. Petre,Malcolm Yates,María P. Martín,Silvia Suárez,Juan Antonio González Martín +5 more
Abstract: Highly dispersed noble-metal particles on porous supports have multiple applications in industrial catalyzed processes. [
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Multilocus approach to species recognition in the Cladonia humilis complex (Cladoniaceae, Ascomycota)
TL;DR: It is suggested that morphological characters and secondary metabolites have less taxonomical value than thought in the Cladonia humilis complex and use of multilocus phylogeny is recommended to delimit species.
Cladonia subturgida and C. iberica (Cladoniaceae) form a single, morphologically and chemically polymorphic species
TL;DR: The results prove that C. subturgida and C. iberica constitute a single, morphologically and chemically polymorphic species, which shows great morphological polymorphism.
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