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RECOMB
2005
Springer

A Partial Solution to the C-Value Paradox

14 years 4 months ago
A Partial Solution to the C-Value Paradox
In the half-century since the C-value paradox (the apparent lack of correlation between organismal genome size and morphological complexity) was described, there have been no explicit statistical comparisons between measures of genome size and organism complexity. It is reported here that there are significant positive correlations between measures of genome size and complexity with measures of non-hierarchical morphological complexity in 139 prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms with sequenced genomes. These correlations are robust to correction for phylogenetic history by independent contrasts, and are largely unaffected by the choice of data set for phylogenetic reconstruction. These results suggest that the C-value paradox may be more apparent than real, at least for organisms with relatively small genomes like those considered here. A complete resolution of the C-value paradox will require the consideration and inclusion of organisms with large genomes into analyses like those pres...
Jeffrey M. Marcus
Added 03 Dec 2009
Updated 03 Dec 2009
Type Conference
Year 2005
Where RECOMB
Authors Jeffrey M. Marcus
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