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1. Trio-binned genomes of the woodrats Neotoma bryanti and N. lepida reveal novel gene islands and rapid copy number evolution of xenobiotic metabolizing cytochrome p450 genes

3. Dietary Breadth Predicts Toxin Expression Complexity in the Venoms of North American Gartersnakes.

4. Tandem duplication of serpin genes yields functional variation and snake venom inhibitors.

5. Phylogenomic Discordance is Driven by Wide-Spread Introgression and Incomplete Lineage Sorting During Rapid Species Diversification Within Rattlesnakes (Viperidae: Crotalus and Sistrurus).

6. High-throughput amino acid-level characterization of the interactions of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 with variably divergent proteases.

7. Selection Across the Three-Dimensional Structure of Venom Proteins from North American Scolopendromorph Centipedes.

8. The genetic regulatory architecture and epigenomic basis for age-related changes in rattlesnake venom.

9. A genome assembly for the southern Pacific rattlesnake, Crotalus oreganus helleri, in the western rattlesnake species complex.

10. Emergence and influence of sequence bias in evolutionarily malleable, mammalian tandem arrays.

11. Sequence Divergence in Venom Genes Within and Between Montane Pitviper (Viperidae: Crotalinae: Cerrophidion) Species is Driven by Mutation-Drift Equilibrium.

12. Genetic characterization of potential venom resistance proteins in California ground squirrels (Otospermophilus beecheyi) using transcriptome analyses.

13. Biodiversity in the Lyme-light: ecological restoration and tick-borne diseases in Europe.

14. A Disease Outbreak in Beef Cattle Associated with Anaplasma and Mycoplasma Infections.

15. Trio-binned genomes of the woodrats Neotoma bryanti and Neotoma lepida reveal novel gene islands and rapid copy number evolution of xenobiotic metabolizing genes.

16. Evolutionary allometry and ecological correlates of fang length evolution in vipers.

17. The roles of balancing selection and recombination in the evolution of rattlesnake venom.

18. Venom Gene Sequence Diversity and Expression Jointly Shape Diet Adaptation in Pitvipers.

19. Individual Variability in Bothrops atrox Snakes Collected from Different Habitats in the Brazilian Amazon: New Findings on Venom Composition and Functionality.

20. Deep mutational scanning of the plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 functional landscape.

21. Phenotypic and functional variation in venom and venom resistance of two sympatric rattlesnakes and their prey.

22. Adaptive divergence despite low effective population size in a peripherally isolated population of the pygmy rabbit, Brachylagus idahoensis.

23. Phylogenetically diverse diets favor more complex venoms in North American pitvipers.

24. Size Matters: An Evaluation of the Molecular Basis of Ontogenetic Modifications in the Composition of Bothrops jararacussu Snake Venom.

25. Gradual and Discrete Ontogenetic Shifts in Rattlesnake Venom Composition and Assessment of Hormonal and Ecological Correlates.

26. Physiological Stress Integrates Resistance to Rattlesnake Venom and the Onset of Risky Foraging in California Ground Squirrels.

27. The molecular basis of venom resistance in a rattlesnake-squirrel predator-prey system.

28. Intraspecific sequence and gene expression variation contribute little to venom diversity in sidewinder rattlesnakes ( Crotalus cerastes).

29. Serum-based inhibition of pitviper venom by eastern indigo snakes ( Drymarchon couperi ).

30. Comparative venom-gland transcriptomics and venom proteomics of four Sidewinder Rattlesnake (Crotalus cerastes) lineages reveal little differential expression despite individual variation.

31. Local prey community composition and genetic distance predict venom divergence among populations of the northern Pacific rattlesnake (Crotalus oreganus).

32. Evaluating the Performance of De Novo Assembly Methods for Venom-Gland Transcriptomics.

33. Good vibrations: Assessing the stability of snake venom composition after researcher-induced disturbance in the laboratory.

34. Venom Resistance as a Model for Understanding the Molecular Basis of Complex Coevolutionary Adaptations.

35. No safety in the trees: Local and species-level adaptation of an arboreal squirrel to the venom of sympatric rattlesnakes.

36. Coevolution of venom function and venom resistance in a rattlesnake predator and its squirrel prey.

37. Evaluating the thermal effects of translocation in a large-bodied pitviper.

38. Roads are associated with a blunted stress response in a North American pit viper.

39. Wet- and dry-season steroid hormone profiles and stress reactivity of an insular dwarf snake, the Hog Island boa (Boa constrictor imperator).

40. Experimentally altered navigational demands induce changes in the cortical forebrain of free-ranging northern pacific rattlesnakes (Crotalus o. oreganus).

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