{"@context":{"ns0":"https://kos.lifewatch.eu/thesauri/endemisms/","rdf":"http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#","owl":"http://www.w3.org/2002/07/owl#","skos":"http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#","metadata_def":"http://data.bioontology.org/metadata/def/","dct":"http://purl.org/dc/terms/","ns1":"https://kos.lifewatch.eu/thesauri/"},"@graph":[{"@id":"ns0:c_10","@type":["owl:NamedIndividual","skos:Concept"],"skos:prefLabel":{"@value":"Neoendemic","@language":"en"},"metadata_def:mappingSameURI":{"@id":"ns0:c_10"},"metadata_def:mappingLoom":"neoendemic","skos:broader":{"@id":"ns0:c_1"},"skos:historyNote":[{"@value":"Recently formed endemic species (Lomolino M.V., Riddle B.R., Whittaker R.J. & Brown J.H., 2010. Biogeography. Fourth Edition. Sinauer Associates, Inc., Sunderland (Massachusetts), 764 pp. [ISBN 978-0-87893-494-2]).","@language":"en"},{"@value":"Endemic species whose confinement may be due to “the fact that they have only recently evolved have not yet had time to spread from their centers of origin” (Cox C.B & Moore P.D., 2010. Biogeography: An Ecological and Evolutionary Approach, 8th Edition. Wiley, 520 pp. [ISBN : 978-0-470-63794-4]).","@language":"en"}],"skos:definition":{"@value":"Species that have evolved relatively recently, as a result of changes in habitat or through a process such as evolution of polyploidy, and live near their close relatives.","@language":"en"},"dct:modified":"2017-03-13 12:40:57","dct:created":"2016-12-19 14:26:48","skos:note":{"@value":"Parenti L.R. & Ebach M.C. 2009. Comparative Biogeography: Discovering and Classifying Biogeographical Patterns of a Dynamic Earth. University of California Press, Berkeley, XIII + 292 pp. [ISBN 978-0-520-25945-4]","@language":"en"},"skos:inScheme":{"@id":"ns1:endemisms"}},{"@id":"ns0:c_1","skos:narrower":{"@id":"ns0:c_10"}}]}
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