taxonID	type	format	identifier	references	title	description	created	creator	contributor	publisher	audience	source	license	rightsHolder	datasetID
03C68546170AE979B7F2FDC0FE443238.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7182495/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7182495	Fig. 7. Shape of third abdominal sternite,Cryptopone vs.Wadeura. Cryptopone gilvagrande (CASENT064143),lateral view (A), oblique ventral view (B).Wadeura guianensis (CASENT0640149), lateral view (C), oblique ventral view (D). Scale bars are 0.2 mm.	Fig. 7. Shape of third abdominal sternite,Cryptopone vs.Wadeura. Cryptopone gilvagrande (CASENT064143),lateral view (A), oblique ventral view (B).Wadeura guianensis (CASENT0640149), lateral view (C), oblique ventral view (D). Scale bars are 0.2 mm.	2022-01-25	Branstetter, Michael G.;Longino, John T.		Zenodo	biologists	Branstetter, Michael G.;Longino, John T.			
03C685461709E978B7F2FE3BFD32337D.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7182493/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7182493	Fig. 6. Biogeography of the Cryptopone gilva complex within Central America.Chronogram inferred using BEAST2,300 UCE loci, and a fixed topology (all UCE samples and SWSC-EN partitioning). Only results for the C. gilva complex are shown (see Supp Fig. 6 [online only] for the full results). Numbers on nodes are mean ages in millions of years ago and node bars are 95% Highest Posterior Densities (HPD).The map inset shows the distribution of C. gilva-clade samples within Central America. Colored dots match tip labels of the chronogram. Sites where specimens were identified by morphology alone (no sequencing) are shown as x for C. gilvagrande and a small black dot for C. guatemalensis. Samples of true C. gilva from the United States are not shown in the map.	Fig. 6. Biogeography of the Cryptopone gilva complex within Central America.Chronogram inferred using BEAST2,300 UCE loci, and a fixed topology (all UCE samples and SWSC-EN partitioning). Only results for the C. gilva complex are shown (see Supp Fig. 6 [online only] for the full results). Numbers on nodes are mean ages in millions of years ago and node bars are 95% Highest Posterior Densities (HPD).The map inset shows the distribution of C. gilva-clade samples within Central America. Colored dots match tip labels of the chronogram. Sites where specimens were identified by morphology alone (no sequencing) are shown as x for C. gilvagrande and a small black dot for C. guatemalensis. Samples of true C. gilva from the United States are not shown in the map.	2022-01-25	Branstetter, Michael G.;Longino, John T.		Zenodo	biologists	Branstetter, Michael G.;Longino, John T.			
03C685461709E978B7F2F918FB5534FE.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7182493/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7182493	Fig. 6. Biogeography of the Cryptopone gilva complex within Central America.Chronogram inferred using BEAST2,300 UCE loci, and a fixed topology (all UCE samples and SWSC-EN partitioning). Only results for the C. gilva complex are shown (see Supp Fig. 6 [online only] for the full results). Numbers on nodes are mean ages in millions of years ago and node bars are 95% Highest Posterior Densities (HPD).The map inset shows the distribution of C. gilva-clade samples within Central America. Colored dots match tip labels of the chronogram. Sites where specimens were identified by morphology alone (no sequencing) are shown as x for C. gilvagrande and a small black dot for C. guatemalensis. Samples of true C. gilva from the United States are not shown in the map.	Fig. 6. Biogeography of the Cryptopone gilva complex within Central America.Chronogram inferred using BEAST2,300 UCE loci, and a fixed topology (all UCE samples and SWSC-EN partitioning). Only results for the C. gilva complex are shown (see Supp Fig. 6 [online only] for the full results). Numbers on nodes are mean ages in millions of years ago and node bars are 95% Highest Posterior Densities (HPD).The map inset shows the distribution of C. gilva-clade samples within Central America. Colored dots match tip labels of the chronogram. Sites where specimens were identified by morphology alone (no sequencing) are shown as x for C. gilvagrande and a small black dot for C. guatemalensis. Samples of true C. gilva from the United States are not shown in the map.	2022-01-25	Branstetter, Michael G.;Longino, John T.		Zenodo	biologists	Branstetter, Michael G.;Longino, John T.			
