A numerical cladistic analysis, based on 23 terminal groups and 63 morphological characters, was done to infer phylogenetic relationships within the Eurasian catfish family Siluridae. Nine hundred and forty-five equally most parsimonious trees (134 steps, consistency index 0.634) were found that differ in their resolutions of four polychotomies. Strict consensus of these trees includes ten internal nodes, does not support monophyly of Silurus, Ompok and Kvpfopteru, as usually defined, and offers ambiguous support for monophyly of WauagO. Sihrlrr and Ktyptopterus are each composed of two non-sister group clades, and Ompok is composed of at least two such clades. Heuristic searches constrained by monophyly of Silurus, Ompok or Ktyptopterus yielded trees five or six steps longer than the shortest trees free of constraints. The strict consensus also infers a basal dichotomy that separates the Siluridae into a temperate Eurasian clade with about 20 nominal species and a subtropical/tropical south and southeast Asian clade with about 7.5 nominal species. The distributions of these clades overlap in a relatively narrow region of east Asia. A heuristic search for trees 1 step longer than the shortest trees yielded 253890 trees. A strict consensus of these trees also infers a basal dichotomy between the above-mentioned clades. This analysis revealed four additional putative synapomorphies of the Siluridae, pending further resolution of the family's outgroup relationships.
Supply chain integration—merging products for health programs into a single supply chain—tends to be the dominant model in health sector reform. However, multiplicity in a supply system may be justified as a risk management strategy that can better ensure product availability, advance specific health program objectives, and increase efficiency.
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