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Domino A. Joyce

Researcher at University of Hull

Publications -  40
Citations -  2196

Domino A. Joyce is an academic researcher from University of Hull. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cichlid & Adaptive radiation. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 34 publications receiving 2056 citations. Previous affiliations of Domino A. Joyce include University of Bern & Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology.

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Detection and quantification of fusarium culmorum and fusarium graminearum in cereals using pcr assays

TL;DR: In this article, random amplified polymorphic DNA assays were used to identify amplification products characteristic of either Fusarium culmorum or fusarium graminearum and selected fragments were cloned, sequenced and primer pairs were developed which permitted specific detection of F. graminearlyum using conventional PCR.
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Age of Cichlids: New Dates for Ancient Lake Fish Radiations

TL;DR: Accumulation of genetic diversity within the radiating lineages of the African Lakes Malawi, Victoria and Barombi Mbo, and Palaeolake Makgadikgadi began around or after the time of lake basin formation, suggesting lakes may have captured preexisting cichlid diversity from multiple sources from which adaptive radiations have evolved.
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An extant cichlid fish radiation emerged in an extinct Pleistocene lake

TL;DR: The discovery of a recently adaptive radiation in a large lake that dried up in the Holocene seeded all major river systems of southern Africa with ecologically diverse cichlids reveals how local evolutionary processes operating during a short window of ecological opportunity can have a major and lasting effect on biodiversity on a continental scale.
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Balancing selection, random genetic drift, and genetic variation at the major histocompatibility complex in two wild populations of guppies (Poecilia reticulata).

TL;DR: Analysis of genetic variation in two wild populations of the Trinidadian guppy shows that selection by parasites plays a particularly important role in the evolution of guppies in the upland habitat, which has resulted in high levels of MHC diversity being maintained in this population despite considerable genetic drift.
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Repeated colonization and hybridization in Lake Malawi cichlids

TL;DR: Broad taxonomic sampling and nuclear DNA markers are used and find that the Lake Malawi radiation is not monophyletic, but instead contains genetic material from divergent riverine ancestors indicating multiple invasions and hybridization.