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John W.H. Trueman

Researcher at Australian National University

Publications -  45
Citations -  2385

John W.H. Trueman is an academic researcher from Australian National University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Monophyly. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 45 publications receiving 2240 citations. Previous affiliations of John W.H. Trueman include Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation.

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A taxonomic revision of Metarhizium based on a phylogenetic analysis of rDNA sequence data

TL;DR: The taxonomy of Metarhizium has been reassessed using sequence data and RAPD patterns from 123 isolates recognised as M. anisopliae, M. flavoviride or M. album, and four clades are recognised and redefined according to ITS sequence data.
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Integrative taxonomy, or iterative taxonomy?

TL;DR: The term ‘iterative taxonomy’ is proposed for current practice that treats species boundaries as hypotheses to be tested with new evidence, and a search for biological or evolutionary explanations for discordant evidence can be used to distinguish between competing species boundary hypotheses.
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Phylogenetic relationships of world populations of Bemisia tabaci (Gennadius) using ribosomal ITS1.

TL;DR: The phylogenetic relationships of the different populations of B. tabaci and the origins of effective natural enemies of the B biotype suggest that knowing the origin of the A biotype is not essential to finding effective agents and supports the notion that crop management is the key aspect to control.
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Bemisia argentifolii is a race of B. tabaci (Hemiptera: Aleyrodidae): the molecular genetic differentiation of B. tabaci populations around the world.

TL;DR: Phylogenetic and minimum spanning network analyses identified six major races, Asia, Bali, Australia, sub-Saharan Africa, Mediterranean/Asia Minor/Africa and New World as well as a large collection of genotypes from the Asia region with no strong association with any of the races.