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Parasitology / Louse / Philopteridae / Parasitism / Bird louse / Maximum parsimony / Phylogenetics / Lice / Biology / Parasites


Syst. Biol. 52(1):37–47, 2003 DOI: When Do Parasites Fail to Speciate in Response to Host Speciation? K EVIN P. J OHNSON,1 R ICHARD J. ADAMS ,2 R ODERIC D. M. PAGE,3
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Document Date: 2007-07-24 12:40:32


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City

Salt Lake City / Champaign / Glasgow / Barker / Oxford / /

Company

Qiagen / GenBank / /

Continent

Africa / /

Country

United States / United Kingdom / New Zealand / /

Facility

DNA Sequencing Facility / Tracy Aviary / University of Utah / Kansas Museum of Natural History / University of Glasgow / Field Museum of Natural History / Louisiana State University Museum of Natural Science / /

IndustryTerm

heuristic search / model systems / parasite systems / cophylogenetic solution / louse systems / /

OperatingSystem

Macintosh / /

Organization

National Science Foundation / Louisiana State University / University of Utah / Salt Lake City / Department of Biology / University of Glasgow / USA Division of Environmental and Evolutionary Biology / /

Person

Nelson / Alan Baker / Clayton / Sarah Al-Tamimi / JOHNSON ET AL / Johnson / Chris Simon / Columbiform / Murray / Russell Gray / /

Position

secondary structure model of this gene region / Major / jeweler / /

Product

TreeFitter / Oxylipeurus / /

ProgrammingLanguage

ML / /

ProvinceOrState

Kansas / Utah / South Carolina / Illinois / Louisiana / /

PublishedMedium

Natural History / /

Technology

alpha / DNA Sequencing / molecular evolution / Simulation / ALE / FAILURE OF PARASITES TO SPECIATE protocols / /

URL

http /

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