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Paper Details

The whole genome sequence of the Mediterranean fruit fly, Ceratitis capitata (Wiedemann), reveals insights into the biology and adaptive evolution of a highly invasive pest species.
Genome Biol
94
2016
1800, Ceratitis capitata, Drosophila, Mb medfly genome, Mediterranean fruit, Mediterranean fruit fly, agricultural, aquaporins, contig, cuticle proteins, gene families, gene family, human, insect genomes, medfly, medfly genome sequence, medfly populations, messenger RNAs, opsins, scaffold
Author NameAffiliation
Alexie PapanicolaouHawkesbury Institute for the Environment, Western Sydney University
Peter Arensburger
Peter W AtkinsonDepartment of Entomology and Center for Disease Vector Research, University of California Riverside
Peter W AtkinsonUniversity of California Riverside
Christopher P ChildersUSDA
Huyen DinhBaylor College of Medicine
Huyen DinhBaylor College of Medicine
Harshavardhan DoddapaneniBaylor College of Medicine
Harshavardhan DoddapaneniBaylor College of Medicine
Shannon DuganBaylor College of Medicine
Shannon DuganBaylor College of Medicine
Markus FriedrichWayne State University
Richard A GibbsBaylor College of Medicine
Yi HanBaylor College of Medicine
Yi HanBaylor College of Medicine
Sandra L LeeBaylor College of Medicine
Terence D MurphyNational Center for Biotechnology Information, National Institutes of Health
Donna M MuznyBaylor College of Medicine
Donna M MuznyBaylor College of Medicine
Monica F PoelchauUSDA
Hugh M RobertsonUniversity of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Ioannis S VlachosUniversity of Thessaly, Greece and Hellenic Pasteur Institute
Ioannis S VlachosUniversity of Thessaly, Greece and Hellenic Pasteur Institute
John H WerrenUniversity of Rochester
Ernst A WimmerGeorg-August-Universitat Gottingen, Johann-Friedrich-Blumenbach-Institut fur Zoologie und Anthropologie
Kim C WorleyBaylor College of Medicine
Kim C WorleyBaylor College of Medicine
Stephen RichardsBaylor College of Medicine
Stephen RichardsBaylor College of Medicine
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