M
Maria Anice Mureb Sallum
Researcher at University of São Paulo
Publications - 223
Citations - 4163
Maria Anice Mureb Sallum is an academic researcher from University of São Paulo. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anopheles & Culex. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 204 publications receiving 3593 citations. Previous affiliations of Maria Anice Mureb Sallum include Smithsonian Institution & National Museum of Natural History.
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Phylogeny of Anophelinae (Diptera: Culicidae) based on nuclear ribosomal and mitochondrial DNA sequences
Maria Anice Mureb Sallum,Ted R. Schultz,Peter G. Foster,K. Aronstein,Robert A. Wirtz,Richard C. Wilkerson +5 more
TL;DR: The most basal relationships within genus Anopheles are not well resolved by any of the data partitions, although the results of statistical analyses of the rDNA data suggest that the clade consisting of Bironella, Lophopodomyia, Nyssorhynchus and Kerteszia is the sister to theClade containing Cellia and Anophele.
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Yellow fever virus in Haemagogus leucocelaenus and Aedes serratus mosquitoes, southern Brazil, 2008
Jáder da Cruz Cardoso,Marco Antônio Barreto de Almeida,Edmilson Moutinho dos Santos,Daltro Fernandes da Fonseca,Maria Anice Mureb Sallum,Carlos Alberto Noll,Hamilton Antônio de Oliveira Monteiro,Ana Cecília Ribeiro Cruz,Valéria Lima Carvalho,Eliana Vieira Pinto,Francisco Corrêa Castro,Joaquim Pinto Nunes Neto,Maria N.O. Segura,Pedro Fernando da Costa Vasconcelos +13 more
TL;DR: The results confirmed the role of Hg.
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Six new species of the Anopheles leucosphyrus group, reinterpretation of An. elegans and vector implications
TL;DR: Six new species are here described from adult, pupal and larval stages (with illustrations of immature stages) and formally named as follows: An.
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Phylogeny of Anophelinae (Diptera Culicidae) Based on Morphological Characters
TL;DR: A cladistic analysis of 163 morphological characters from females, males, fourth-instar larvae, and pupae of 64 species indicates that Anophelinae is monophyletic, that Chagasia is the earliest-diverged lineage within Anop Helinae, and that the genus Anopheles, as currently defined, is paraphyletic.
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Genetic variability of Aedes aegypti in the Americas using a mitochondrial gene: evidence of multiple introductions
José Eduardo Bracco,Margareth Lara Capurro,Ricardo Lourenço-de-Oliveira,Maria Anice Mureb Sallum +3 more
TL;DR: Phylogeographic structure detected by the NCA was consistent with distant colonization within one clade and fragmentation followed by range expansion via long distance dispersal in the other, suggestive of a gene pool division that may support the hypothesis of occurrence of two subspecies of Ae.