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Michael J. Wingfield

Researcher at University of Pretoria

Publications -  1124
Citations -  51563

Michael J. Wingfield is an academic researcher from University of Pretoria. The author has contributed to research in topics: Eucalyptus & Population. The author has an hindex of 93, co-authored 1085 publications receiving 43943 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael J. Wingfield include Great Lakes Institute of Management & Stellenbosch University.

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Botanical gardens provide valuable baseline Phytophthora diversity data

TL;DR: The results highlight the value of botanical gardens as areas for baseline data collection and early warning systems for Phytophthora species diversity in the Cape Floristic Region.
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Population dynamics of Thaumastocoris peregrinus in Eucalyptus plantations of South Africa

TL;DR: Temperature, humidity and rainfall were mostly weakly, or not at all, associated with population fluctuations, and it is clear that a complex interaction of these and other factors influence population fluctuations in an annual, site specific cycle.
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New and rare coelomycetes with appendage-bearing conidia from Pondoland, South Africa

TL;DR: During a mycological excursion to the Pondoland region of South Africa in 2008, six interesting anamorphic fungi with appendage-bearing conidia were isolated and the teleomorphic affinity of C. umtamvunae to the Helotiales is proposed based on DNA sequence data.
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Phylogenetic relationships among biological species of Armillaria from China

TL;DR: P phylogenetic relationships between Chinese Armillaria isolates and those from other parts of the world were determined based on DNA sequence data and suggest that CBS F might not represent A. singula, and that A. tabescens should be treated as a single species.
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Epitypification of Ophiostoma galeiforme and phylogeny of species in the O. galeiforme complex.

TL;DR: Morphological characteristics of isolates from Sweden, South Africa, Scotland, Chile and Aus- tria corresponded well with those originally de- scribed for O. galeiforme, and an isolate from Scot-