M
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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Journal ArticleDOI
Molecular characterisation of Armillaria species from Zimbabwe.
TL;DR: Differences in IGS-1 sequences strongly suggest that the Zimbabwean groups represent three distinct taxa, similar to those identified as A. heimii and A. fuscipes.
Journal ArticleDOI
Genetic variation in the wattle wilt pathogen Ceratocystis albofundus
TL;DR: The C. albofundus population was found to have a high level of both nuclear and mitochondrial gene diversity when compared with published data of populations of otherCeratocystis spp.
Book ChapterDOI
Impact Of Fungal Pathogens in Natural Forest Ecosystems: A Focus on Eucalypts
TL;DR: Vigilant and strictly applied quarantine measures are necessary to prevent the introduction of potentially devastating pathogens into Australia from the tropics and sub-tropics.
Journal ArticleDOI
A List of Eucalyptus Leaf Fungi and their Potential Importance to South African Forestry
TL;DR: Fungi reported from Eucalyptus leaves are tabulated, giving their host species and world geographic distribution, and a brief evaluation is made of the status of the fungi.
Journal ArticleDOI
Fungal Systematics and Evolution: FUSE 3.
Irmgard Krisai-Greilhuber,Yun Chen,Sana Jabeen,Hugo Madrid,Seonju Marincowitz,Abdul Razaq,Hana Ševčíková,Hermann Voglmayr,Kenan Yazici,André Aptroot,Ali Aslan,Teun Boekhout,Jan Borovička,Pedro W. Crous,Sobia Ilyas,Fahimeh Jami,Yu-Lan Jiang,Abdul Nasir Khalid,Anna Kolecka,Tereza Konvalinková,Chada Norphanphoun,Shabnum Shaheen,Yong Wang,Michael J. Wingfield,Shi-Ping Wu,Yue-Ming Wu,Jie-Ying Yu +26 more
TL;DR: Most of the new taxa are Ascomycetes, but the study also includes a new variety of a Basidiomycete.