Thomas E. Dowling
Aus WORLDFISH WIKI
Thomas E. Dowling
- School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, PO Box 874501, Tempe AZ 85287–4501.
- E-mail: thomas.dowling@asu.edu
Publikationen
- Dowling, T.E., Hoeh, W.R., Smith, G.R. & Brown, W.M. 1992. Evolutionary Relationships of Shiners in the Genus Luxilus (Cyprinidae) as Determined by Analysis of Mitochondrial DNA. Copeia, 1992 (2): 306-322. Zitatseite
- Alves, M.J., Collares-Pereira, M.J., Dowling, T.E. & Coelho, M.M. 2002. The genetics of maintenance of an all-male lineage in the Squalius alburnoides complex. Journal of Fish Biology, 60 (3): 649-662. (doi) Zitatseite
- Smith, G.R., Dowling, T.E., Gobalet, K.W., Lugaski, T., Shiozawa, D.K. & Evans, R.P. 2002. Biogeography and timing of evolutionary events among Great Basin fishes. Pp. 175-234 in: Hershler, R., Madsen, D.B. & Currey, D.R. (eds.): Great Basin aquatic systems history. Smithsonian Contributions to Earth Sciences, #33. Zitatseite
- Dowling, T.E., Marsh, P.C., Kelsen, A.T. & Tibbets, C.A. 2004. Genetic monitoring of wild and repatriated populations of endangered razorback sucker (Xyrauchen texanus, Catostomidae, Teleostei) in Lake Mohave, Arizona-Nevada. Molecular Ecology, 14 (1) [2005]: 123-135. (doi) Zitatseite
- Smith, G.R., Chow, J., Unmack, P.J., Markle, D.F. & Dowling, T.E. 2017. Evolution of the Rhinichthys osculus complex (Teleostei: Cyprinidae) in Western North America. Miscellaneous Publications Museum of Zoology University of Michigan, 204 (2): 1–83. Zitatseite
- Page, L.M., Bemis, K.E., Dowling, T.E., Espinosa-Pérez, H.S., Findley, L.T., Gilbert, C.R., Hartel, K.E., Lea, R.N., Mandrak, N.E., Neighbors, M.A., Schmitter-Soto, J.J. & Walker, H.J., Jr. 2023. Common and scientific names of fishes from the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Eighth edition. American Fisheries Society, Special Publication, No. 37: i-vii + 1-439. (doi) Zitatseite
- Wicks, A.J., Bowman, M. & Dowling, T.E. 2024. Contrasting the role of historic factors in phylogeograpic patterns in the native Johnny darter (Etheostoma nigrum) and invasive round goby (Neogobius melanostomus) in lower Michigan. Ecology and Evolution, First published: 31 October 2024. (doi) Zitatseite