Richard Buggs

About Richard Buggs

Richard Buggs, With an exceptional h-index of 32 and a recent h-index of 26 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Queen Mary University of London, specializes in the field of Evolution, Speciation, Hybridization, Genomics.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Genetic barcodes for ash (Fraxinus) species and generation of new wide hybrids

Indigenous crop diversity maintained despite the introduction of major global crops in an African centre of agrobiodiversity

Maintenance and expansion of genetic and trait variation following domestication in a clonal crop

Tapping Culture Collections for Fungal Endophytes: First Genome Assemblies for Three Genera and Five Species in the Ascomycota

Genomic signals of local adaptation and hybridization in Asian white birch

The challenge of demonstrating contemporary natural selection on polygenic quantitative traits in the wild

A first draft genome of Holm oak (Quercus ilex L.), the most representative species of the Mediterranean forest and the Spanish agrosilvopastoral ecosystem “dehesa”

Rapid polygenic adaptation in a wild population of ash trees under a novel fungal epidemic

Richard Buggs Information

University

Position

Professor

Citations(all)

6361

Citations(since 2020)

2966

Cited By

4568

hIndex(all)

32

hIndex(since 2020)

26

i10Index(all)

55

i10Index(since 2020)

50

Email

University Profile Page

Google Scholar

Richard Buggs Skills & Research Interests

Evolution

Speciation

Hybridization

Genomics

Top articles of Richard Buggs

Genetic barcodes for ash (Fraxinus) species and generation of new wide hybrids

bioRxiv

2024

Indigenous crop diversity maintained despite the introduction of major global crops in an African centre of agrobiodiversity

Plants, People, Planet

2023/11

Maintenance and expansion of genetic and trait variation following domestication in a clonal crop

Molecular Ecology

2023/8

Tapping Culture Collections for Fungal Endophytes: First Genome Assemblies for Three Genera and Five Species in the Ascomycota

Genome Biology and Evolution

2023/3/1

Genomic signals of local adaptation and hybridization in Asian white birch

Molecular Ecology

2023/2

The challenge of demonstrating contemporary natural selection on polygenic quantitative traits in the wild

Molecular Ecology

2022/12

A first draft genome of Holm oak (Quercus ilex L.), the most representative species of the Mediterranean forest and the Spanish agrosilvopastoral ecosystem “dehesa”

BioRxiv

2022/10/10

Rapid polygenic adaptation in a wild population of ash trees under a novel fungal epidemic

bioRxiv

2022/8/1

A high‐quality reference genome for Fraxinus pennsylvanica for ash species restoration and research

Molecular ecology resources

2022/5

Lifestyle transitions in fusarioid fungi are frequent and lack clear genomic signatures

Molecular Biology and Evolution

2022/4/1

Introduced crops supplement rather than replace indigenous crops in an African center of agrobiodiversity

bioRxiv

2022/4/1

Lucie Büchi
Lucie Büchi

H-Index: 14

Richard Buggs
Richard Buggs

H-Index: 22

Reconfiguring Darwin’s abominable mystery

Nature Plants

2022/3

Genomic structure and diversity of oak populations in British parklands

Plants, People, Planet

2022/3

Uses and benefits of digital sequence information from plant genetic resources: Lessons learnt from botanical collections

Plants, People, Planet

2022/1

Richard Buggs
Richard Buggs

H-Index: 22

Resolving phylogeny and polyploid parentage using genus-wide genome-wide sequence data from birch trees

Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution

2021/7/1

Revision of Chassalia (Rubiaceae-Rubioideae-Palicoureeae) in Borneo, with 14 new species

European journal of taxonomy

2021/3/9

A chromosome‐scale genome assembly of European hazel (Corylus avellana L.) reveals targets for crop improvement

The Plant Journal

2021/3

The origin of Darwin’s “abominable mystery”

American Journal of Botany

2021/1

Evidence for the widespread occurrence of bacteria implicated in acute oak decline from incidental genetic sampling

Forests

2021/12/1

Extraction and high-throughput sequencing of oak heartwood DNA: Assessing the feasibility of genome-wide DNA methylation profiling

Plos one

2021/11/18

See List of Professors in Richard Buggs University(Queen Mary University of London)

Co-Authors

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