William S. Pearman

About William S. Pearman

William S. Pearman, With an exceptional h-index of 5 and a recent h-index of 5 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at University of Otago, specializes in the field of bioinformatics, population genetics, genomics, metagenomics, microbial ecology.

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

Host population crashes disrupt the diversity of associated marine microbiomes

Macroalgal microbiome biogeography is shaped by environmental drivers rather than geographic distance

The adaptive and biogeographic significance of the microbiome of southern bull kelp (Durvillaea)

The future of molecular ecology in Aotearoa New Zealand: an early career perspective

Meta‐analysis of Antarctic phylogeography reveals strong sampling bias and critical knowledge gaps

Commonly used Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium filtering schemes impact population structure inferences using RADseq data

Southern Hemisphere coasts are biologically connected by frequent, long-distance rafting events

Long-read sequencing reveals atypical mitochondrial genome structure in a New Zealand marine isopod

William S. Pearman Information

University

Position

___

Citations(all)

179

Citations(since 2020)

178

Cited By

15

hIndex(all)

5

hIndex(since 2020)

5

i10Index(all)

4

i10Index(since 2020)

4

Email

University Profile Page

Google Scholar

William S. Pearman Skills & Research Interests

bioinformatics

population genetics

genomics

metagenomics

microbial ecology

Top articles of William S. Pearman

Host population crashes disrupt the diversity of associated marine microbiomes

Environmental Microbiology

2024/3/22

Macroalgal microbiome biogeography is shaped by environmental drivers rather than geographic distance

Annals of Botany

2024/1/1

The adaptive and biogeographic significance of the microbiome of southern bull kelp (Durvillaea)

2023

The future of molecular ecology in Aotearoa New Zealand: an early career perspective

Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand

2022/12/30

Meta‐analysis of Antarctic phylogeography reveals strong sampling bias and critical knowledge gaps

2022/12

Commonly used Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium filtering schemes impact population structure inferences using RADseq data

Molecular Ecology Resources

2022/10

Southern Hemisphere coasts are biologically connected by frequent, long-distance rafting events

Current Biology

2022/7/25

Long-read sequencing reveals atypical mitochondrial genome structure in a New Zealand marine isopod

Royal Society Open Science

2022/1/12

Testing the advantages and disadvantages of short-and long-read eukaryotic metagenomics using simulated reads

BMC Bioinformatics

2020/12

MARES, a replicable pipeline and curated reference database for marine eukaryote metabarcoding

Scientific Data

2020/7/3

Concordant geographic and genetic structure revealed by genotyping‐by‐sequencing in a New Zealand marine isopod

Ecology and Evolution

2020/12

See List of Professors in William S. Pearman University(University of Otago)

Co-Authors

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