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Falciparum malaria from coastal Tanzania and Zanzibar remains highly connected despite effective control efforts on the archipelago

Publication ,  Preprint
Morgan, A; Brazeau, N; Ngasala, B; Mhamilawa, L; Denton, M; Msellem, M; Morris, U; Filer, D; Aydemir, O; Bailey, J; Parr, J; Mårtensson, A ...
2019

Duke Scholars

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Publication Date

2019
 

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Morgan, A., Brazeau, N., Ngasala, B., Mhamilawa, L., Denton, M., Msellem, M., … Juliano, J. (2019). Falciparum malaria from coastal Tanzania and Zanzibar remains highly connected despite effective control efforts on the archipelago. bioRxiv. https://doi.org/10.1101/863019
Morgan, Andrew, Nicholas Brazeau, Billy Ngasala, Lwidiko Mhamilawa, Madeline Denton, Mwinyi Msellem, Ulrika Morris, et al. “Falciparum malaria from coastal Tanzania and Zanzibar remains highly connected despite effective control efforts on the archipelago.” BioRxiv, 2019. https://doi.org/10.1101/863019.
Morgan A, Brazeau N, Ngasala B, Mhamilawa L, Denton M, Msellem M, et al. Falciparum malaria from coastal Tanzania and Zanzibar remains highly connected despite effective control efforts on the archipelago. bioRxiv. 2019.
Morgan A, Brazeau N, Ngasala B, Mhamilawa L, Denton M, Msellem M, Morris U, Filer D, Aydemir O, Bailey J, Parr J, Mårtensson A, Bjorkman A, Juliano J. Falciparum malaria from coastal Tanzania and Zanzibar remains highly connected despite effective control efforts on the archipelago. bioRxiv. 2019.

DOI

Publication Date

2019