Verbylaitė, R.; Aravanopoulos, F.A.; Baliuckas, V.; Tourvas, N.; Farsakoglou, A.-M.; Kotina, V.-M.; Lyrou, F.G.; Juškauskaitė, A.; Petrokas, R.; Lygis, V.
The Central-Periphery Hypothesis Revisited: Implications for Long-Term Genetic Conservation. Plants 2025, 14, 3563.
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants14233563
AMA Style
Verbylaitė R, Aravanopoulos FA, Baliuckas V, Tourvas N, Farsakoglou A-M, Kotina V-M, Lyrou FG, Juškauskaitė A, Petrokas R, Lygis V.
The Central-Periphery Hypothesis Revisited: Implications for Long-Term Genetic Conservation. Plants. 2025; 14(23):3563.
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants14233563
Chicago/Turabian Style
Verbylaitė, Rita, Filippos A. Aravanopoulos, Virgilijus Baliuckas, Nikolaos Tourvas, Anna-Maria Farsakoglou, Vasiliki-Maria Kotina, Fani G. Lyrou, Aušra Juškauskaitė, Raimundas Petrokas, and Vaidotas Lygis.
2025. "The Central-Periphery Hypothesis Revisited: Implications for Long-Term Genetic Conservation" Plants 14, no. 23: 3563.
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants14233563
APA Style
Verbylaitė, R., Aravanopoulos, F. A., Baliuckas, V., Tourvas, N., Farsakoglou, A.-M., Kotina, V.-M., Lyrou, F. G., Juškauskaitė, A., Petrokas, R., & Lygis, V.
(2025). The Central-Periphery Hypothesis Revisited: Implications for Long-Term Genetic Conservation. Plants, 14(23), 3563.
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants14233563