@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref18981,
author = {Jana Frank and Pedro W. Crous and Johannes (Ewald) Zacharias Groenewald and Bernhard Oertel and Kevin D Hyde and Pheng Phengsintham and Hans-Josef Schroers},
title = {Microcyclospora and Microcyclosporella: novel genera accommodating epiphytic fungi causing sooty blotch on apple},
year = {2010},
keywords = {Devriesia, hyphomycetes, Malus, microfungi, Pseudocercospora, Pseudocercosporella, SBFS, taxonomy},
doi = {10.3767/003158510X510560},
url = {http://www.persoonia.org/Issue/24/09.pdf},
pmid = {},
journal = {Persoonia},
volume = {24},
number = {},
pages = {93--105},
abstract = {Recent studies have found a wide range of ascomycetes to be associated with sooty blotch and flyspeck (SBFS) blemishes on the surfaces of pomaceous fruits, specifically apples. Based on collections of such fungi from apple orchards in Germany and Slovenia we introduce two novel genera according to analyses of morphological characters and nuclear ribosomal DNA sequences (large subunit and internal transcribed spacer regions). Microcyclosporella is represented by a single species, M. mali, and is presently known from Germany and Slovenia. Microcyclosporella is Pseudocercosporella-like in morphology, but genetically and morphologically distinct from Pseudocercosporella s.str., for which an epitype is designated based on a fresh collection of P. bakeri from Laos. Furthermore, Pseudocercosporella is shown to be paraphyletic within the Capnodiales. Microcyclospora gen. nov. is Pseudocercospora-like in morphology, but is genetically and morphologically distinct from Pseudocercospora s.str., which is based on P. vitis. Three species, Microcyclospora malicola, M. pomicola (both collected in Germany), and M. tardicrescens (collected in Slovenia) are described. Finally, a new species of Devriesia, D. pseudoamericana, is described from pome fruit surfaces collected in Germany. Devriesia is shown to be paraphyletic, and to represent several lineages of which only Devriesia s.str. is thermotolerant. Further collections are required, however, before the latter generic complex can be resolved.}
}
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Citation title:
"Microcyclospora and Microcyclosporella: novel genera accommodating epiphytic fungi causing sooty blotch on apple".

Study name:
"Microcyclospora and Microcyclosporella: novel genera accommodating epiphytic fungi causing sooty blotch on apple".

This study is part of submission 10537
(Status: Published).
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