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Citation for Study 11949

About Citation title: "DNA sequence incongruence and inconsistent morphology obscure species boundaries in the Teratosphaeria suttonii species complex.".
About Study name: "DNA sequence incongruence and inconsistent morphology obscure species boundaries in the Teratosphaeria suttonii species complex.".
About This study is part of submission 11949 (Status: Published).

Citation

Taole M.M., Burgess T.I., Wingfield B.D., Wingfield M.J., & Gryzenhout G. 2011. DNA sequence incongruence and inconsistent morphology obscure species boundaries in the Teratosphaeria suttonii species complex. Mycoscience, .

Authors

  • Taole M.M.
  • Burgess T.I. Phone +61893607537
  • Wingfield B.D.
  • Wingfield M.J.
  • Gryzenhout G.

Abstract

Teratosphaeria suttonii (= Kirramyces epicoccoides) is a leaf pathogen that can cause premature defoliation, reduced growth and vigour and subsequent tree death of many Eucalyptus species. Although the fungus primarily infects mature leaves in the lower canopy, infections can spread to younger leaves during continued epidemics or when trees are stressed. Teratosphaeria suttonii has a wide distribution in Australia and has been introduced to many other parts of the world, most probably with germplasm used to establish plantations. The aim of this study was to establish the phylogenetic relationships between T. suttonii isolates from different countries and to consider whether cryptic species exist in a species complex. DNA from parts of the nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (ITS), β-tubulin and elongation factor-1α genes was sequenced and analyzed for isolates from throughout the range of T. suttonii in Australia, and from six countries (China, Indonesia, South Africa, Uruguay, USA and Vietnam) where the pathogen is introduced. Morphometrics of conidia produced both in vivo and in vitro were also considered. Analysis of the sequence data resulted in incongruent genealogies. Furthermore, groups of isolates in the genealogies could not be linked to area of origin. Likewise differences in conidial morphology could not be linked to any of the phylogenetic groups. There was no evidence of distinct species boundaries and isolates from Australia were closely related to those from other parts of the world. The results of this study supports T. suttonii as a morphologically and genetically diverse species in its natural range in Australia. The diversity is reflected within the less diverse introduced populations.

Keywords

eucalyptus diseases, fungal populations, fungal taxonomy, phylogenetics

External links

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  • Canonical resource URI: http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S11949
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