@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref25627,
author = {Siska Arie Siahaan and Iman Hidayat and Kartini Kramadibrata and Jamjan Meeboon and Susumu Takamatsu},
title = {Bauhinia purpurea, Durio zibethinus, and Nephelium lappaceum: additional hosts of the asexual morph of Erysiphe quercicola},
year = {2016},
keywords = {Erysiphaceae, Host range, Molecular phylogeny, Powdery mildew, Quercus phillyreoides},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycoscience},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Because of the obligate biotrophic nature, host relationships of powdery mildews have long been considered as conservative. Especially, no tree-parasitic powdery mildew species having wide host ranges have been known so far. However, previous reports revealed that powdery mildews occurring on eight genera of tropical fruits trees and other woody plants covering five families belong to a single species, Erysiphe quercicola. The authors found in Indonesia three additional tropical trees infected by E. quercicola, viz. Bauhinia purpurea, Durio zibethinus, and Nephelium lappaceum, which are cultivated widely in tropical regions as fruit trees, flower trees, or industrial crops. This result suggests that these tree species play important roles as alternative hosts for powdery mildew epidemics caused by E. quercicola in tropical regions. Investigations and surveys of the exact host range of E. quercicola are important for the management of this powdery mildew.}
}
Citation for Study 18959
Citation title:
"Bauhinia purpurea, Durio zibethinus, and Nephelium lappaceum: additional hosts of the asexual morph of Erysiphe quercicola".
Study name:
"Bauhinia purpurea, Durio zibethinus, and Nephelium lappaceum: additional hosts of the asexual morph of Erysiphe quercicola".
This study is part of submission 18959
(Status: Published).
Citation
Siahaan S.A., Hidayat I., Kramadibrata K., Meeboon J., & Takamatsu S. 2016. Bauhinia purpurea, Durio zibethinus, and Nephelium lappaceum: additional hosts of the asexual morph of Erysiphe quercicola. Mycoscience, .
Authors
-
Siahaan S.A.
-
Hidayat I.
-
Kramadibrata K.
-
Meeboon J.
-
Takamatsu S.
Abstract
Because of the obligate biotrophic nature, host relationships of powdery mildews have long been considered as conservative. Especially, no tree-parasitic powdery mildew species having wide host ranges have been known so far. However, previous reports revealed that powdery mildews occurring on eight genera of tropical fruits trees and other woody plants covering five families belong to a single species, Erysiphe quercicola. The authors found in Indonesia three additional tropical trees infected by E. quercicola, viz. Bauhinia purpurea, Durio zibethinus, and Nephelium lappaceum, which are cultivated widely in tropical regions as fruit trees, flower trees, or industrial crops. This result suggests that these tree species play important roles as alternative hosts for powdery mildew epidemics caused by E. quercicola in tropical regions. Investigations and surveys of the exact host range of E. quercicola are important for the management of this powdery mildew.
Keywords
Erysiphaceae, Host range, Molecular phylogeny, Powdery mildew, Quercus phillyreoides
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S18959
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref25627,
author = {Siska Arie Siahaan and Iman Hidayat and Kartini Kramadibrata and Jamjan Meeboon and Susumu Takamatsu},
title = {Bauhinia purpurea, Durio zibethinus, and Nephelium lappaceum: additional hosts of the asexual morph of Erysiphe quercicola},
year = {2016},
keywords = {Erysiphaceae, Host range, Molecular phylogeny, Powdery mildew, Quercus phillyreoides},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycoscience},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Because of the obligate biotrophic nature, host relationships of powdery mildews have long been considered as conservative. Especially, no tree-parasitic powdery mildew species having wide host ranges have been known so far. However, previous reports revealed that powdery mildews occurring on eight genera of tropical fruits trees and other woody plants covering five families belong to a single species, Erysiphe quercicola. The authors found in Indonesia three additional tropical trees infected by E. quercicola, viz. Bauhinia purpurea, Durio zibethinus, and Nephelium lappaceum, which are cultivated widely in tropical regions as fruit trees, flower trees, or industrial crops. This result suggests that these tree species play important roles as alternative hosts for powdery mildew epidemics caused by E. quercicola in tropical regions. Investigations and surveys of the exact host range of E. quercicola are important for the management of this powdery mildew.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 25627
AU - Siahaan,Siska Arie
AU - Hidayat,Iman
AU - Kramadibrata,Kartini
AU - Meeboon,Jamjan
AU - Takamatsu,Susumu
T1 - Bauhinia purpurea, Durio zibethinus, and Nephelium lappaceum: additional hosts of the asexual morph of Erysiphe quercicola
PY - 2016
KW - Erysiphaceae
KW - Host range
KW - Molecular phylogeny
KW - Powdery mildew
KW - Quercus phillyreoides
UR - http://dx.doi.org/
N2 - Because of the obligate biotrophic nature, host relationships of powdery mildews have long been considered as conservative. Especially, no tree-parasitic powdery mildew species having wide host ranges have been known so far. However, previous reports revealed that powdery mildews occurring on eight genera of tropical fruits trees and other woody plants covering five families belong to a single species, Erysiphe quercicola. The authors found in Indonesia three additional tropical trees infected by E. quercicola, viz. Bauhinia purpurea, Durio zibethinus, and Nephelium lappaceum, which are cultivated widely in tropical regions as fruit trees, flower trees, or industrial crops. This result suggests that these tree species play important roles as alternative hosts for powdery mildew epidemics caused by E. quercicola in tropical regions. Investigations and surveys of the exact host range of E. quercicola are important for the management of this powdery mildew.
L3 -
JF - Mycoscience
VL -
IS -
ER -