@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref24282,
author = {Martin P. A. Coetzee and Brenda D Wingfield and Jun Zhao and Phia van Coller and Michael J Wingfield},
title = {Phylogenetic relationships among biological species of Armillaria from China},
year = {2015},
keywords = {Fungal diagnostics, Intergenic spacer region one (IGS-1), Root rot, Transcription elongation factor one alpha (TEF-1α) gene},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycoscience},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Fourteen Chinese Biological Species (CBS) of Armillaria were previously identified in a collection of Chinese isolates. CBS C, F, G, H, J, L, N and O remained unnamed, while the remaining isolates included A. borealis, A. cepistipes, A. gallica, A. mellea, A. sinapina and A. tabescens. CBS F was suggested to represent A. singula based on basidiocarp morphology. In this study, phylogenetic relationships between Chinese Armillaria isolates and those from other parts of the world were determined based on DNA sequence data. Results of this study suggest that CBS F might not represent A. singula, and that A. monadelpha (a name applied to the North American form of A. tabescens by some authors) and A. tabescens should be treated as a single species. Four main phylogenetic lineages, referred to as the A. ostoyae, A. gallica, A. tabescens and A. mellea clusters, were identified on the phylogenetic trees. The unnamed biological species grouped within the ?A. gallica cluster? and were phylogenetically closely related. The results of this study contribute to our current understanding of the systematics of Armillaria from South East Asia where these fungi are relatively poorly known.}
}
Citation for Study 17215
Citation title:
"Phylogenetic relationships among biological species of Armillaria from China".
Study name:
"Phylogenetic relationships among biological species of Armillaria from China".
This study is part of submission 17215
(Status: Published).
Citation
Coetzee M., Wingfield B.D., Zhao J., Van coller P., & Wingfield M.J. 2015. Phylogenetic relationships among biological species of Armillaria from China. Mycoscience, .
Authors
-
Coetzee M.
-
Wingfield B.D.
-
Zhao J.
-
Van coller P.
-
Wingfield M.J.
Abstract
Fourteen Chinese Biological Species (CBS) of Armillaria were previously identified in a collection of Chinese isolates. CBS C, F, G, H, J, L, N and O remained unnamed, while the remaining isolates included A. borealis, A. cepistipes, A. gallica, A. mellea, A. sinapina and A. tabescens. CBS F was suggested to represent A. singula based on basidiocarp morphology. In this study, phylogenetic relationships between Chinese Armillaria isolates and those from other parts of the world were determined based on DNA sequence data. Results of this study suggest that CBS F might not represent A. singula, and that A. monadelpha (a name applied to the North American form of A. tabescens by some authors) and A. tabescens should be treated as a single species. Four main phylogenetic lineages, referred to as the A. ostoyae, A. gallica, A. tabescens and A. mellea clusters, were identified on the phylogenetic trees. The unnamed biological species grouped within the ?A. gallica cluster? and were phylogenetically closely related. The results of this study contribute to our current understanding of the systematics of Armillaria from South East Asia where these fungi are relatively poorly known.
Keywords
Fungal diagnostics, Intergenic spacer region one (IGS-1), Root rot, Transcription elongation factor one alpha (TEF-1α) gene
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S17215
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref24282,
author = {Martin P. A. Coetzee and Brenda D Wingfield and Jun Zhao and Phia van Coller and Michael J Wingfield},
title = {Phylogenetic relationships among biological species of Armillaria from China},
year = {2015},
keywords = {Fungal diagnostics, Intergenic spacer region one (IGS-1), Root rot, Transcription elongation factor one alpha (TEF-1α) gene},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycoscience},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Fourteen Chinese Biological Species (CBS) of Armillaria were previously identified in a collection of Chinese isolates. CBS C, F, G, H, J, L, N and O remained unnamed, while the remaining isolates included A. borealis, A. cepistipes, A. gallica, A. mellea, A. sinapina and A. tabescens. CBS F was suggested to represent A. singula based on basidiocarp morphology. In this study, phylogenetic relationships between Chinese Armillaria isolates and those from other parts of the world were determined based on DNA sequence data. Results of this study suggest that CBS F might not represent A. singula, and that A. monadelpha (a name applied to the North American form of A. tabescens by some authors) and A. tabescens should be treated as a single species. Four main phylogenetic lineages, referred to as the A. ostoyae, A. gallica, A. tabescens and A. mellea clusters, were identified on the phylogenetic trees. The unnamed biological species grouped within the ?A. gallica cluster? and were phylogenetically closely related. The results of this study contribute to our current understanding of the systematics of Armillaria from South East Asia where these fungi are relatively poorly known.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 24282
AU - Coetzee,Martin P. A.
AU - Wingfield,Brenda D
AU - Zhao,Jun
AU - van Coller,Phia
AU - Wingfield,Michael J
T1 - Phylogenetic relationships among biological species of Armillaria from China
PY - 2015
KW - Fungal diagnostics
KW - Intergenic spacer region one (IGS-1)
KW - Root rot
KW - Transcription elongation factor one alpha (TEF-1α) gene
UR - http://dx.doi.org/
N2 - Fourteen Chinese Biological Species (CBS) of Armillaria were previously identified in a collection of Chinese isolates. CBS C, F, G, H, J, L, N and O remained unnamed, while the remaining isolates included A. borealis, A. cepistipes, A. gallica, A. mellea, A. sinapina and A. tabescens. CBS F was suggested to represent A. singula based on basidiocarp morphology. In this study, phylogenetic relationships between Chinese Armillaria isolates and those from other parts of the world were determined based on DNA sequence data. Results of this study suggest that CBS F might not represent A. singula, and that A. monadelpha (a name applied to the North American form of A. tabescens by some authors) and A. tabescens should be treated as a single species. Four main phylogenetic lineages, referred to as the A. ostoyae, A. gallica, A. tabescens and A. mellea clusters, were identified on the phylogenetic trees. The unnamed biological species grouped within the ?A. gallica cluster? and were phylogenetically closely related. The results of this study contribute to our current understanding of the systematics of Armillaria from South East Asia where these fungi are relatively poorly known.
L3 -
JF - Mycoscience
VL -
IS -
ER -