@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref25907,
author = {D Rabern Simmons and Z. Wilhelm de Beer and Yin-Tse Huang and Craig Bateman and Alina S. Campbell and Tyler James Dreaden and You Li and Randy C. ploetz and Adam Black and Hou-Feng Li and Chi-Yu Chen and Michael J. Wingfield and Jiri Hulcr},
title = {New Raffaelea species (Ophiostomatales) from the United States and Taiwan associated with ambrosia beetles and plant hosts.},
year = {2016},
keywords = {18S rDNA, ITS rDNA},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {IMA Fungus},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Raffaelea (Ophiostomatales) is a genus of more than 20 ophiostomatoid fungi commonly in symbioses with wood-boring ambrosia beetles. We examined ambrosia beetles and plant hosts in the United States and Taiwan for the presence of these mycosymbionts and found 22 isolates representing known and undescribed lineages of Raffaelea. From 28S rDNA and βT sequences, we generated a molecular phylogeny of the Ophiostomatales and observed morphological features of seven cultures representing undescribed lineages in Raffaelea s. str. From these analyses, we describe five species in Raffaelea s. str.: R. aguacate sp. nov., R. campbellii sp. nov., R. crossotarsa sp. nov., R. cyclorhipidia sp. nov., and R. xyleborina sp. nov. Our analyses also identified two plant-pathogenic species of Raffaelea associated with previously undocumented beetle hosts: (1) R. quercivora, the causative agent of Japanese oak wilt, from Cyclorhipidion ohnoi and Crossotarsus emancipatus in Taiwan, and (2) R. lauricola, the pathogen of laurel wilt, from Ambrosiodmus lecontei in Florida. The results of this study show that Raffaelea and associated ophiostomatoid fungi have been poorly sampled and that future investigations on ambrosia beetle mycosymbionts should reveal a substantially increased diversity.}
}
Citation for Study 19323
Citation title:
"New Raffaelea species (Ophiostomatales) from the United States and Taiwan associated with ambrosia beetles and plant hosts.".
Study name:
"New Raffaelea species (Ophiostomatales) from the United States and Taiwan associated with ambrosia beetles and plant hosts.".
This study is part of submission 19323
(Status: Published).
Citation
Simmons D.R., De beer Z.W., Huang Y., Bateman C., Campbell A.S., Dreaden T.J., Li Y., Ploetz R.C., Black A., Li H., Chen C., Wingfield M.J., & Hulcr J. 2016. New Raffaelea species (Ophiostomatales) from the United States and Taiwan associated with ambrosia beetles and plant hosts. IMA Fungus, .
Authors
-
Simmons D.R.
(submitter)
2073568106
-
De beer Z.W.
-
Huang Y.
-
Bateman C.
-
Campbell A.S.
-
Dreaden T.J.
-
Li Y.
-
Ploetz R.C.
-
Black A.
-
Li H.
-
Chen C.
-
Wingfield M.J.
-
Hulcr J.
Abstract
Raffaelea (Ophiostomatales) is a genus of more than 20 ophiostomatoid fungi commonly in symbioses with wood-boring ambrosia beetles. We examined ambrosia beetles and plant hosts in the United States and Taiwan for the presence of these mycosymbionts and found 22 isolates representing known and undescribed lineages of Raffaelea. From 28S rDNA and βT sequences, we generated a molecular phylogeny of the Ophiostomatales and observed morphological features of seven cultures representing undescribed lineages in Raffaelea s. str. From these analyses, we describe five species in Raffaelea s. str.: R. aguacate sp. nov., R. campbellii sp. nov., R. crossotarsa sp. nov., R. cyclorhipidia sp. nov., and R. xyleborina sp. nov. Our analyses also identified two plant-pathogenic species of Raffaelea associated with previously undocumented beetle hosts: (1) R. quercivora, the causative agent of Japanese oak wilt, from Cyclorhipidion ohnoi and Crossotarsus emancipatus in Taiwan, and (2) R. lauricola, the pathogen of laurel wilt, from Ambrosiodmus lecontei in Florida. The results of this study show that Raffaelea and associated ophiostomatoid fungi have been poorly sampled and that future investigations on ambrosia beetle mycosymbionts should reveal a substantially increased diversity.
Keywords
18S rDNA, ITS rDNA
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S19323
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- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref25907,
author = {D Rabern Simmons and Z. Wilhelm de Beer and Yin-Tse Huang and Craig Bateman and Alina S. Campbell and Tyler James Dreaden and You Li and Randy C. ploetz and Adam Black and Hou-Feng Li and Chi-Yu Chen and Michael J. Wingfield and Jiri Hulcr},
title = {New Raffaelea species (Ophiostomatales) from the United States and Taiwan associated with ambrosia beetles and plant hosts.},
year = {2016},
keywords = {18S rDNA, ITS rDNA},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {IMA Fungus},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Raffaelea (Ophiostomatales) is a genus of more than 20 ophiostomatoid fungi commonly in symbioses with wood-boring ambrosia beetles. We examined ambrosia beetles and plant hosts in the United States and Taiwan for the presence of these mycosymbionts and found 22 isolates representing known and undescribed lineages of Raffaelea. From 28S rDNA and βT sequences, we generated a molecular phylogeny of the Ophiostomatales and observed morphological features of seven cultures representing undescribed lineages in Raffaelea s. str. From these analyses, we describe five species in Raffaelea s. str.: R. aguacate sp. nov., R. campbellii sp. nov., R. crossotarsa sp. nov., R. cyclorhipidia sp. nov., and R. xyleborina sp. nov. Our analyses also identified two plant-pathogenic species of Raffaelea associated with previously undocumented beetle hosts: (1) R. quercivora, the causative agent of Japanese oak wilt, from Cyclorhipidion ohnoi and Crossotarsus emancipatus in Taiwan, and (2) R. lauricola, the pathogen of laurel wilt, from Ambrosiodmus lecontei in Florida. The results of this study show that Raffaelea and associated ophiostomatoid fungi have been poorly sampled and that future investigations on ambrosia beetle mycosymbionts should reveal a substantially increased diversity.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 25907
AU - Simmons,D Rabern
AU - de Beer,Z. Wilhelm
AU - Huang,Yin-Tse
AU - Bateman,Craig
AU - Campbell,Alina S.
AU - Dreaden,Tyler James
AU - Li,You
AU - ploetz,Randy C.
AU - Black,Adam
AU - Li,Hou-Feng
AU - Chen,Chi-Yu
AU - Wingfield,Michael J.
AU - Hulcr,Jiri
T1 - New Raffaelea species (Ophiostomatales) from the United States and Taiwan associated with ambrosia beetles and plant hosts.
PY - 2016
KW - 18S rDNA
KW - ITS rDNA
UR - http://dx.doi.org/
N2 - Raffaelea (Ophiostomatales) is a genus of more than 20 ophiostomatoid fungi commonly in symbioses with wood-boring ambrosia beetles. We examined ambrosia beetles and plant hosts in the United States and Taiwan for the presence of these mycosymbionts and found 22 isolates representing known and undescribed lineages of Raffaelea. From 28S rDNA and βT sequences, we generated a molecular phylogeny of the Ophiostomatales and observed morphological features of seven cultures representing undescribed lineages in Raffaelea s. str. From these analyses, we describe five species in Raffaelea s. str.: R. aguacate sp. nov., R. campbellii sp. nov., R. crossotarsa sp. nov., R. cyclorhipidia sp. nov., and R. xyleborina sp. nov. Our analyses also identified two plant-pathogenic species of Raffaelea associated with previously undocumented beetle hosts: (1) R. quercivora, the causative agent of Japanese oak wilt, from Cyclorhipidion ohnoi and Crossotarsus emancipatus in Taiwan, and (2) R. lauricola, the pathogen of laurel wilt, from Ambrosiodmus lecontei in Florida. The results of this study show that Raffaelea and associated ophiostomatoid fungi have been poorly sampled and that future investigations on ambrosia beetle mycosymbionts should reveal a substantially increased diversity.
L3 -
JF - IMA Fungus
VL -
IS -
ER -