@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref23039,
author = {Zsolt Bereczky and Alexandra Pintye and Peter Csontos and Uwe Braun and Levente Kiss},
title = {Does the parasite follow its host? Occurrence of morphologically barely distinguishable powdery mildew anamorphs on Oenothera spp. in different parts of the world},
year = {2014},
keywords = {Cryptic species, Erysiphe alphitoides, Erysiphe howeana, Invasive plant, ITS sequences},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycoscience},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {To identify powdery mildew fungi infecting Oenothera spp. in Europe, specimens collected worldwide were examined based on morphology and internal transcribed spacer (ITS)
sequences of the nuclear rRNA gene complex. The specimens were morphologically barely distinguishable from each other, each exhibiting pseudoidium-type conidiophores but sexual
morphs lacking. Surprisingly, based on ITS sequence analyses, these represented two species, E. howeana, known to infect Oenothera spp., and Erysiphe cf. alphitoides, which has never been recorded on herbaceous plants. Both species were detected on the invasive O. biennis in different parts of the world including regions where O. biennis was introduced only recently.}
}
Citation for Study 15603
Citation title:
"Does the parasite follow its host? Occurrence of morphologically barely distinguishable powdery mildew anamorphs on Oenothera spp. in different parts of the world".
Study name:
"Does the parasite follow its host? Occurrence of morphologically barely distinguishable powdery mildew anamorphs on Oenothera spp. in different parts of the world".
This study is part of submission 15603
(Status: Published).
Citation
Bereczky Z., Pintye A., Csontos P., Braun U., & Kiss L. 2014. Does the parasite follow its host? Occurrence of morphologically barely distinguishable powdery mildew anamorphs on Oenothera spp. in different parts of the world. Mycoscience, .
Authors
-
Bereczky Z.
-
Pintye A.
(submitter)
-
Csontos P.
-
Braun U.
-
Kiss L.
Abstract
To identify powdery mildew fungi infecting Oenothera spp. in Europe, specimens collected worldwide were examined based on morphology and internal transcribed spacer (ITS)
sequences of the nuclear rRNA gene complex. The specimens were morphologically barely distinguishable from each other, each exhibiting pseudoidium-type conidiophores but sexual
morphs lacking. Surprisingly, based on ITS sequence analyses, these represented two species, E. howeana, known to infect Oenothera spp., and Erysiphe cf. alphitoides, which has never been recorded on herbaceous plants. Both species were detected on the invasive O. biennis in different parts of the world including regions where O. biennis was introduced only recently.
Keywords
Cryptic species, Erysiphe alphitoides, Erysiphe howeana, Invasive plant, ITS sequences
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S15603
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref23039,
author = {Zsolt Bereczky and Alexandra Pintye and Peter Csontos and Uwe Braun and Levente Kiss},
title = {Does the parasite follow its host? Occurrence of morphologically barely distinguishable powdery mildew anamorphs on Oenothera spp. in different parts of the world},
year = {2014},
keywords = {Cryptic species, Erysiphe alphitoides, Erysiphe howeana, Invasive plant, ITS sequences},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycoscience},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {To identify powdery mildew fungi infecting Oenothera spp. in Europe, specimens collected worldwide were examined based on morphology and internal transcribed spacer (ITS)
sequences of the nuclear rRNA gene complex. The specimens were morphologically barely distinguishable from each other, each exhibiting pseudoidium-type conidiophores but sexual
morphs lacking. Surprisingly, based on ITS sequence analyses, these represented two species, E. howeana, known to infect Oenothera spp., and Erysiphe cf. alphitoides, which has never been recorded on herbaceous plants. Both species were detected on the invasive O. biennis in different parts of the world including regions where O. biennis was introduced only recently.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 23039
AU - Bereczky,Zsolt
AU - Pintye,Alexandra
AU - Csontos,Peter
AU - Braun,Uwe
AU - Kiss,Levente
T1 - Does the parasite follow its host? Occurrence of morphologically barely distinguishable powdery mildew anamorphs on Oenothera spp. in different parts of the world
PY - 2014
KW - Cryptic species
KW - Erysiphe alphitoides
KW - Erysiphe howeana
KW - Invasive plant
KW - ITS sequences
UR - http://dx.doi.org/
N2 - To identify powdery mildew fungi infecting Oenothera spp. in Europe, specimens collected worldwide were examined based on morphology and internal transcribed spacer (ITS)
sequences of the nuclear rRNA gene complex. The specimens were morphologically barely distinguishable from each other, each exhibiting pseudoidium-type conidiophores but sexual
morphs lacking. Surprisingly, based on ITS sequence analyses, these represented two species, E. howeana, known to infect Oenothera spp., and Erysiphe cf. alphitoides, which has never been recorded on herbaceous plants. Both species were detected on the invasive O. biennis in different parts of the world including regions where O. biennis was introduced only recently.
L3 -
JF - Mycoscience
VL -
IS -
ER -