@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref26918,
author = {Uwe Braun and M. J. Bradshaw and Monika Goetz and Jamjan Meeboon and Susumu Takamatsu},
title = {Powdery mildew of Chrysanthemum morifolium ? phylogeny and taxonomy in the context of Golovinomyces species on Asteraceae hosts},
year = {2017},
keywords = {Florist?s daisy ? Oidium chrysanthemi ? Golovinomyces chrysanthemi ? G. macrocarpus},
doi = {10.1080/00275514.2017.1358136},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycoscience},
volume = {109},
number = {3},
pages = {508--519},
abstract = {The taxonomic history of the common powdery mildew of Chrysanthemum ? morifolium (chrysanthemum,
florist?s daisy), originally described in Germany as Oidium chrysanthemi, is discussed.
The position of O. chrysanthemi was investigated on the basis of morphological traits and
molecular phylogenetic analyses. Based on the results of this study, this species, which is closely
related to Golovinomyces artemisae, was reassessed and reallocated to Golovinomyces. The phylogenetic
analysis and taxonomic reassessment of the chrysanthemum powdery mildew is supplemented
by a morphological description, a summary of its worldwide distribution data, and a brief
discussion of the introduction of this fungus to North America. G. chrysanthemi differs from true G.
artemisiae in that it has much longer conidiophores, is not constricted at the base, and has much
larger and most importantly longer conidia. The close affinity of Golovinomyces to Artemisia and
Chrysanthemum species signifies a coevolutionary event between the powdery mildews concerned
and their host species in the subtribe Artemisiinae (Asteraceae tribe Anthemideae). This
conclusion is fully supported by the current phylogeny and taxonomy of the host plant genera
and the coevolution that occurred with the host and pathogen. The following powdery mildew
species, which are associated with hosts belonging to the tribe Anthemideae of the Asteraceae, are
epitypified: Alphitomorpha depressa β artemisiae (≡ Alphitomorpha artemisiae), Erysiphe artemisiae,
and Oidium chrysanthemi. Erysiphe macrocarpa is neotypified. Their sequences were retrieved from
the epitype collections and have been added to the phylogenetic tree. Golovinomyces orontii, an
additional powdery mildew species on Chrysanthemum ?morifolium, is reported. This species is
rarely found as a spontaneous infection and was obtained from inoculation experiments.}
}
Citation for Study 20626
Citation title:
"Powdery mildew of Chrysanthemum morifolium ? phylogeny and taxonomy in the context of Golovinomyces species on Asteraceae hosts".
Study name:
"Powdery mildew of Chrysanthemum morifolium ? phylogeny and taxonomy in the context of Golovinomyces species on Asteraceae hosts".
This study is part of submission 20626
(Status: Published).
Citation
Braun U., Bradshaw M., Goetz M., Meeboon J., & Takamatsu S. 2017. Powdery mildew of Chrysanthemum morifolium ? phylogeny and taxonomy in the context of Golovinomyces species on Asteraceae hosts. Mycoscience, 109(3): 508-519.
Authors
-
Braun U.
-
Bradshaw M.
-
Goetz M.
-
Meeboon J.
-
Takamatsu S.
Abstract
The taxonomic history of the common powdery mildew of Chrysanthemum ? morifolium (chrysanthemum,
florist?s daisy), originally described in Germany as Oidium chrysanthemi, is discussed.
The position of O. chrysanthemi was investigated on the basis of morphological traits and
molecular phylogenetic analyses. Based on the results of this study, this species, which is closely
related to Golovinomyces artemisae, was reassessed and reallocated to Golovinomyces. The phylogenetic
analysis and taxonomic reassessment of the chrysanthemum powdery mildew is supplemented
by a morphological description, a summary of its worldwide distribution data, and a brief
discussion of the introduction of this fungus to North America. G. chrysanthemi differs from true G.
artemisiae in that it has much longer conidiophores, is not constricted at the base, and has much
larger and most importantly longer conidia. The close affinity of Golovinomyces to Artemisia and
Chrysanthemum species signifies a coevolutionary event between the powdery mildews concerned
and their host species in the subtribe Artemisiinae (Asteraceae tribe Anthemideae). This
conclusion is fully supported by the current phylogeny and taxonomy of the host plant genera
and the coevolution that occurred with the host and pathogen. The following powdery mildew
species, which are associated with hosts belonging to the tribe Anthemideae of the Asteraceae, are
epitypified: Alphitomorpha depressa β artemisiae (≡ Alphitomorpha artemisiae), Erysiphe artemisiae,
and Oidium chrysanthemi. Erysiphe macrocarpa is neotypified. Their sequences were retrieved from
the epitype collections and have been added to the phylogenetic tree. Golovinomyces orontii, an
additional powdery mildew species on Chrysanthemum ?morifolium, is reported. This species is
rarely found as a spontaneous infection and was obtained from inoculation experiments.
Keywords
Florist?s daisy ? Oidium chrysanthemi ? Golovinomyces chrysanthemi ? G. macrocarpus
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S20626
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref26918,
author = {Uwe Braun and M. J. Bradshaw and Monika Goetz and Jamjan Meeboon and Susumu Takamatsu},
title = {Powdery mildew of Chrysanthemum morifolium ? phylogeny and taxonomy in the context of Golovinomyces species on Asteraceae hosts},
year = {2017},
keywords = {Florist?s daisy ? Oidium chrysanthemi ? Golovinomyces chrysanthemi ? G. macrocarpus},
doi = {10.1080/00275514.2017.1358136},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycoscience},
volume = {109},
number = {3},
pages = {508--519},
abstract = {The taxonomic history of the common powdery mildew of Chrysanthemum ? morifolium (chrysanthemum,
florist?s daisy), originally described in Germany as Oidium chrysanthemi, is discussed.
The position of O. chrysanthemi was investigated on the basis of morphological traits and
molecular phylogenetic analyses. Based on the results of this study, this species, which is closely
related to Golovinomyces artemisae, was reassessed and reallocated to Golovinomyces. The phylogenetic
analysis and taxonomic reassessment of the chrysanthemum powdery mildew is supplemented
by a morphological description, a summary of its worldwide distribution data, and a brief
discussion of the introduction of this fungus to North America. G. chrysanthemi differs from true G.
artemisiae in that it has much longer conidiophores, is not constricted at the base, and has much
larger and most importantly longer conidia. The close affinity of Golovinomyces to Artemisia and
Chrysanthemum species signifies a coevolutionary event between the powdery mildews concerned
and their host species in the subtribe Artemisiinae (Asteraceae tribe Anthemideae). This
conclusion is fully supported by the current phylogeny and taxonomy of the host plant genera
and the coevolution that occurred with the host and pathogen. The following powdery mildew
species, which are associated with hosts belonging to the tribe Anthemideae of the Asteraceae, are
epitypified: Alphitomorpha depressa β artemisiae (≡ Alphitomorpha artemisiae), Erysiphe artemisiae,
and Oidium chrysanthemi. Erysiphe macrocarpa is neotypified. Their sequences were retrieved from
the epitype collections and have been added to the phylogenetic tree. Golovinomyces orontii, an
additional powdery mildew species on Chrysanthemum ?morifolium, is reported. This species is
rarely found as a spontaneous infection and was obtained from inoculation experiments.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 26918
AU - Braun,Uwe
AU - Bradshaw,M. J.
AU - Goetz,Monika
AU - Meeboon,Jamjan
AU - Takamatsu,Susumu
T1 - Powdery mildew of Chrysanthemum morifolium ? phylogeny and taxonomy in the context of Golovinomyces species on Asteraceae hosts
PY - 2017
KW - Florist?s daisy ? Oidium chrysanthemi ? Golovinomyces chrysanthemi ? G. macrocarpus
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00275514.2017.1358136
N2 - The taxonomic history of the common powdery mildew of Chrysanthemum ? morifolium (chrysanthemum,
florist?s daisy), originally described in Germany as Oidium chrysanthemi, is discussed.
The position of O. chrysanthemi was investigated on the basis of morphological traits and
molecular phylogenetic analyses. Based on the results of this study, this species, which is closely
related to Golovinomyces artemisae, was reassessed and reallocated to Golovinomyces. The phylogenetic
analysis and taxonomic reassessment of the chrysanthemum powdery mildew is supplemented
by a morphological description, a summary of its worldwide distribution data, and a brief
discussion of the introduction of this fungus to North America. G. chrysanthemi differs from true G.
artemisiae in that it has much longer conidiophores, is not constricted at the base, and has much
larger and most importantly longer conidia. The close affinity of Golovinomyces to Artemisia and
Chrysanthemum species signifies a coevolutionary event between the powdery mildews concerned
and their host species in the subtribe Artemisiinae (Asteraceae tribe Anthemideae). This
conclusion is fully supported by the current phylogeny and taxonomy of the host plant genera
and the coevolution that occurred with the host and pathogen. The following powdery mildew
species, which are associated with hosts belonging to the tribe Anthemideae of the Asteraceae, are
epitypified: Alphitomorpha depressa β artemisiae (≡ Alphitomorpha artemisiae), Erysiphe artemisiae,
and Oidium chrysanthemi. Erysiphe macrocarpa is neotypified. Their sequences were retrieved from
the epitype collections and have been added to the phylogenetic tree. Golovinomyces orontii, an
additional powdery mildew species on Chrysanthemum ?morifolium, is reported. This species is
rarely found as a spontaneous infection and was obtained from inoculation experiments.
L3 - 10.1080/00275514.2017.1358136
JF - Mycoscience
VL - 109
IS - 3
SP - 508
EP - 519
ER -