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Citation for Study 15823

About Citation title: "Unexpected diversity of basidiomycetous endophyes in sapwood and leaves of Hevea".
About Study name: "Unexpected diversity of basidiomycetous endophyes in sapwood and leaves of Hevea".
About This study is part of submission 15823 (Status: Published).

Citation

Martin R.M., Gazis R.O., Skaltsas D., Chaverri P., & Hibbett D. 2014. Unexpected diversity of basidiomycetous endophyes in sapwood and leaves of Hevea. Mycologia, .

Authors

  • Martin R.M.
  • Gazis R.O. (submitter)
  • Skaltsas D.
  • Chaverri P. Phone 3014057041
  • Hibbett D.

Abstract

Research on fungal endophytes has expanded dramatically in recent years, but little is known about the diversity and ecological roles of endophytic basidiomycetes. Here, we report the analysis of 310 basidiomycetous endophytes isolated from wild and planted populations of the rubber tree genus, Hevea. Species accumulation curves were non-asymptotic, as in the majority of endophyte surveys, indicating that more sampling is needed to recover the true diversity of the community. One hundred and eighteen OTUs were delimited, representing nine orders of Basidiomycota (Agaricales, Atheliales, Auriculariales, Cantharellales, Hymenochaetales, Polyporales, Russulales, Septobasidiales, and Tremellales). The diversity of basidiomycetous endophytes found inhabiting wild populations of Hevea was comparable to that present in plantations. However, when samples were segregated by tissue type, sapwood of wild populations was found to contain a higher number of species than sapwood of planted trees. Seventy-five percent of the isolates were members of the Polyporales, the majority in the phlebioid clade. Most of the species belong to clades known to cause a white-rot type of wood decay. Two species in the insect associated genus Septobasidium were isolated. The most frequently isolated genera included Bjerkandera, Ceriporia, Phanerochaete, Phlebia,Rigidoporus, Tinctoporellus, Trametes (Polyporales), Peniophora, Stereum (Russulales), and Coprinellus (Agaricales), which have all been previously reported as endophytes from a variety of hosts, across wide geographic locations. Literature records on the geographic distribution and host association of these genera revealed that their distribution and substrate affinity could be extended if the endophytic niche was investigated as part of fungal biodiversity surveys.

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  • Canonical resource URI: http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S15823
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