@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref24825,
author = {Maria Luisa Raimondo and Francesco Lops and Antonia Carlucci},
title = {Charcoal canker of pear, quince and plum trees caused by Biscogniauxia rosacearum sp. nov. in southern Italy },
year = {2015},
keywords = {charcoal canker, endophytes, systematics, Biscogniauxia, Xylariaceae.},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Plant Disease},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {The genus Biscogniauxia is paraphyletic to Xylariaceae, and includes at least 52 species to date that are mainly parasites of dicotyledonous angiosperm trees. Most of these are forest trees, such as Acacia, Alnus, Eucalyptus, Populous, Quercus and others. Biscogniauxia species have been reported as endophytic fungi or secondary invaders that attack only stressed plants. During a survey in Rosaceae orchards in southern Italy, several charcoal cankers were observed and carpophore samples were collected. A collection of 31 Biscogniauxia isolates were analysed. Their phylogenetic relationships were determined through study of ITS, ?-tubulin and actin gene sequences. Combining morphological, culture and molecular data, a new species of Biscogniauxia genus is described here as B. rosacearum. This new species is isolated for the first time from Rosaceae hosts in Apulia. The pathogenicity tests show that it causes symptoms on vegetation growth of stems when artificially inoculated, and produces carpophores on the bark surface. }
}
Citation for Study 17923
Citation title:
"Charcoal canker of pear, quince and plum trees caused by Biscogniauxia rosacearum sp. nov. in southern Italy ".
Study name:
"Charcoal canker of pear, quince and plum trees caused by Biscogniauxia rosacearum sp. nov. in southern Italy ".
This study is part of submission 17923
(Status: Published).
Citation
Raimondo M.L., Lops F., & Carlucci A. 2015. Charcoal canker of pear, quince and plum trees caused by Biscogniauxia rosacearum sp. nov. in southern Italy. Plant Disease, .
Authors
-
Raimondo M.L.
-
Lops F.
-
Carlucci A.
Abstract
The genus Biscogniauxia is paraphyletic to Xylariaceae, and includes at least 52 species to date that are mainly parasites of dicotyledonous angiosperm trees. Most of these are forest trees, such as Acacia, Alnus, Eucalyptus, Populous, Quercus and others. Biscogniauxia species have been reported as endophytic fungi or secondary invaders that attack only stressed plants. During a survey in Rosaceae orchards in southern Italy, several charcoal cankers were observed and carpophore samples were collected. A collection of 31 Biscogniauxia isolates were analysed. Their phylogenetic relationships were determined through study of ITS, ?-tubulin and actin gene sequences. Combining morphological, culture and molecular data, a new species of Biscogniauxia genus is described here as B. rosacearum. This new species is isolated for the first time from Rosaceae hosts in Apulia. The pathogenicity tests show that it causes symptoms on vegetation growth of stems when artificially inoculated, and produces carpophores on the bark surface.
Keywords
charcoal canker, endophytes, systematics, Biscogniauxia, Xylariaceae.
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S17923
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref24825,
author = {Maria Luisa Raimondo and Francesco Lops and Antonia Carlucci},
title = {Charcoal canker of pear, quince and plum trees caused by Biscogniauxia rosacearum sp. nov. in southern Italy },
year = {2015},
keywords = {charcoal canker, endophytes, systematics, Biscogniauxia, Xylariaceae.},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Plant Disease},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {The genus Biscogniauxia is paraphyletic to Xylariaceae, and includes at least 52 species to date that are mainly parasites of dicotyledonous angiosperm trees. Most of these are forest trees, such as Acacia, Alnus, Eucalyptus, Populous, Quercus and others. Biscogniauxia species have been reported as endophytic fungi or secondary invaders that attack only stressed plants. During a survey in Rosaceae orchards in southern Italy, several charcoal cankers were observed and carpophore samples were collected. A collection of 31 Biscogniauxia isolates were analysed. Their phylogenetic relationships were determined through study of ITS, ?-tubulin and actin gene sequences. Combining morphological, culture and molecular data, a new species of Biscogniauxia genus is described here as B. rosacearum. This new species is isolated for the first time from Rosaceae hosts in Apulia. The pathogenicity tests show that it causes symptoms on vegetation growth of stems when artificially inoculated, and produces carpophores on the bark surface. }
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 24825
AU - Raimondo,Maria Luisa
AU - Lops,Francesco
AU - Carlucci,Antonia
T1 - Charcoal canker of pear, quince and plum trees caused by Biscogniauxia rosacearum sp. nov. in southern Italy
PY - 2015
KW - charcoal canker
KW - endophytes
KW - systematics
KW - Biscogniauxia
KW - Xylariaceae.
UR - http://dx.doi.org/
N2 - The genus Biscogniauxia is paraphyletic to Xylariaceae, and includes at least 52 species to date that are mainly parasites of dicotyledonous angiosperm trees. Most of these are forest trees, such as Acacia, Alnus, Eucalyptus, Populous, Quercus and others. Biscogniauxia species have been reported as endophytic fungi or secondary invaders that attack only stressed plants. During a survey in Rosaceae orchards in southern Italy, several charcoal cankers were observed and carpophore samples were collected. A collection of 31 Biscogniauxia isolates were analysed. Their phylogenetic relationships were determined through study of ITS, ?-tubulin and actin gene sequences. Combining morphological, culture and molecular data, a new species of Biscogniauxia genus is described here as B. rosacearum. This new species is isolated for the first time from Rosaceae hosts in Apulia. The pathogenicity tests show that it causes symptoms on vegetation growth of stems when artificially inoculated, and produces carpophores on the bark surface.
L3 -
JF - Plant Disease
VL -
IS -
ER -