@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref18820,
author = {Eugenio Luis Fraga Diogo and Jorge Manuel Santos and Alan John Lander Phillips},
title = {Phylogeny, morphology and pathogenicity of Diaporthe and Phomopsis species on almond in Portugal},
year = {2010},
keywords = {Almond, Diaporthe, epitype, ITS, Phomopsis, systematics},
doi = {10.1007/s13225-010-0057-x},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Fungal Diversity},
volume = {44},
number = {1},
pages = {107--115},
abstract = {The ascomycete genus Diaporthe includes plant pathogens and endophytes on a wide range of hosts including economically important crops. Anamorphs are oelomycetous and reside in the genus Phomopsis. Phomopsis amygdali is the causal agent of twig canker and blight of almonds. In a recent survey of dieback of almonds in Portugal, the most frequent fungi detected were iaporthe/Phomopsis species.
Isolates from almond and other Prunus species were characterised and grouped according to their microsatelliteprimed
PCR (MSP-PCR) profiles and representatives of the different groups were selected for a phylogenetic study based on the ITS rDNA region (ITS1?5.8S?ITS2). Combining morphological, cultural, molecular and pathogenicity data, three species were distinguished. Phomopsis amygdali was shown to be the main pathogen on almond and is epitypified in the present work. Diaporthe neotheicola is reported for the
first time on this host. A third species represented by a single isolate could not be unequivocally identified.}
}
Citation for Study 10334
Citation title:
"Phylogeny, morphology and pathogenicity of Diaporthe and Phomopsis species on almond in Portugal".
Study name:
"Phylogeny, morphology and pathogenicity of Diaporthe and Phomopsis species on almond in Portugal".
This study is part of submission 10324
(Status: Published).
Citation
Diogo E.L., Santos J., & Phillips A. 2010. Phylogeny, morphology and pathogenicity of Diaporthe and Phomopsis species on almond in Portugal. Fungal Diversity, 44(1): 107-115.
Authors
-
Diogo E.L.
(submitter)
351213613206
-
Santos J.
-
Phillips A.
Abstract
The ascomycete genus Diaporthe includes plant pathogens and endophytes on a wide range of hosts including economically important crops. Anamorphs are oelomycetous and reside in the genus Phomopsis. Phomopsis amygdali is the causal agent of twig canker and blight of almonds. In a recent survey of dieback of almonds in Portugal, the most frequent fungi detected were iaporthe/Phomopsis species.
Isolates from almond and other Prunus species were characterised and grouped according to their microsatelliteprimed
PCR (MSP-PCR) profiles and representatives of the different groups were selected for a phylogenetic study based on the ITS rDNA region (ITS1?5.8S?ITS2). Combining morphological, cultural, molecular and pathogenicity data, three species were distinguished. Phomopsis amygdali was shown to be the main pathogen on almond and is epitypified in the present work. Diaporthe neotheicola is reported for the
first time on this host. A third species represented by a single isolate could not be unequivocally identified.
Keywords
Almond, Diaporthe, epitype, ITS, Phomopsis, systematics
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S10334
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref18820,
author = {Eugenio Luis Fraga Diogo and Jorge Manuel Santos and Alan John Lander Phillips},
title = {Phylogeny, morphology and pathogenicity of Diaporthe and Phomopsis species on almond in Portugal},
year = {2010},
keywords = {Almond, Diaporthe, epitype, ITS, Phomopsis, systematics},
doi = {10.1007/s13225-010-0057-x},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Fungal Diversity},
volume = {44},
number = {1},
pages = {107--115},
abstract = {The ascomycete genus Diaporthe includes plant pathogens and endophytes on a wide range of hosts including economically important crops. Anamorphs are oelomycetous and reside in the genus Phomopsis. Phomopsis amygdali is the causal agent of twig canker and blight of almonds. In a recent survey of dieback of almonds in Portugal, the most frequent fungi detected were iaporthe/Phomopsis species.
Isolates from almond and other Prunus species were characterised and grouped according to their microsatelliteprimed
PCR (MSP-PCR) profiles and representatives of the different groups were selected for a phylogenetic study based on the ITS rDNA region (ITS1?5.8S?ITS2). Combining morphological, cultural, molecular and pathogenicity data, three species were distinguished. Phomopsis amygdali was shown to be the main pathogen on almond and is epitypified in the present work. Diaporthe neotheicola is reported for the
first time on this host. A third species represented by a single isolate could not be unequivocally identified.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 18820
AU - Diogo,Eugenio Luis Fraga
AU - Santos,Jorge Manuel
AU - Phillips,Alan John Lander
T1 - Phylogeny, morphology and pathogenicity of Diaporthe and Phomopsis species on almond in Portugal
PY - 2010
KW - Almond
KW - Diaporthe
KW - epitype
KW - ITS
KW - Phomopsis
KW - systematics
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13225-010-0057-x
N2 - The ascomycete genus Diaporthe includes plant pathogens and endophytes on a wide range of hosts including economically important crops. Anamorphs are oelomycetous and reside in the genus Phomopsis. Phomopsis amygdali is the causal agent of twig canker and blight of almonds. In a recent survey of dieback of almonds in Portugal, the most frequent fungi detected were iaporthe/Phomopsis species.
Isolates from almond and other Prunus species were characterised and grouped according to their microsatelliteprimed
PCR (MSP-PCR) profiles and representatives of the different groups were selected for a phylogenetic study based on the ITS rDNA region (ITS1?5.8S?ITS2). Combining morphological, cultural, molecular and pathogenicity data, three species were distinguished. Phomopsis amygdali was shown to be the main pathogen on almond and is epitypified in the present work. Diaporthe neotheicola is reported for the
first time on this host. A third species represented by a single isolate could not be unequivocally identified.
L3 - 10.1007/s13225-010-0057-x
JF - Fungal Diversity
VL - 44
IS - 1
SP - 107
EP - 115
ER -