@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref18212,
author = {Naoki Yanagida and Toshikazu Irie and Eiji Tanaka and Chihei Teramoto and Kazuya Kuwabara and Akitoshi Tajimi},
title = {New choke diseases and their molecular phylogenetic analysis in Agropyron ciliare var. minus and Agropyron tsukushiense var. transiens},
year = {2005},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycologia},
volume = {97},
number = {},
pages = {1287--1291},
abstract = {Choke diseases were surveyed in two closely related grass species, Agropyron ciliare var. minus (Aokamojigusa) and Agropyron tsukushiense var. transiens (Kamojigusa) in Shiga Prefecture, Japan, whereas the ascospore was not observed in either case. Conidiostromata on A. ciliare var. minus enclosed and sterilized young inflorescens, such as the typical choke symptom by Epichlo? typhina. On the other hand, conidiostromata on A. tsukusiense var. transiens thinly covered mature spike with white epiphyllous hyphae, such as a conidiostroma of Ephelis spp. The fungal isolates produced typical Neotyphodium-type conidia. Molecular phylogenetic analyses using the beta-tubulin gene (tubB) indicated that the two Agropyron species are infected with the species grouping into a novel single clade among Epichlo? species and they are closely related to a haploid of hybrid Neotyphodium species. The host plant features may be a cause for the different type of conidiostromata between in A. ciliare var. minus and in A. tsukushiense var. transiens.}
}
Citation for Study 1604
Citation title:
"New choke diseases and their molecular phylogenetic analysis in Agropyron ciliare var. minus and Agropyron tsukushiense var. transiens".
This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S1551
(Status: Published).
Citation
Yanagida N., Irie T., Tanaka E., Teramoto C., Kuwabara K., & Tajimi A. 2005. New choke diseases and their molecular phylogenetic analysis in Agropyron ciliare var. minus and Agropyron tsukushiense var. transiens. Mycologia, 97: 1287-1291.
Authors
-
Yanagida N.
-
Irie T.
-
Tanaka E.
-
Teramoto C.
-
Kuwabara K.
-
Tajimi A.
Abstract
Choke diseases were surveyed in two closely related grass species, Agropyron ciliare var. minus (Aokamojigusa) and Agropyron tsukushiense var. transiens (Kamojigusa) in Shiga Prefecture, Japan, whereas the ascospore was not observed in either case. Conidiostromata on A. ciliare var. minus enclosed and sterilized young inflorescens, such as the typical choke symptom by Epichlo? typhina. On the other hand, conidiostromata on A. tsukusiense var. transiens thinly covered mature spike with white epiphyllous hyphae, such as a conidiostroma of Ephelis spp. The fungal isolates produced typical Neotyphodium-type conidia. Molecular phylogenetic analyses using the beta-tubulin gene (tubB) indicated that the two Agropyron species are infected with the species grouping into a novel single clade among Epichlo? species and they are closely related to a haploid of hybrid Neotyphodium species. The host plant features may be a cause for the different type of conidiostromata between in A. ciliare var. minus and in A. tsukushiense var. transiens.
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S1604
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref18212,
author = {Naoki Yanagida and Toshikazu Irie and Eiji Tanaka and Chihei Teramoto and Kazuya Kuwabara and Akitoshi Tajimi},
title = {New choke diseases and their molecular phylogenetic analysis in Agropyron ciliare var. minus and Agropyron tsukushiense var. transiens},
year = {2005},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycologia},
volume = {97},
number = {},
pages = {1287--1291},
abstract = {Choke diseases were surveyed in two closely related grass species, Agropyron ciliare var. minus (Aokamojigusa) and Agropyron tsukushiense var. transiens (Kamojigusa) in Shiga Prefecture, Japan, whereas the ascospore was not observed in either case. Conidiostromata on A. ciliare var. minus enclosed and sterilized young inflorescens, such as the typical choke symptom by Epichlo? typhina. On the other hand, conidiostromata on A. tsukusiense var. transiens thinly covered mature spike with white epiphyllous hyphae, such as a conidiostroma of Ephelis spp. The fungal isolates produced typical Neotyphodium-type conidia. Molecular phylogenetic analyses using the beta-tubulin gene (tubB) indicated that the two Agropyron species are infected with the species grouping into a novel single clade among Epichlo? species and they are closely related to a haploid of hybrid Neotyphodium species. The host plant features may be a cause for the different type of conidiostromata between in A. ciliare var. minus and in A. tsukushiense var. transiens.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 18212
AU - Yanagida,Naoki
AU - Irie,Toshikazu
AU - Tanaka,Eiji
AU - Teramoto,Chihei
AU - Kuwabara,Kazuya
AU - Tajimi,Akitoshi
T1 - New choke diseases and their molecular phylogenetic analysis in Agropyron ciliare var. minus and Agropyron tsukushiense var. transiens
PY - 2005
UR -
N2 - Choke diseases were surveyed in two closely related grass species, Agropyron ciliare var. minus (Aokamojigusa) and Agropyron tsukushiense var. transiens (Kamojigusa) in Shiga Prefecture, Japan, whereas the ascospore was not observed in either case. Conidiostromata on A. ciliare var. minus enclosed and sterilized young inflorescens, such as the typical choke symptom by Epichlo? typhina. On the other hand, conidiostromata on A. tsukusiense var. transiens thinly covered mature spike with white epiphyllous hyphae, such as a conidiostroma of Ephelis spp. The fungal isolates produced typical Neotyphodium-type conidia. Molecular phylogenetic analyses using the beta-tubulin gene (tubB) indicated that the two Agropyron species are infected with the species grouping into a novel single clade among Epichlo? species and they are closely related to a haploid of hybrid Neotyphodium species. The host plant features may be a cause for the different type of conidiostromata between in A. ciliare var. minus and in A. tsukushiense var. transiens.
L3 -
JF - Mycologia
VL - 97
IS -
SP - 1287
EP - 1291
ER -