@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref14544,
author = {Artur Alves and Ant?nio Correia and Jordi Luque and Alan John Lander Phillips},
title = {Botryosphaeria corticola sp. nov. on Quercus species, with notes and description of Botryosphaeria stevensii and its anamorph Diplodia mutila.},
year = {2004},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycologia},
volume = {96},
number = {3},
pages = {598--613},
abstract = {Botryosphaeria stevensii has frequently been associated with dieback and canker diseases of oaks, mainly in the Western Mediterranean area but more rarely in other regions. The species concept of B. stevensii has been unclear, and it is possible that some collections were incorrectly identified. A collection of fungal strains isolated from diseased oak trees and initially identified as B. stevensii was characterized on the basis of morphology and ITS nucleotide sequences. Morphology was compared with the type specimens of Physalospora mutila (= B. stevensii) and its anamorph Diplodia mutila. It was concluded that the isolates from oaks differed from B. stevensii in having larger ascospores and conidia as well as different spore shapes, and represented an as yet undescribed species, which is described here as B. corticola. Moreover, ITS sequence data separated B. corticola from all other known species of Botryosphaeria. Amended descriptions of B. stevensii and its anamorph are provided to differentiate B. stevensii from B. corticola and to clarify some of the earlier taxonomic uncertainties.}
}
Citation for Study 1053
Citation title:
"Botryosphaeria corticola sp. nov. on Quercus species, with notes and description of Botryosphaeria stevensii and its anamorph Diplodia mutila.".
This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S949
(Status: Published).
Citation
Alves A., Correia A., Luque J., & Phillips A. 2004. Botryosphaeria corticola sp. nov. on Quercus species, with notes and description of Botryosphaeria stevensii and its anamorph Diplodia mutila. Mycologia, 96(3): 598-613.
Authors
-
Alves A.
-
Correia A.
-
Luque J.
-
Phillips A.
Abstract
Botryosphaeria stevensii has frequently been associated with dieback and canker diseases of oaks, mainly in the Western Mediterranean area but more rarely in other regions. The species concept of B. stevensii has been unclear, and it is possible that some collections were incorrectly identified. A collection of fungal strains isolated from diseased oak trees and initially identified as B. stevensii was characterized on the basis of morphology and ITS nucleotide sequences. Morphology was compared with the type specimens of Physalospora mutila (= B. stevensii) and its anamorph Diplodia mutila. It was concluded that the isolates from oaks differed from B. stevensii in having larger ascospores and conidia as well as different spore shapes, and represented an as yet undescribed species, which is described here as B. corticola. Moreover, ITS sequence data separated B. corticola from all other known species of Botryosphaeria. Amended descriptions of B. stevensii and its anamorph are provided to differentiate B. stevensii from B. corticola and to clarify some of the earlier taxonomic uncertainties.
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S1053
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref14544,
author = {Artur Alves and Ant?nio Correia and Jordi Luque and Alan John Lander Phillips},
title = {Botryosphaeria corticola sp. nov. on Quercus species, with notes and description of Botryosphaeria stevensii and its anamorph Diplodia mutila.},
year = {2004},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycologia},
volume = {96},
number = {3},
pages = {598--613},
abstract = {Botryosphaeria stevensii has frequently been associated with dieback and canker diseases of oaks, mainly in the Western Mediterranean area but more rarely in other regions. The species concept of B. stevensii has been unclear, and it is possible that some collections were incorrectly identified. A collection of fungal strains isolated from diseased oak trees and initially identified as B. stevensii was characterized on the basis of morphology and ITS nucleotide sequences. Morphology was compared with the type specimens of Physalospora mutila (= B. stevensii) and its anamorph Diplodia mutila. It was concluded that the isolates from oaks differed from B. stevensii in having larger ascospores and conidia as well as different spore shapes, and represented an as yet undescribed species, which is described here as B. corticola. Moreover, ITS sequence data separated B. corticola from all other known species of Botryosphaeria. Amended descriptions of B. stevensii and its anamorph are provided to differentiate B. stevensii from B. corticola and to clarify some of the earlier taxonomic uncertainties.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 14544
AU - Alves,Artur
AU - Correia,Ant?nio
AU - Luque,Jordi
AU - Phillips,Alan John Lander
T1 - Botryosphaeria corticola sp. nov. on Quercus species, with notes and description of Botryosphaeria stevensii and its anamorph Diplodia mutila.
PY - 2004
KW -
UR -
N2 - Botryosphaeria stevensii has frequently been associated with dieback and canker diseases of oaks, mainly in the Western Mediterranean area but more rarely in other regions. The species concept of B. stevensii has been unclear, and it is possible that some collections were incorrectly identified. A collection of fungal strains isolated from diseased oak trees and initially identified as B. stevensii was characterized on the basis of morphology and ITS nucleotide sequences. Morphology was compared with the type specimens of Physalospora mutila (= B. stevensii) and its anamorph Diplodia mutila. It was concluded that the isolates from oaks differed from B. stevensii in having larger ascospores and conidia as well as different spore shapes, and represented an as yet undescribed species, which is described here as B. corticola. Moreover, ITS sequence data separated B. corticola from all other known species of Botryosphaeria. Amended descriptions of B. stevensii and its anamorph are provided to differentiate B. stevensii from B. corticola and to clarify some of the earlier taxonomic uncertainties.
L3 -
JF - Mycologia
VL - 96
IS - 3
SP - 598
EP - 613
ER -