@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref17332,
author = {Gary J. Samuels and Sarah L. Dodd and Walter Gams and Lisa A. Castlebury and Orlando Petrini},
title = {Trichoderma species associated with the green mold epidemic of commercially grown Agaricus bisporus.},
year = {2002},
keywords = {green mold disease; Hypocrea; Hypocreales; ITS; systematics; translation elongation factor 1 alpha gene (EF-1?); Trichoderma aggressivum; Trichoderma atroviride; Trichoderma harzianum},
doi = {},
url = {http://www.mycologia.org/cgi/content/abstract/94/1/146},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycologia},
volume = {94},
number = {1},
pages = {146--170},
abstract = {Trichoderma aggressivum sp. nov. and T. aggressivum f. europaeum f. nov. are described. These forms cause the green mold epidemic in commercially grown Agaricus bisporus in North America and Europe, respectively. In the literature they have been reported as T. harzianum biotypes Th 4 and Th 2, respectively. They are strongly separated from their closest relative, T. harzianum, in sequences of the ITS-1 region of nuclear rDNA and an approximately 689 bp fragment of the protein coding translation elongation factor gene (EF-1?). They are distinguished from the morphologically similar T. harzianum and T. atroviride (the latter also known as biotype Th 3) most readily by rate of growth. Of these, only T. harzianum grows well and sporulates at 35 C, while T. atroviride is the slowest growing. Trichoderma aggressivum f. aggressivum and f. europaeum are effectively indistinguishable morphologically although they have subtly different growth rates at 25 C on SNA and statistically significant micromorphological differences. Based on findings of this study, descriptions of T. harzianum and T. atroviride are expanded. A key to Trichoderma species commonly found associated with commercially grown A. bisporus is provided.}
}
Citation for Study 779
Citation title:
"Trichoderma species associated with the green mold epidemic of commercially grown Agaricus bisporus.".
This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S634
(Status: Published).
Citation
Samuels G., Dodd S., Gams W., Castlebury L., & Petrini O. 2002. Trichoderma species associated with the green mold epidemic of commercially grown Agaricus bisporus. Mycologia, 94(1): 146-170.
Authors
-
Samuels G.
-
Dodd S.
-
Gams W.
-
Castlebury L.
-
Petrini O.
Abstract
Trichoderma aggressivum sp. nov. and T. aggressivum f. europaeum f. nov. are described. These forms cause the green mold epidemic in commercially grown Agaricus bisporus in North America and Europe, respectively. In the literature they have been reported as T. harzianum biotypes Th 4 and Th 2, respectively. They are strongly separated from their closest relative, T. harzianum, in sequences of the ITS-1 region of nuclear rDNA and an approximately 689 bp fragment of the protein coding translation elongation factor gene (EF-1?). They are distinguished from the morphologically similar T. harzianum and T. atroviride (the latter also known as biotype Th 3) most readily by rate of growth. Of these, only T. harzianum grows well and sporulates at 35 C, while T. atroviride is the slowest growing. Trichoderma aggressivum f. aggressivum and f. europaeum are effectively indistinguishable morphologically although they have subtly different growth rates at 25 C on SNA and statistically significant micromorphological differences. Based on findings of this study, descriptions of T. harzianum and T. atroviride are expanded. A key to Trichoderma species commonly found associated with commercially grown A. bisporus is provided.
Keywords
green mold disease; Hypocrea; Hypocreales; ITS; systematics; translation elongation factor 1 alpha gene (EF-1?); Trichoderma aggressivum; Trichoderma atroviride; Trichoderma harzianum
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S779
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref17332,
author = {Gary J. Samuels and Sarah L. Dodd and Walter Gams and Lisa A. Castlebury and Orlando Petrini},
title = {Trichoderma species associated with the green mold epidemic of commercially grown Agaricus bisporus.},
year = {2002},
keywords = {green mold disease; Hypocrea; Hypocreales; ITS; systematics; translation elongation factor 1 alpha gene (EF-1?); Trichoderma aggressivum; Trichoderma atroviride; Trichoderma harzianum},
doi = {},
url = {http://www.mycologia.org/cgi/content/abstract/94/1/146},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycologia},
volume = {94},
number = {1},
pages = {146--170},
abstract = {Trichoderma aggressivum sp. nov. and T. aggressivum f. europaeum f. nov. are described. These forms cause the green mold epidemic in commercially grown Agaricus bisporus in North America and Europe, respectively. In the literature they have been reported as T. harzianum biotypes Th 4 and Th 2, respectively. They are strongly separated from their closest relative, T. harzianum, in sequences of the ITS-1 region of nuclear rDNA and an approximately 689 bp fragment of the protein coding translation elongation factor gene (EF-1?). They are distinguished from the morphologically similar T. harzianum and T. atroviride (the latter also known as biotype Th 3) most readily by rate of growth. Of these, only T. harzianum grows well and sporulates at 35 C, while T. atroviride is the slowest growing. Trichoderma aggressivum f. aggressivum and f. europaeum are effectively indistinguishable morphologically although they have subtly different growth rates at 25 C on SNA and statistically significant micromorphological differences. Based on findings of this study, descriptions of T. harzianum and T. atroviride are expanded. A key to Trichoderma species commonly found associated with commercially grown A. bisporus is provided.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 17332
AU - Samuels,Gary J.
AU - Dodd,Sarah L.
AU - Gams,Walter
AU - Castlebury,Lisa A.
AU - Petrini,Orlando
T1 - Trichoderma species associated with the green mold epidemic of commercially grown Agaricus bisporus.
PY - 2002
KW - green mold disease; Hypocrea; Hypocreales; ITS; systematics; translation elongation factor 1 alpha gene (EF-1?); Trichoderma aggressivum; Trichoderma atroviride; Trichoderma harzianum
UR - http://www.mycologia.org/cgi/content/abstract/94/1/146
N2 - Trichoderma aggressivum sp. nov. and T. aggressivum f. europaeum f. nov. are described. These forms cause the green mold epidemic in commercially grown Agaricus bisporus in North America and Europe, respectively. In the literature they have been reported as T. harzianum biotypes Th 4 and Th 2, respectively. They are strongly separated from their closest relative, T. harzianum, in sequences of the ITS-1 region of nuclear rDNA and an approximately 689 bp fragment of the protein coding translation elongation factor gene (EF-1?). They are distinguished from the morphologically similar T. harzianum and T. atroviride (the latter also known as biotype Th 3) most readily by rate of growth. Of these, only T. harzianum grows well and sporulates at 35 C, while T. atroviride is the slowest growing. Trichoderma aggressivum f. aggressivum and f. europaeum are effectively indistinguishable morphologically although they have subtly different growth rates at 25 C on SNA and statistically significant micromorphological differences. Based on findings of this study, descriptions of T. harzianum and T. atroviride are expanded. A key to Trichoderma species commonly found associated with commercially grown A. bisporus is provided.
L3 -
JF - Mycologia
VL - 94
IS - 1
SP - 146
EP - 170
ER -