@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref20547,
author = {Ulrike Damm and Paul Cannon and Joyce H. C. Woudenberg and Peter Johnston and Bevan S Weir and Yu Pei Tan and Roger G Shivas and Pedro W. Crous},
title = {The Colletotrichum boninense species complex},
year = {2012},
keywords = {anthracnose, Ascomycota, Colletotrichum boninense, Glomerella, phylogeny, systematics},
doi = {10.3114/sim0002},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Studies in Mycology},
volume = {73},
number = {},
pages = {1--36},
abstract = {Although only recently described, Colletotrichum boninense is well established in literature as an anthracnose pathogen or endophyte of a diverse range of host
plants worldwide. It is especially prominent on members of Amaryllidaceae, Orchidaceae, Proteaceae and Solanaceae. Reports from literature and preliminary studies using
ITS sequence data indicated that C. boninense represents a species complex. A multilocus molecular phylogenetic analysis (ITS, ACT, TUB2, CHS-1, GAPDH, HIS3, CAL) of
86 strains previously identified as C. boninense and other related strains revealed 18 clades. These clades are recognised here as separate species, including C. boninense s.
str., C. hippeastri, C. karstii and 12 previously undescribed species, C. annellatum, C. beeveri, C. brassicicola, C. brasiliense, C. colombiense, C. constrictum, C. cymbidiicola,
C. dacrycarpi, C. novae-zelandiae, C. oncidii, C. parsonsiae and C. torulosum. Seven of the new species are only known from New Zealand, perhaps reflecting a sampling bias.
The new combination C. phyllanthi was made, and C. dracaenae Petch was epitypified and the name replaced with C. petchii. Typical for species of the C. boninense species
complex are the conidiogenous cells with rather prominent periclinal thickening that also sometimes extend to form a new conidiogenous locus or annellations as well as conidia
that have a prominent basal scar. Many species in the C. boninense complex form teleomorphs in culture.}
}
Citation for Study 12517
Citation title:
"The Colletotrichum boninense species complex".
Study name:
"The Colletotrichum boninense species complex".
This study is part of submission 12517
(Status: Published).
Citation
Damm U., Cannon P., Woudenberg J., Johnston P., Weir B.S., Tan Y., Shivas R.G., & Crous P.W. 2012. The Colletotrichum boninense species complex. Studies in Mycology, 73: 1-36.
Authors
-
Damm U.
(submitter)
+49 3581 4760 5312
-
Cannon P.
-
Woudenberg J.
-
Johnston P.
+64 9 574 4714
-
Weir B.S.
+64 9 574 4115
-
Tan Y.
-
Shivas R.G.
-
Crous P.W.
Abstract
Although only recently described, Colletotrichum boninense is well established in literature as an anthracnose pathogen or endophyte of a diverse range of host
plants worldwide. It is especially prominent on members of Amaryllidaceae, Orchidaceae, Proteaceae and Solanaceae. Reports from literature and preliminary studies using
ITS sequence data indicated that C. boninense represents a species complex. A multilocus molecular phylogenetic analysis (ITS, ACT, TUB2, CHS-1, GAPDH, HIS3, CAL) of
86 strains previously identified as C. boninense and other related strains revealed 18 clades. These clades are recognised here as separate species, including C. boninense s.
str., C. hippeastri, C. karstii and 12 previously undescribed species, C. annellatum, C. beeveri, C. brassicicola, C. brasiliense, C. colombiense, C. constrictum, C. cymbidiicola,
C. dacrycarpi, C. novae-zelandiae, C. oncidii, C. parsonsiae and C. torulosum. Seven of the new species are only known from New Zealand, perhaps reflecting a sampling bias.
The new combination C. phyllanthi was made, and C. dracaenae Petch was epitypified and the name replaced with C. petchii. Typical for species of the C. boninense species
complex are the conidiogenous cells with rather prominent periclinal thickening that also sometimes extend to form a new conidiogenous locus or annellations as well as conidia
that have a prominent basal scar. Many species in the C. boninense complex form teleomorphs in culture.
Keywords
anthracnose, Ascomycota, Colletotrichum boninense, Glomerella, phylogeny, systematics
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S12517
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref20547,
author = {Ulrike Damm and Paul Cannon and Joyce H. C. Woudenberg and Peter Johnston and Bevan S Weir and Yu Pei Tan and Roger G Shivas and Pedro W. Crous},
title = {The Colletotrichum boninense species complex},
year = {2012},
keywords = {anthracnose, Ascomycota, Colletotrichum boninense, Glomerella, phylogeny, systematics},
doi = {10.3114/sim0002},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Studies in Mycology},
volume = {73},
number = {},
pages = {1--36},
abstract = {Although only recently described, Colletotrichum boninense is well established in literature as an anthracnose pathogen or endophyte of a diverse range of host
plants worldwide. It is especially prominent on members of Amaryllidaceae, Orchidaceae, Proteaceae and Solanaceae. Reports from literature and preliminary studies using
ITS sequence data indicated that C. boninense represents a species complex. A multilocus molecular phylogenetic analysis (ITS, ACT, TUB2, CHS-1, GAPDH, HIS3, CAL) of
86 strains previously identified as C. boninense and other related strains revealed 18 clades. These clades are recognised here as separate species, including C. boninense s.
str., C. hippeastri, C. karstii and 12 previously undescribed species, C. annellatum, C. beeveri, C. brassicicola, C. brasiliense, C. colombiense, C. constrictum, C. cymbidiicola,
C. dacrycarpi, C. novae-zelandiae, C. oncidii, C. parsonsiae and C. torulosum. Seven of the new species are only known from New Zealand, perhaps reflecting a sampling bias.
The new combination C. phyllanthi was made, and C. dracaenae Petch was epitypified and the name replaced with C. petchii. Typical for species of the C. boninense species
complex are the conidiogenous cells with rather prominent periclinal thickening that also sometimes extend to form a new conidiogenous locus or annellations as well as conidia
that have a prominent basal scar. Many species in the C. boninense complex form teleomorphs in culture.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 20547
AU - Damm,Ulrike
AU - Cannon,Paul
AU - Woudenberg,Joyce H. C.
AU - Johnston,Peter
AU - Weir,Bevan S
AU - Tan,Yu Pei
AU - Shivas,Roger G
AU - Crous,Pedro W.
T1 - The Colletotrichum boninense species complex
PY - 2012
KW - anthracnose
KW - Ascomycota
KW - Colletotrichum boninense
KW - Glomerella
KW - phylogeny
KW - systematics
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.3114/sim0002
N2 - Although only recently described, Colletotrichum boninense is well established in literature as an anthracnose pathogen or endophyte of a diverse range of host
plants worldwide. It is especially prominent on members of Amaryllidaceae, Orchidaceae, Proteaceae and Solanaceae. Reports from literature and preliminary studies using
ITS sequence data indicated that C. boninense represents a species complex. A multilocus molecular phylogenetic analysis (ITS, ACT, TUB2, CHS-1, GAPDH, HIS3, CAL) of
86 strains previously identified as C. boninense and other related strains revealed 18 clades. These clades are recognised here as separate species, including C. boninense s.
str., C. hippeastri, C. karstii and 12 previously undescribed species, C. annellatum, C. beeveri, C. brassicicola, C. brasiliense, C. colombiense, C. constrictum, C. cymbidiicola,
C. dacrycarpi, C. novae-zelandiae, C. oncidii, C. parsonsiae and C. torulosum. Seven of the new species are only known from New Zealand, perhaps reflecting a sampling bias.
The new combination C. phyllanthi was made, and C. dracaenae Petch was epitypified and the name replaced with C. petchii. Typical for species of the C. boninense species
complex are the conidiogenous cells with rather prominent periclinal thickening that also sometimes extend to form a new conidiogenous locus or annellations as well as conidia
that have a prominent basal scar. Many species in the C. boninense complex form teleomorphs in culture.
L3 - 10.3114/sim0002
JF - Studies in Mycology
VL - 73
IS -
SP - 1
EP - 36
ER -