@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref14992,
author = {Y. J. Choi and H. D. Shin and Sebastian Ploch and Marco Thines},
title = {Evidence for uncharted biodiversity in the Albugo candida complex, with the description of a new species},
year = {2008},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycological Research},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {During the past two years the integrity of Albugo candida as the only species of Albugo parasitic to Brassicaceae has been challenged. The existence of two distinct species parasitic to Brassicaceae has been confirmed, to which a third species was added. For the purpose of further exploring the diversity of the A. candida complex, eight Albugo specimens on Draba lasiocarpa, D. nemorosa, and D. verna (Brassicaceae) were morphologically and molecularly compared with other Albugo species. On grounds of sequence comparisons and thorough investigation of the characteristics of the oospores, especially surface ornamentation, Albugo voglmayrii sp. nov., parasitic to Draba nemorosa, is described from five specimens collected in Korea and China. By its oospore wall ornamentation it differs from the previously described species A. candida, A. koreana, and A. lepidii. The morphological discrepancy is supported by high genetic distances to other species of Albugo in ITS rDNA and cox2 mtDNA. Albugo specimens from D. lasiocarpa and D. verna were grouped with A. candida, revealing that two distinct species may cause white blister rust on the genus Draba. Therefore, the paradigms that (1) there is only a single species parasitic to Brassicaceae, that (2) oospore morphology is useful only for distinguishing between largely unrelated species, and that (3) in general only one species of Albugo may occur on a single host genus need to be discarded.}
}
Citation for Study 2026

Citation title:
"Evidence for uncharted biodiversity in the Albugo candida complex, with the description of a new species".

This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S2020
(Status: Published).
Citation
Choi Y., Shin H., Ploch S., & Thines M. 2008. Evidence for uncharted biodiversity in the Albugo candida complex, with the description of a new species. Mycological Research, null.
Authors
-
Choi Y.
-
Shin H.
-
Ploch S.
-
Thines M.
Abstract
During the past two years the integrity of Albugo candida as the only species of Albugo parasitic to Brassicaceae has been challenged. The existence of two distinct species parasitic to Brassicaceae has been confirmed, to which a third species was added. For the purpose of further exploring the diversity of the A. candida complex, eight Albugo specimens on Draba lasiocarpa, D. nemorosa, and D. verna (Brassicaceae) were morphologically and molecularly compared with other Albugo species. On grounds of sequence comparisons and thorough investigation of the characteristics of the oospores, especially surface ornamentation, Albugo voglmayrii sp. nov., parasitic to Draba nemorosa, is described from five specimens collected in Korea and China. By its oospore wall ornamentation it differs from the previously described species A. candida, A. koreana, and A. lepidii. The morphological discrepancy is supported by high genetic distances to other species of Albugo in ITS rDNA and cox2 mtDNA. Albugo specimens from D. lasiocarpa and D. verna were grouped with A. candida, revealing that two distinct species may cause white blister rust on the genus Draba. Therefore, the paradigms that (1) there is only a single species parasitic to Brassicaceae, that (2) oospore morphology is useful only for distinguishing between largely unrelated species, and that (3) in general only one species of Albugo may occur on a single host genus need to be discarded.
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S2026
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref14992,
author = {Y. J. Choi and H. D. Shin and Sebastian Ploch and Marco Thines},
title = {Evidence for uncharted biodiversity in the Albugo candida complex, with the description of a new species},
year = {2008},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycological Research},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {During the past two years the integrity of Albugo candida as the only species of Albugo parasitic to Brassicaceae has been challenged. The existence of two distinct species parasitic to Brassicaceae has been confirmed, to which a third species was added. For the purpose of further exploring the diversity of the A. candida complex, eight Albugo specimens on Draba lasiocarpa, D. nemorosa, and D. verna (Brassicaceae) were morphologically and molecularly compared with other Albugo species. On grounds of sequence comparisons and thorough investigation of the characteristics of the oospores, especially surface ornamentation, Albugo voglmayrii sp. nov., parasitic to Draba nemorosa, is described from five specimens collected in Korea and China. By its oospore wall ornamentation it differs from the previously described species A. candida, A. koreana, and A. lepidii. The morphological discrepancy is supported by high genetic distances to other species of Albugo in ITS rDNA and cox2 mtDNA. Albugo specimens from D. lasiocarpa and D. verna were grouped with A. candida, revealing that two distinct species may cause white blister rust on the genus Draba. Therefore, the paradigms that (1) there is only a single species parasitic to Brassicaceae, that (2) oospore morphology is useful only for distinguishing between largely unrelated species, and that (3) in general only one species of Albugo may occur on a single host genus need to be discarded.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 14992
AU - Choi,Y. J.
AU - Shin,H. D.
AU - Ploch,Sebastian
AU - Thines,Marco
T1 - Evidence for uncharted biodiversity in the Albugo candida complex, with the description of a new species
PY - 2008
KW -
UR -
N2 - During the past two years the integrity of Albugo candida as the only species of Albugo parasitic to Brassicaceae has been challenged. The existence of two distinct species parasitic to Brassicaceae has been confirmed, to which a third species was added. For the purpose of further exploring the diversity of the A. candida complex, eight Albugo specimens on Draba lasiocarpa, D. nemorosa, and D. verna (Brassicaceae) were morphologically and molecularly compared with other Albugo species. On grounds of sequence comparisons and thorough investigation of the characteristics of the oospores, especially surface ornamentation, Albugo voglmayrii sp. nov., parasitic to Draba nemorosa, is described from five specimens collected in Korea and China. By its oospore wall ornamentation it differs from the previously described species A. candida, A. koreana, and A. lepidii. The morphological discrepancy is supported by high genetic distances to other species of Albugo in ITS rDNA and cox2 mtDNA. Albugo specimens from D. lasiocarpa and D. verna were grouped with A. candida, revealing that two distinct species may cause white blister rust on the genus Draba. Therefore, the paradigms that (1) there is only a single species parasitic to Brassicaceae, that (2) oospore morphology is useful only for distinguishing between largely unrelated species, and that (3) in general only one species of Albugo may occur on a single host genus need to be discarded.
L3 -
JF - Mycological Research
VL -
IS -
ER -