@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref31258,
author = {Yukako Hattori and Yuho Ando and Chiharu Nakashima},
title = {The taxonomical study of the Botryosphaeria species in Japan},
year = {2020},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Plant & Fungal Research},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {The reexamination of the fungal genus Botryosphaeria on twelve plant species of ten families was carried out based on the molecular phylogenetic analysis using tef1-a, tub2, and rpb2 protein-coding regions and ITS region of rDNA, and morphological characteristics. Japanese isolates were divided into five clades and identified as B. dothidea, B. qingyuanensis, B. sinensia, and Botryosphaeria sp. Two species, B. qingyuanensis and B. sinensia, have been newly added to the Japanese mycoflora, and these species were not host-specific. Besides, B. tenuispora isolated from Leucothoe fontanesiana and insect gall on leaves of Aucuba japonica was proposed as a new species. }
}
Citation for Study 26984

Citation title:
"The taxonomical study of the Botryosphaeria species in Japan".

Study name:
"The taxonomical study of the Botryosphaeria species in Japan".

This study is part of submission 26984
(Status: Published).
Citation
Hattori Y., Ando Y., & Nakashima C. 2020. The taxonomical study of the Botryosphaeria species in Japan. Plant & Fungal Research, .
Authors
-
Hattori Y.
(submitter)
-
Ando Y.
+81298534707
-
Nakashima C.
Abstract
The reexamination of the fungal genus Botryosphaeria on twelve plant species of ten families was carried out based on the molecular phylogenetic analysis using tef1-a, tub2, and rpb2 protein-coding regions and ITS region of rDNA, and morphological characteristics. Japanese isolates were divided into five clades and identified as B. dothidea, B. qingyuanensis, B. sinensia, and Botryosphaeria sp. Two species, B. qingyuanensis and B. sinensia, have been newly added to the Japanese mycoflora, and these species were not host-specific. Besides, B. tenuispora isolated from Leucothoe fontanesiana and insect gall on leaves of Aucuba japonica was proposed as a new species.
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S26984
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref31258,
author = {Yukako Hattori and Yuho Ando and Chiharu Nakashima},
title = {The taxonomical study of the Botryosphaeria species in Japan},
year = {2020},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Plant & Fungal Research},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {The reexamination of the fungal genus Botryosphaeria on twelve plant species of ten families was carried out based on the molecular phylogenetic analysis using tef1-a, tub2, and rpb2 protein-coding regions and ITS region of rDNA, and morphological characteristics. Japanese isolates were divided into five clades and identified as B. dothidea, B. qingyuanensis, B. sinensia, and Botryosphaeria sp. Two species, B. qingyuanensis and B. sinensia, have been newly added to the Japanese mycoflora, and these species were not host-specific. Besides, B. tenuispora isolated from Leucothoe fontanesiana and insect gall on leaves of Aucuba japonica was proposed as a new species. }
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 31258
AU - Hattori,Yukako
AU - Ando,Yuho
AU - Nakashima,Chiharu
T1 - The taxonomical study of the Botryosphaeria species in Japan
PY - 2020
KW -
UR - http://dx.doi.org/
N2 - The reexamination of the fungal genus Botryosphaeria on twelve plant species of ten families was carried out based on the molecular phylogenetic analysis using tef1-a, tub2, and rpb2 protein-coding regions and ITS region of rDNA, and morphological characteristics. Japanese isolates were divided into five clades and identified as B. dothidea, B. qingyuanensis, B. sinensia, and Botryosphaeria sp. Two species, B. qingyuanensis and B. sinensia, have been newly added to the Japanese mycoflora, and these species were not host-specific. Besides, B. tenuispora isolated from Leucothoe fontanesiana and insect gall on leaves of Aucuba japonica was proposed as a new species.
L3 -
JF - Plant & Fungal Research
VL -
IS -
ER -