@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref19705,
author = {Takayuki Aoki and Mar?a Mercedes Scandiani and Kerry O'Donnell},
title = {Phenotypic, molecular phylogenetic and pathogenetic characterization of Fusarium crassistipitatum sp. nov., a novel soybean sudden death syndrome pathogen from Argentina and Brazil},
year = {2011},
keywords = {Argentina, Brazil, Glycine max, SDS, pathogenicity, phylogeny, taxonomy},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycoscience},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {A novel soybean sudden death syndrome (SDS) pathogen from Argentina and Brazil is formally described herein as Fusarium crassistipitatum based on detailed phenotypic analyses of macro- and microscopic characters and phylogenetic analyses of multilocus DNA sequence data. Fusarium crassistipitatum can be distinguished from the other soybean SDS and Phaseolus/Vigna root rot pathogens (BRR) phenotypically by the production of yellowish colonies on PDA; and tall, stout and mostly unbranched conidiophores with a thick-walled base, which form mutiseptate conidia apically. Phylogenetic species recognition based on genealogical concordance of a six-gene dataset strongly supported the reciprocal monophyly of F. crassistipitatum with respect to the other SDS and BRR pathogens. Isolates of F. crassistipitatum were able to induce typical SDS foliar and root-rot symptoms on soybean that were indistinguishable from those caused by three other SDS pathogens (i.e., F. virguliforme, F. brasiliense and F. tucumaniae) on susceptible cultivars A 6445RG and N 4613RG in a pathogenicity experiment. }
}
Trees for Study 11502
Citation title:
"Phenotypic, molecular phylogenetic and pathogenetic characterization of Fusarium crassistipitatum sp. nov., a novel soybean sudden death syndrome pathogen from Argentina and Brazil".
Study name:
"Phenotypic, molecular phylogenetic and pathogenetic characterization of Fusarium crassistipitatum sp. nov., a novel soybean sudden death syndrome pathogen from Argentina and Brazil".
This study is part of submission 11492
(Status: Published).
Trees