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Crown Rust Fungi with Short Lifecycles – the Puccinia Mesnieriana Species Complex
DOI 10.12905/0380.sydowia71-2019-0047 Published online 6 June 2019 Crown rust fungi with short lifecycles – the Puccinia mesnieriana species complex Sarah Hambleton1,*, Miao Liu1,*, Quinn Eggertson1, Sylvia Wilson1**, Julie Carey1, Yehoshua Anikster2 & James A. Kolmer3 1 Biodiversity and Bioresources, Ottawa Research and Development Centre, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Ottawa, ON K1A 0C6, Canada. 2 Institute for Cereal Crops Improvement, George S. Wise Faculty of Life Science, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv 69978, Israel. 3 USDA-ARS Cereal Disease Laboratory, St. Paul, MN 55108, USA * e-mails: [email protected]; [email protected] ** Current address: Ottawa Plant Laboratory (Fallowfield) - Plant Pathology, Canadian Food Inspection Agency, Nepean ON K2H 8P9 Canada Hambleton S., Liu M., Eggertson Q., Wilson S., Carey J., Anikster Y. & Kolmer J.A. (2019) Crown rust fungi with short lifecy- cles – the Puccinia mesnieriana species complex. – Sydowia 71: 47–63. The short lifecycle rust species Puccinia mesnieriana produces telia and teliospores on buckthorns (Rhamnus spp.) that are similar to those produced by the crown rust fungi (Puccinia series Coronata) on oats and grasses. The morphological similarity of these fungi led to hypotheses of their close relationship as correlated species. Phylogenetic analyses based on ITS2 and partial 28S nrDNA regions and the cytochrome oxidase subunit I (COI) revealed that P. mesnieriana was a species complex comprising four lineages within P. ser. Coronata. Each lineage was recognized as a distinct species with differentiating morphological char- acteristics, host associations and geographic distribution. Puccinia mesnieriana was restricted to a single specimen from Portu- gal that was morphologically similar to and shared the same provenance as the type specimen of the species, which was not se- quenced. -
Taxonomic Utility of Old Names in Current Fungal Classification and Nomenclature: Conflicts, Confusion & Clarifications
Mycosphere 7 (11): 1622–1648 (2016) www.mycosphere.org ISSN 2077 7019 Article – special issue Doi 10.5943/mycosphere/7/11/2 Copyright © Guizhou Academy of Agricultural Sciences Taxonomic utility of old names in current fungal classification and nomenclature: Conflicts, confusion & clarifications Dayarathne MC1,2, Boonmee S1,2, Braun U7, Crous PW8, Daranagama DA1, Dissanayake AJ1,6, Ekanayaka H1,2, Jayawardena R1,6, Jones EBG10, Maharachchikumbura SSN5, Perera RH1, Phillips AJL9, Stadler M11, Thambugala KM1,3, Wanasinghe DN1,2, Zhao Q1,2, Hyde KD1,2, Jeewon R12* 1Center of Excellence in Fungal Research, Mae Fah Luang University, Chiang Rai 57100, Thailand 2Key Laboratory for Plant Biodiversity and Biogeography of East Asia (KLPB), Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Science, Kunming 650201, Yunnan China3Guizhou Key Laboratory of Agricultural Biotechnology, Guizhou Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Guiyang 550006, Guizhou, China 4Engineering Research Center of Southwest Bio-Pharmaceutical Resources, Ministry of Education, Guizhou University, Guiyang 550025, Guizhou Province, China5Department of Crop Sciences, College of Agricultural and Marine Sciences, Sultan Qaboos University, P.O. Box 34, Al-Khod 123,Oman 6Institute of Plant and Environment Protection, Beijing Academy of Agriculture and Forestry Sciences, No 9 of ShuGuangHuaYuanZhangLu, Haidian District Beijing 100097, China 7Martin Luther University, Institute of Biology, Department of Geobotany, Herbarium, Neuwerk 21, 06099 Halle, Germany 8Westerdijk Fungal Biodiversity Institute, Uppsalalaan 8, 3584CT Utrecht, The Netherlands. 9University of Lisbon, Faculty of Sciences, Biosystems and Integrative Sciences Institute (BioISI), Campo Grande, 1749-016 Lisbon, Portugal. 10Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology, Faculty of Agriculture, Chiang Mai University, 50200, Thailand 11Helmholtz-Zentrum für Infektionsforschung GmbH, Dept. -
SCIENCE CITATION INDEX EXPANDED - JOURNAL LIST Total Journals: 8631
SCIENCE CITATION INDEX EXPANDED - JOURNAL LIST Total journals: 8631 1. 4OR-A QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF OPERATIONS RESEARCH 2. AAPG BULLETIN 3. AAPS JOURNAL 4. AAPS PHARMSCITECH 5. AATCC REVIEW 6. ABDOMINAL IMAGING 7. ABHANDLUNGEN AUS DEM MATHEMATISCHEN SEMINAR DER UNIVERSITAT HAMBURG 8. ABSTRACT AND APPLIED ANALYSIS 9. ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY 10. ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE 11. ACADEMIC MEDICINE 12. ACADEMIC PEDIATRICS 13. ACADEMIC RADIOLOGY 14. ACCOUNTABILITY IN RESEARCH-POLICIES AND QUALITY ASSURANCE 15. ACCOUNTS OF CHEMICAL RESEARCH 16. ACCREDITATION AND QUALITY ASSURANCE 17. ACI MATERIALS JOURNAL 18. ACI STRUCTURAL JOURNAL 19. ACM COMPUTING SURVEYS 20. ACM JOURNAL ON EMERGING TECHNOLOGIES IN COMPUTING SYSTEMS 21. ACM SIGCOMM COMPUTER COMMUNICATION REVIEW 22. ACM SIGPLAN NOTICES 23. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON ALGORITHMS 24. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON APPLIED PERCEPTION 25. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON ARCHITECTURE AND CODE OPTIMIZATION 26. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON AUTONOMOUS AND ADAPTIVE SYSTEMS 27. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON COMPUTATIONAL LOGIC 28. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON COMPUTER SYSTEMS 29. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON COMPUTER-HUMAN INTERACTION 30. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON DATABASE SYSTEMS 31. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON DESIGN AUTOMATION OF ELECTRONIC SYSTEMS 32. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON EMBEDDED COMPUTING SYSTEMS 33. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON GRAPHICS 34. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON INFORMATION AND SYSTEM SECURITY 35. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON INFORMATION SYSTEMS 36. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS AND TECHNOLOGY 37. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON INTERNET TECHNOLOGY 38. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON KNOWLEDGE DISCOVERY FROM DATA 39. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON MATHEMATICAL SOFTWARE 40. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON MODELING AND COMPUTER SIMULATION 41. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON MULTIMEDIA COMPUTING COMMUNICATIONS AND APPLICATIONS 42. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON PROGRAMMING LANGUAGES AND SYSTEMS 43. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON RECONFIGURABLE TECHNOLOGY AND SYSTEMS 44. -
Occurrence of Non-Obligate Microfungi Inside Lichen Thalli
ZOBODAT - www.zobodat.at Zoologisch-Botanische Datenbank/Zoological-Botanical Database Digitale Literatur/Digital Literature Zeitschrift/Journal: Sydowia Jahr/Year: 2005 Band/Volume: 57 Autor(en)/Author(s): Suryanarayanan Trichur Subramanian, Thirunavukkarasu N., Hariharan G. N., Balaji P. Artikel/Article: Occurrence of non-obligate microfungi inside lichen thalli. 120-130 ©Verlag Ferdinand Berger & Söhne Ges.m.b.H., Horn, Austria, download unter www.biologiezentrum.at Occurrence of non-obligate microfungi inside lichen thalli T. S. Suryanarayanan1, N. Thirunavukkarasu1, G. N. Hariharan2 and P. Balajr 1 Vivekananda Institute of Tropical Mycology, Ramakrishna Mission Vidyapith, Chennai 600 004, India; 2 M S Swaminathan Research Foundation, Taramani, Chennai 600 113, India. Suryanarayanan, T. S., N. Thirunavukkarasu, G. N. Hariharan & P. Balaji (2005): Occurrence of non-obligate microfungi inside lichen thalli. - Sydowia 57 (1): 120-130. Five corticolous lichen species (four foliose and one fruticose) and the leaf and bark tissues of their host trees were screened for the presence of asympto- matic, culturable microfungi. Four isolation procedures were evaluated to identify the most suitable one for isolating the internal mycobiota of lichens. A total of 242 isolates of 21 fungal genera were recovered from 500 thallus segments of the lichens. Different fungi dominated the fungal assemblages of the lichen thalli and the host tissues. An ordination analysis showed that there was little overlap between the fungi of the lichens and those of the host tissues even though, con- sidering their close proximity, they must have been exposed to the same fungal inoculum. This is the first study that compares the microfungal assemblage asso- ciated with lichens with those occurring in their substrates. -
Author's Guidelines 2008.DOC, 1
Author's guidelines 2008.DOC, 1 Author's guidelines Editorial Board of Sydowia General policy Sydowia publishes contributions (reports of original research and reviews) relevant to fungal taxonomy, systematics, evolution, structure, development, ecology, pathology (plants, animals, humans), and biotechnological applica- tions. The official journal language is English. An abstract of no more than 200 words is mandatory for each paper. Submission of a manuscript to the Exe- cutive Editor implies that the results have not been published or submitted for publication elsewhere, except as an abstract. When the authors are in doubt as to the suitability of their papers for Sydowia, the editor of the journal should be consulted before submission of the manuscript. Manuscript preparation A proper and quick processing of your manuscript requires a clean manuscript regarding both its scientific content and its formal presentation. Detailed information on the layout/style conventions recommended for Sydowia is given in the attached file ‘Sydowia_Manuscript_Template.DOC’. When in doubt as for the presentation of special items, please refer to papers recently published in Sydowia. Responsibility The author(s) alone bear full responsibility for the form and contents of their contributions. Submission of a manuscript for publication implies that all authors have agreed to publication of the work. The authors must ensure that the manuscript does not infringe copyrights or property rights. The editors of Sydowia will not bear any responsibility in issues of copyright infringement. Author's guidelines 2008.DOC, 2 Review of the papers All manuscripts are reviewed by two referees and an Associate Editor. In case of doubt, the right to consult additional experts is reserved to the editor. -
Project Summary
Curriculum Vitae T. Y. James TIMOTHY YONG JAMES Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of Michigan Ann Arbor, MI 48109, U.S.A. Telephone: +1-734-615-7753 Fax: +1-734-763-0544 e-mail: [email protected] webpage: www.umich.edu/~mycology RESEARCH INTERESTS My research covers multiples aspects of the evolutionary genetics of fungi. Particular research foci center around traits unique to fungi or for which fungi make excellent models. These include the genetics of multiallelic and multilocus mating systems, heterokaryosis, spore dispersal strategies, population structure, mitotic recombination, and the evolution of virulence. I also study the fungal tree of life and its relationship to the evolution of phenotypes such as mating systems, morphology, and the genome. EDUCATION Ph.D. in Biology and Program in Cell and Molecular Biology (2003), Duke University, Durham, NC, USA B.Sc. in Botany (1996), University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USA PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE 2015- Lewis E. Wehmeyer and Elaine Prince Wehmeyer Professor of Fungal Taxonomy College of Literature Sciences and the Arts, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA 2015- Associate professor and associate curator of fungi, Dept. of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA 2009-2015 Assistant professor and assistant curator of fungi, Dept. of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA 2008 Postdoctoral researcher, Dept. of Biology, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada Advisor: Dr. Jianping Xu Genetic control of mitochondrial inheritance by the mating-type locus of the pathogenic yeast Cryptococcus neoformans. 2006-2007 Postdoctoral researcher, Dept. of Evolutionary Biology, Uppsala University & Dept. -
Author's Guidelines
Authors guide-lines 2005.DOC, 1 Author's guidelines Editorial Board of Sydowia General policy Sydowia publishes contributions (reports of original research and reviews) relevant to fungal taxonomy, systematics, evolution, structure, development, ecology, pathology (plants, animals, humans), and biotechnological applications. The official journal language is English. An abstract of no more than 200 words is mandatory for each paper. Submission of a manuscript to the Executive Editor implies that the results have not been published or submitted for publication elsewhere, except as an abstract. When the authors are in doubt as to the suitability of their papers for Sydowia, the editor of the journal should be consulted before submission of the manuscript. Manuscript preparation A proper and quick processing of your manuscript requires a clean manuscript regarding both its scientific content and its formal presentation. Detailed information on the layout/style conventions recommended for Sydowia is given in the attached file ‘Sydowia_Manuscript_Template.DOC’. When in doubt as for the presentation of special items, please refer to papers recently published in Sydowia. Responsibility The author(s) alone bear full responsibility for the form and contents of their contributions. Submission of a manuscript for publication implies that all authors have agreed to publication of the work. The authors must ensure that the manuscript does not infringe copyrights or property rights. The editors of Sydowia will not bear any responsibility in issues of copyright infringement. Authors guide-lines 2005.DOC, 2 Review of the papers All manuscripts are reviewed by two referees and an Associate Editor. In case of doubt, the right to consult additional experts is reserved to the editor. -
Autochthonous White Rot Fungi from the Tropical Forest of Colombia for Dye Decolourisation and Ligninolytic Enzymes Production
©Verlag Ferdinand Berger & Söhne Ges.m.b.H., Horn, Austria, download unter www.biologiezentrum.at Autochthonous white rot fungi from the tropical forest of Colombia for dye decolourisation and ligninolytic enzymes production Carolina Arboleda1, Amanda I. MejõÂa1, Ana E. Franco-Molano2, Gloria A. JimeÂnez3, Michel J. Penninckx3 * 1 Grupo Biopolimer, Facultad de QuõÂmica FarmaceÂutica, Universidad de Antioquia, A.A. 1226, MedellõÂn, Colombia 2 Grupo de TaxonomõÂa y EcologõÂa de Hongos, Instituto de BiologõÂa, Universidad de Antioquia A.A. 1226, MedellõÂn, Colombia 3 Laboratoire de Physiologie et Ecologie Microbienne, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium Arboleda C., MejõÂa A. I., Franco-Molano A. E., JimeÂnez G. A., Penninckx M. J. (2008) Autochthonous white rot fungi from the tropical forest of Colombia for dye decolourisation and ligninolytic enzymes production. ± Sydowia 60 (2): 165±180. Nineteen different strains of white rot fungi, originating from the tropical forest in Colombia were screened for their ability to decolourise Azure B and Coomassie Blue included in solid media. Collybia plectophyla, Pleurous djamor, Lentinus swartzii, Lentinus crinitus, Pycnoporus sanguineus, Auricularia auricula, Auricularia fuscosuccinea, Oudemansiella canarii, Ganoderma stipitatum and Collybia omphalodes were selected on the basis of this screening. These ten strains were further characterized in liquid medium for decolourisation and production of Laccase, Manganese and Lignin peroxidases. The strains producing best decolour- isation were L. swartzii, L. crinitus, G. stipitatum, and O. canarii. A correlation between dyes decolourisation, laccase and manganese peroxidase production, was shown. Lignin peroxidase was never detected in the cultivation conditions used. Enzyme induction by Mn2+, Ethanol and Cu2+ was studied in more detail for Ganoderma stipitatum, Lentinus crinitus and Lentinus swartzi. -
Mountain Pine Beetle Mutualist Leptographium Longiclavatum Presence in the Southern Rocky Mountains During a Record Warm Period
DOI 10.12905/0380.sydowia70-2018-0001 Published online 30 April 2018 Mountain pine beetle mutualist Leptographium longiclavatum presence in the southern Rocky Mountains during a record warm period Javier E. Mercado1,* & Beatriz Ortiz-Santana2 1 Rocky Mountain Research Station, 240 W Prospect Rd., Fort Collins, CO 80526 2 Northern Research Station, One Gifford Pinchot Dr., Madison, WI 53726 * e-mail: [email protected] Mercado J.E. & Ortiz-Santana B. (2018) Mountain pine beetle mutualist Leptographium longiclavatum presence in the south- ern Rocky Mountains during a record warm period. – Sydowia 70: 1–10. We studied blue-stain fungi (Ophiostomataceae: Ophiostomatales) of mountain pine beetle in declining epidemic populations affecting three pine species in Colorado. Using morphological and molecular characterizations, we determined the presence of the mutualist L. longiclavatum in the southern Rocky Mountains of Colorado, where it was as common as the warm temperature adapted O. montium within the insect’s specialized maxillary mycangium. The species was more prevalent than its “sibling spe- cies” G. clavigera which is the the common mycangial mutualist documented in USA populations. Findings were made during a two-year period including the warmest year on record in the state (i. e., 2012). Other studies have indicated that L. longiclavatum is more frequent in insect populations occurring in the northern Canadian Rockies diminishing in southern areas of that moun- tain range, suggesting latitude influences the frequency of this fungal mutualists, due to its better cool temperature tolerances. Our findings suggest Colorado isolates may have a greater tolerance of warmer temperatures than those from the north. -
Biological Control of Fungal Diseases in a Forest Nursery: Impact on the Fungal Community, Species Abundance and Some Fungal Pathogens
Faculty of Forest Sciences Biological control of fungal diseases in a forest nursery: Impact on the fungal community, species abundance and some fungal pathogens Elin Persson Degree project [30] credits Forest Science - Master’s program Department of Forest Mycology and Plant Pathology Umeå 2020 1 Biological control of fungal diseases in a forest nursery: Impact on the fungal community, species abundance and some fungal pathogens Biologisk kontroll av svampsjukdomar i en skogsträds-plantskola: Påverkan på svampsamhället på, artabundans och några skadesvampar Elin Persson Supervisor: Åke Olson, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Forest Mycology and Plant Pathology Assistant supervisor: Audrius Menkis, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Forest Mycology and Plant Pathology Examiner: Malin Elfstrand, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Forest Mycology and Plant Pathology Credits: [30] credits Level: A2E/Advanced Course title: Course code: EX0972/10135 Program/education: Forest Science- Master’s Program Course coordinating department: Department of Forest Mycology and Plant Pathology Place of publication: Umeå Year of publication: 2020 Cover picture: Elin Persson Keywords: Biological control, forest nursery, fungal communities, pathogens, metabarcoding. Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Faculty of Forest Sciences Department of Forest Mycology and Plant Pathology 2 3 Abstract There is a large production of regeneration material in Sweden, where modernization and new technologies have made it possible to produce a large number of high- quality seedlings. To provide the whole forestry sector with seedlings for regeneration, forest nurseries must as well make sure that the management generate healthy seedlings. Fungal diseases have for a long time been a constant problem for nurseries, but kept under control using chemical fungicides. -
Hormonema Carpetanum Sp. Nov., a New Lineage of Dothideaceous Black Yeasts from Spain
STUDIES IN MYCOLOGY 50: 149–157. 2004. Hormonema carpetanum sp. nov., a new lineage of dothideaceous black yeasts from Spain Gerald F. Bills*, Javier Collado, Constantino Ruibal, Fernando Peláez and Gonzalo Platas Centro de Investigación Básica, Merck Sharp and Dohme de España, Josefa Valcárcel 38, Madrid, E-28027, Spain *Correspondence: G.F. Bills, [email protected] Abstract: Strains of an unnamed Hormonema species were collected from living and decaying leaves of Juniperus species, plant litter, and rock surfaces in Spain. Strains were recognized and selected based on their antifungal activity caused by the triterpene glycoside, enfumafungin, or based on morphological characteristics and ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 rDNA (ITS) sequence data. Examination of 13 strains from eight different sites demonstrated that they share a common set of morphological fea- tures. The strains have identical or nearly identical sequences of rDNA from ITS regions. Phylogenetic analyses of ITS region and intron-containing actin gene sequences demonstrated that these strains comprised a lineage closely allied to, but distinct from, Hormonema dematioides, and other dothideaceous ascomycetes with Hormonema anamorphs. Therefore, a new species, Hormonema carpetanum, is proposed and illustrated. The strains form a pycnidial synanamorph that resembles the coelomycete genus Sclerophoma in agar culture and on sterilized juniper leaves. Taxonomic novelty: Hormonema carpetanum Bills, Peláez & Ruibal sp. nov. Key words: Dothideales, endophyte, enfumafungin, Kabatina, Rhizosphaera, rock-inhabiting fungi, Sclerophoma, Sydowia. INTRODUCTION demonstrated that they share a set of morphological Enfumafungin is a hemiacetal triterpene glycoside features common to the enfumafungin-producing that is produced in fermentations of a Hormonema sp. Hormonema sp. The strains have identical or nearly associated with living leaves of Juniperus communis identical sequences of rDNA from ITS regions. -
A Comparative Study of Fungal Populations in Healthy and Symptomatic Twigs and Seedlings of Eucalyptus Globulus in Uruguay
ZOBODAT - www.zobodat.at Zoologisch-Botanische Datenbank/Zoological-Botanical Database Digitale Literatur/Digital Literature Zeitschrift/Journal: Sydowia Jahr/Year: 1997 Band/Volume: 49 Autor(en)/Author(s): Bettucci Lina, Alonso Raquel, Fernandez Luis M. Artikel/Article: A comparative study of fungal populations in healthy and symptomatic twigs and seedlings of Eucalyptus globulus in Uruguay. 109- 117 ©Verlag Ferdinand Berger & Söhne Ges.m.b.H., Horn, Austria, download unter www.biologiezentrum.at A comparative study of fungal populations in healthy and symptomatic twigs and seedlings of Eucalyptus globulus in Uruguay Lina Bettucci1, Raquel Alonso1 & Luis M. Fernandez1 1 Laboratorio de Micologia, Facultad de Ingenierm'a, Julio Herrera y Reissig 565. Secciön Micologia, Facultad de Ciencias, Montevideo, Uruguay Bettucci, L., R. Alonso & L,. M. Fernandez (1997). A comparative study of fungal populations in healthy and symptomatic twigs and seedlings of Eucalyptus globulus in Uruguay. - Sydowia 49(2): 109-117. The main goal of this work was to compare the fungal species present in endophytic assemblages of healthy twigs with those associated with twig lesions of Eucalyptus globulus and to compare them with fungal endophytes from seedlings. From 400 segments of healthy and symptomatic twigs of E. globulus 302 isolates corresponding to 49 taxa have been obtained, but only 19 taxa were isolated at frequencies higher than 2%. From 200 segments of seedlings, 328 isolates belong- ing to 17 taxa were isolated. Alternaria alternata was the main dominant species isolated from all tissues, with the exception of xylem of healthy twigs. Correspon- dence analysis showed differences in species composition between endophytic assemblages from stem seedlings and healthy twigs, thus suggesting that some dominant endophytic species colonizing seedlings adopt different strategies during the plant growth process.