4.5 Article

The Botryosphaeriaceae: genera and species known from culture

Journal

STUDIES IN MYCOLOGY
Volume -, Issue 76, Pages 51-167

Publisher

CENTRAALBUREAU SCHIMMELCULTURE
DOI: 10.3114/sim0021

Keywords

Botryosphaeriales; canker pathogens; Diplodia; Fusicoccum; Lasiodiplodia; Multi-Locus Sequence Analysis; Sphaeropsis; systematics

Categories

Funding

  1. Fundagao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia (Portugal) [PEst-OEJBIA/U10457/2011]
  2. Human Potential Operational Programme (National Strategic Reference Framework)
  3. European Social Fund (EU)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In this paper we give an account of the genera and species in the Botryosphaeriaceae. We consider morphological characters alone as inadequate to define genera or identify species, given the confusion it has repeatedly introduced in the past, their variation during development, and inevitable overlap as representation grows. Thus it seems likely that all of the older taxa linked to the Botryosphaeriaceae, and for which cultures or DNA sequence data are not available, cannot be linked to the species in this family that are known from culture. Such older taxa will have to be disregarded for future use unless they are epitypified. We therefore focus this paper on the 17 genera that can now be recognised phylogenetically, which concentrates on the species that are presently known from culture. Included is a historical overview of the family, the morphological features that define the genera and species and detailed descriptions of the 17 genera and 110 species. Keys to the genera and species are also provided. Phylogenetic relationships of the genera are given in a multi-locus tree based on combined SSU, ITS, LSU, EF1-a and I3-tubulin sequences. The morphological descriptions are supplemented by phylogenetic trees (ITS alone or ITS + EF1-a) for the'species in each genus.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available