Journal
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SYSTEMATIC AND EVOLUTIONARY MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 71, Issue 3, Pages -Publisher
MICROBIOLOGY SOC
DOI: 10.1099/ijsem.0.004747
Keywords
soil fungi; Chaetomiaceae; new species
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Funding
- National Natural Science Foundation Programme of PR China [31970013, 31760012]
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Staphylotrichum sinense is a new hyphomycete isolated from soil in Yunnan Province, China. It is characterized by globose and ochreous conidia born laterally on aerial hyphae. Phylogenetically, it forms a single clade within Staphylotrichum species and is closely related to Staphylotrichum boninense and Staphylotrichum brevistipitatum.
Staphylotrichum sinense, a new hyphomycete classified in the Chaetomiaceae (Ascomycota), was isolated from soil in Jianshui county, Yunnan Province. It is characterized by globose and ochreous conidia born laterally on aerial hyphae, and micronematous, unbranched and 0?1-septate conidiophores, sometimes reduced to conidiogenous cells. Morphologically, Staphylotrichum sinense is similar to Staphylotrichum boninense, but it can be distinguished by lacking of macronematous conidiophores and having larger conidia. Phylogenetically Staphylotrichum sinense formed a single clade within Staphylotrichum species, and is closely related to Staphylotrichum boninense and Staphylotrichum brevistipitatum. Chaetomiaceae was introduced by Winter in 1885, with Chaetomium Kunze as the type genus [1], . The family was initially placed in the order Chaetomiales, then was transferred to the order Sphaeriales [2, 3]. Subsequently, Hawksworth and Wells suggested that this family should be placed in Sordariales based on morphological character and molecular data [4, 5]. The family Chaetomiaceae is mainly character
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