4.6 Article

Taxonomic Re-Examination of Nine Rosellinia Types (Ascomycota, Xylariales) Stored in the Saccardo Mycological Collection

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 9, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms9030666

Keywords

fungal taxonomy; illumina sequencing; mycological collection; phylogeny; Pier Andrea Saccardo; Xylariaceae

Categories

Funding

  1. MIUR (Ministero Istruzione Universita e Ricerca, Italy) [PANN15T3_00789]
  2. University of Padova [704/2018BG]
  3. DOR (Dotazione Ordinaria della Ricerca) 2018-2020 from the Biology Department (UniPD)

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A recent study re-examined nine different types of Rosellinia using morphological and molecular approaches, proposing new combinations for some species based on ITS sequence analysis. The study also introduced a new name for an invalid taxon and highlighted the importance of molecular studies on historical type specimens.
In a recent monograph on the genus Rosellinia, type specimens worldwide were revised and re-classified using a morphological approach. Among them, some came from Pier Andrea Saccardo's fungarium stored in the Herbarium of the Padova Botanical Garden. In this work, we taxonomically re-examine via a morphological and molecular approach nine different Rosellinia sensu Saccardo types. ITS1 and/or ITS2 sequences were successfully obtained applying Illumina MiSeq technology and phylogenetic analyses were carried out in order to elucidate their current taxonomic position. Only the ITS1 sequence was recovered for Rosellinia areolata, while for R. geophila, only the ITS2 sequence was recovered. We proposed here new combinations for Rosellinia chordicola, R. geophila and R. horridula, while for R. ambigua, R. areolata, R. australis, R. romana and R. somala, we did not suggest taxonomic changes compared to the current ones. The name Rosellinia subsimilis Sacc. is invalid, as it is a later homonym of R. subsimilis P. Karst. & Starback. Therefore, we introduced Coniochaeta dakotensis as a nomen novum for R. subsimilis Sacc. This is the first time that these types have been subjected to a molecular study. Our results demonstrate that old types are an important source of DNA sequence data for taxonomic re-examinations.

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