4.7 Article

Taxonomic and phylogenetic characterizations reveal four new species of Simplicillium (Cordycipitaceae, Hypocreales) from Guizhou, China

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-94893-z

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31860002]
  2. High-level Innovative Talents Training Object in Guizhou Province [Qiankehepingtairencai [2020]6005]
  3. Science and Technology Foundation of Guizhou Province [Qiankehejichu [2020]1Y060]
  4. Program of Innovative Scientific and technological Talent Team of Guizhou Province [2020-5010]
  5. Construction Program of Guizhou Engineering Research Center [Qian Fa Gai Gao Ji 2020-896]
  6. National Survey of Traditional Chinese Medicine Resources [Caishe [2017]66, 216]

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Simplicillium species are commonly found in various environments and new insect-associated species have been identified through phylogenetic analyses. The study proposes new species in the genus Simplicillium and suggests a new combination in the genus Leptobacillium based on morphological and phylogenetic evidence.
Simplicillium species are commonly found from soil, seawater, rock surface, decayed wood, air and as symbiotic, endophytic, entomopathogenic and mycoparasitic fungi. Minority insect-associated species was reported. Simplicillium coccinellidae, S. hymenopterorum, S. neolepidopterorum and S. scarabaeoidea were introduced as the newly insect-associated species. The phylogenetic analyses of two combined datasets (LSU+RPB1+TEF and SSU+ITS+LSU) revealed that S. coccinellidae and S. hymenopterorum were both nested in an independent clade. S. neolepidopterorum and S. scarabaeoidea have a close relationship with S. formicidae and S. lepidopterorum, respectively. S. neolepidopterorum can be easily distinguished from S. formicidae by ellipsoidal to cylindrical, solitary conidia which occasionally gather in short imbricate chains. S. scarabaeoidea could be easily distinguished from S. lepodopterorum by having longer phialides and larger conidia. Based on the morphological and phylogenetic conclusion, we determine the four newly generated isolates as new species of Simplicillium and a new combination is proposed in the genus Leptobacillium.

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