4.2 Article

Fusarium species associated with citrus blackfly (Aleurocanthus woglumi) from an agroecological polyculture in Brazil, including an augmented description of F. volatile

Journal

MYCOLOGIA
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/00275514.2023.2283944

Keywords

Fusarium chlamydosporum species complex; Fusarium fujikuroi species complex; Fusarium incarnatum-equiseti species complex; insect-associated fungi; teleomorph

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This study reports Fusarium species associated with Aleurocanthus woglumi collected from a polyculture system in Brazil and provides an augmented description of F. volatile, including its sexual stage. The findings suggest that some species have unknown sexual stages and demonstrate the sexual reproductive modes and characteristics of certain species.
The objectives of this study were to report Fusarium species associated with Aleurocanthus woglumi (Hemiptera: Aleyrodidae) collected from citrus leaves from an agroecological polyculture in Brazil, assess sexual reproductive mode of the species with unknown sexual stages, and provide an augmented description of F. volatile, for which we discovered a sexual stage. Nineteen Fusarium isolates were recovered from A. woglumi. These fungi belong to three species complexes, i.e., the F. chlamydosporum species complex (FCSC), the F. fujikuroi species complex (FFSC), and the F. incarnatum-equiseti species complex (FIESC). Based on multilocus phylogenetic analyses, the species were identified as F. annulatum, F. chlamydosporum, F. pernambucanum, F. sulawesiense, F. verticillioides, and F. volatile. Our results suggest that three species whose sexual stages are unknown (F. chlamydosporum, F. sulawesiense, and F. volatile) are also heterothallic. Intraspecific crosses of F. sulawesiense and F. volatile produced protoperithecia, whereas 66.7% of F. volatile crosses produced fertile perithecia. We provide an augmented description of the latter species to include characteristics of its sexual morph and those observed in the asexual morph that had not yet been described for the species. This study highlights the potential of researching insect-associated fungi to increase knowledge about the diversity, taxonomy, and versatility of Fusarium in ecosystems.

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