2014
DOI: 10.1590/s1982-56762014000600001
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New records of plant parasitic Asterinaceae (Dothideomycetes, Ascomycota) with intercalary appressoria from Central America and Panama

Abstract: New records of species of Asterinaceae with intercalary appressoria infecting plants in Central America and Panama are described and illustrated in detail. New records are Asterolibertia licaniicola on the new host Licania arborea (Chrysobalanaceae), Asterolibertia nodulosa on the new hosts Oxandra venezuelana and Xylopia sp. (Annonaceae), and Cirsosia splendida on the new hosts Chrysobalanus icaco and Hirtella triandra (Chrysobalanaceae). The teleomorph C. splendida is linked for the first time to the asexual… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Asterolibertia campograndensis differs from the species previously reported on Chrysobalanaceae ( Table 1 ) ( Arnaud 1918 , Hansford 1947 , 1949 , 1955 , Müller & von Arx 1962 , Hosagoudar 2010 , Hofmann & Piepenbring 2014 , Farr & Rossman 2015 ). It is closest to A. parinarii , which has smaller appressoria and ascospores, narrower hyphae, and ellipsoid to subglobose asci.…”
Section: Taxonomymentioning
confidence: 60%
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“…Asterolibertia campograndensis differs from the species previously reported on Chrysobalanaceae ( Table 1 ) ( Arnaud 1918 , Hansford 1947 , 1949 , 1955 , Müller & von Arx 1962 , Hosagoudar 2010 , Hofmann & Piepenbring 2014 , Farr & Rossman 2015 ). It is closest to A. parinarii , which has smaller appressoria and ascospores, narrower hyphae, and ellipsoid to subglobose asci.…”
Section: Taxonomymentioning
confidence: 60%
“…A total of 15 species and one variety of Cirsosia have been described on six different host families ( Hosagoudar 2010 , Hofmann & Piepenbring 2014 , Farr & Rossman 2015 ): Dipterocarpaceae (5 species); Arecaceae (4); Chrysobalanaceae (3, including the new variety described here); Malpighiaceae (2); and Burseraceae and Lauraceae (1 on each; Table 4 ). There is no record of the same Cirsosia species being found on two different host families ( Hosagoudar 2010 , Farr & Rossman 2015 ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…al. 2011, Hofmann & Piepenbring 2014, Farr & Rossman 2015, Firmino et al 2016: Dipterocarpaceae (5 species), Arecaceae (4), Chrysobalanaceae (3, including one variety), Malpighiaceae (2), Burseraceae (1) and Lauraceae (1). There is no record of the same Cirsosia species being found on two different host families (Hosagoudar 2010, Farr & Rossman 2015, Firmino et al 2016.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%