2018
DOI: 10.3767/persoonia.2018.40.10
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Abstract: Novel species of fungi described in this study include those from various countries as follows: Australia, Chaetopsina eucalypti on Eucalyptus leaf litter, Colletotrichum cobbittiense from Cordyline stricta × C. australis hybrid, Cyanodermella banksiae on Banksia ericifolia subsp. macrantha, Discosia macrozamiae on Macrozamia miquelii, Elsinoë banksiigena on Banksia marginata, Elsinoë elaeocarpi on Elaeocarpus sp., Elsinoë leucopogonis on Leucopogon sp., Helminthosporium livistonae on Livistona australis, Idri… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1

Citation Types

3
79
0

Year Published

2019
2019
2022
2022

Publication Types

Select...
6
2
1

Relationship

0
9

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 141 publications
(82 citation statements)
references
References 136 publications
3
79
0
Order By: Relevance
“…The genera of this family are mostly plant pathogens and causes disease (Jayawardena et al, ), such as grape, lime and sweet orange scab infected by Elsinoe ampelina (Yun, Louime, & Lu, ), Elsinoe fawcettii (Hyun et al, ) and Elsinoe australis (Chung, ). On the basis of ITS, 18S rDNA, RPB2 and LSU sequences, the T1 isolates obtained in this study are most closely related to Elsinoe leucopogonis, Elsinoe ichnocarpi, Elsinoe lepagei, Elsinoe Mimosae and Elsinoe hederae which caused disease separately in leucopogon (Crous et al, ) , Ichnocarpus frutescens (Fan et al, ), Manilkara zapota (Bitancourt & Jenkins, ) , Mimosae diplotricha (Jayawardena et al, ) and hedera (Vu et al, ). Fan et al () reported that most species in the genus Elsinoe exhibit host specificity and cause symptoms similar to those of scab disease, since there are only four species were found to occur on more than one host, and each of the other 69 species included in species in the genus Elsinoe is known to occur on only one host species or genus, which supports our identification of Elsinoe sp.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 76%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The genera of this family are mostly plant pathogens and causes disease (Jayawardena et al, ), such as grape, lime and sweet orange scab infected by Elsinoe ampelina (Yun, Louime, & Lu, ), Elsinoe fawcettii (Hyun et al, ) and Elsinoe australis (Chung, ). On the basis of ITS, 18S rDNA, RPB2 and LSU sequences, the T1 isolates obtained in this study are most closely related to Elsinoe leucopogonis, Elsinoe ichnocarpi, Elsinoe lepagei, Elsinoe Mimosae and Elsinoe hederae which caused disease separately in leucopogon (Crous et al, ) , Ichnocarpus frutescens (Fan et al, ), Manilkara zapota (Bitancourt & Jenkins, ) , Mimosae diplotricha (Jayawardena et al, ) and hedera (Vu et al, ). Fan et al () reported that most species in the genus Elsinoe exhibit host specificity and cause symptoms similar to those of scab disease, since there are only four species were found to occur on more than one host, and each of the other 69 species included in species in the genus Elsinoe is known to occur on only one host species or genus, which supports our identification of Elsinoe sp.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 76%
“…These characteristics are consistent with the phenotype of Phyllosticta sp. Based on the phylogenetic analyses of the combined four‐gene dataset, as well as morphological characteristics (Crous et al, ; Fan et al, ; Vu et al, ), the T1‐HNGZ and T2‐HNBJ colonies were identified as E. leucospila Hara and Phyllosticta sp., respectively.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The data were based on Wahl, et al [71]. Furthermore, like terrestrial plant tissue culture (PTC), several biotechnological attempts were performed to cultivate and/or regenerate thallus from different species of brown seaweeds using seaweeds tissue culture [72]. They include micropropagation, callus induction and protoplast isolation [69,[73][74][75].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The genus Leratiomyces includes saprotrophic mushrooms found on naked soil, rotten wood, wood debris (including saw-dust and woodchip mulch), and other vegetal debris in woodchip beds, dry grasslands, or sandy-soil habitats [5,6]. It is a small genus which contains around ten agaricoid or hymenogasteroid species distributed worldwide [3][4][5]7,8], and so far, two of them have been reported in Poland: Leratiomyces squamosus (Pers. : Fr.)…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%