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A new approach to species delimitation in Septoria

Authors
Verkley, G. J. M.Quaedvlieg, W.Shin, H. -D.Crous, P. W.
Issue Date
Jun-2013
Publisher
CENTRAALBUREAU SCHIMMELCULTURE
Keywords
Evolution; host jumping; host specificity; Multilocus Sequence Typing (MLST); Mycosphaerella; Mycosphaerellaceae; new genus; new species; Pleosporales; Phloeospora; Septoria; Sphaerulina; taxonomy; systematics
Citation
STUDIES IN MYCOLOGY, no.75, pp.213 - 305
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
STUDIES IN MYCOLOGY
Number
75
Start Page
213
End Page
305
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/103041
DOI
10.3114/sim0018
ISSN
0166-0616
Abstract
Septoria is a large genus of asexual morphs of Ascomycota causing leaf spot diseases of many cultivated and wild plants. Host specificity has long been a decisive criterium in species delimitation in Septoria, mainly because of the paucity of useful morphological characters and the high level of variation therein. This study aimed at improving the species delimitation of Septoria by adopting a polyphasic approach, including multilocus DNA sequencing and morphological analyses on the natural substrate and in culture. To this end 365 cultures preserved in CBS, Utrecht, The Netherlands, among which many new isolates obtained from fresh field specimens were sequenced. Herbarium material including many types was also studied. Full descriptions of the morphology in planta and in vitro are provided for 57 species. DNA sequences were generated for seven loci, viz. nuclear ITS and (partial) LSU ribosomal RNA genes, RPB2, actin, calmodulin, Btub, and EF. The robust phylogeny inferred showed that the septoria-like fungi are distributed over three main clades, establishing the genera Septoria s. str, Sphaerulina, and Caryophylloseptoria gen. nov. Nine new combinations and one species, Sphaerulina tirolensis sp. nov. were proposed. It is demonstrated that some species have wider host ranges than expected, including hosts from more than one family. Septoria protearum, previously only associated with Proteaceae was found to be also associated with host plants from six additional families of phanerogams and cryptogams. To our knowledge this is the first study to provide DNA-based evidence that multiple family-associations occur for a single species in Septoria. The distribution of host families over the phylogenetic tree showed a highly dispersed pattern for 10 host plant families, providing new insight into the evolution of these fungi. It is concluded that trans-family host jumping is a major force driving the evolution of Septoria and Sphaerulina.
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College of Life Sciences and Biotechnology > Division of Environmental Science and Ecological Engineering > 1. Journal Articles

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