New Raffaelea species (Ophiostomatales) from the USA and Taiwan associated with ambrosia beetles and plant hosts
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Date
Authors
Simmons, D. Rabern
De Beer, Z. Wilhelm
Huang, Yin-Tse
Bateman, Craig
Campbell, Alina S.
Dreaden, Tyler J.
Li, You
Ploetz, Randy C.
Black, Adam
Li, Hou-Feng
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
International Mycological Association
Abstract
Raffaelea (Ophiostomatales) is a genus of more than 20 ophiostomatoid fungi commonly occurring in
symbioses with wood-boring ambrosia beetles. We examined ambrosia beetles and plant hosts in the USA and
Taiwan for the presence of these mycosymbionts and found 22 isolates representing known and undescribed
lineages in Raffaelea. From 28S rDNA and β-tubulin sequences, we generated a molecular phylogeny of
Ophiostomatales and observed morphological features of seven cultures representing undescribed lineages
in Raffaelea s. lat. From these analyses, we describe five new species in Raffaelea s. lat.: R. aguacate, R.
campbellii, R. crossotarsa, R. cyclorhipidia, and R. xyleborina spp. nov. Our analyses also identified two plantpathogenic
species of Raffaelea associated with previously undocumented beetle hosts: (1) R. quercivora, the
causative agent of Japanese oak wilt, from Cyclorhipidion ohnoi and Crossotarsus emancipatus in Taiwan, and
(2) R. lauricola, the pathogen responsible for laurel wilt, from Ambrosiodmus lecontei in Florida. The results of
this study show that Raffaelea and associated ophiostomatoid fungi have been poorly sampled and that future
investigations on ambrosia beetle mycosymbionts should reveal a substantially increased diversity.
Description
Keywords
Entomogenous fungi, Insect-fungus interactions, Japanese oak wilt, Laurel wilt, Molecular phylogenetics, Mycosymbioses
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Simmons, DR, De Beer, ZW, Huang, Y-T, Bateman, C, Campbell, AS, Dreaden, TJ, Li, Y, Ploetz, RC, Black, A, Li, H-F, Chen, C-Y, Wingfield, MJ & Hulcr, J 2016, 'New Raffaelea species (Ophiostomatales) from the USA and Taiwan associated with ambrosia beetles and plant hosts', IMA Fungus, vol. 7, no. 2, pp. 265-273.
