Caliciopsis moriondi, a new species for a fungus long confused with the pine pathogen C. pinea
Loading...
Date
Authors
Migliorini, Duccio
Luchi, Nicola
Pepori, Alessia Lucia
Pecori, Francesco
Aglietti, Chiara
Maccioni, Fabio
Munck, Isabel
Wyka, Stephen
Broders, Kirk
Wingfield, Michael J.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Pensoft Publishers
Abstract
The genus Caliciopsis (Eurotiomycetes, Coryneliales) includes saprobic and plant pathogenic species. Caliciopsis canker is caused by Caliciopsis pinea Peck, a species first reported in the 19th century in North
America. In recent years, increasing numbers of outbreaks of Caliciopsis canker have been reported on
different Pinus spp. in the eastern USA. In Europe, the disease has only occasionally been reported causing
cankers, mostly on Pinus radiata in stressed plantations. The aim of this study was to clarify the taxonomy
of Caliciopsis specimens collected from infected Pinus spp. in Europe and North America using an integrative approach, combining morphology and phylogenetic analyses of three loci. The pathogenicity of
the fungus was also considered. Two distinct groups were evident, based on morphology and multilocus
phylogenetic analyses. These represent the known pathogen Caliciopsis pinea that occurs in North America
and a morphologically similar, but phylogenetically distinct, species described here as Caliciopsis moriondi
sp. nov., found in Europe and at least one location in eastern North America. Caliciopsis moriondi differs
from C. pinea in various morphological features including the length of the ascomata, as well as their
distribution on the stromata.
Description
Figure S1. One of the most parsimonious trees from EF1-α sequence datasets.
Data type: Alignment of genomic sequences.
Explanation note: One of the most parsimonious trees from EF1-α gene sequence datasets is shown (length = 66, CI = 0.9999, RI = 0.9998, RC = 0.9988, HI = 0.9888). The MP and Bayesian posterior probability are indicated next to the branches. C. pseudotsugae and C. orientalis are used as outgroup.
This dataset is made available under the Open Database License (http://opendatacommons.org/licenses/odbl/1.0/).
Figure S2. One of the most parsimonious trees from Bt1 sequence datasets. Data type: Alignment of genomic sequences. Explanation note: One of the most parsimonious trees from Bt1 sequence datasets is shown (CI = 0.9268, RI = 0.9840, RC = 0.936428, HI = 0.912039). The MP and Bayesian posterior probability are indicated next to the branches. C. pseudotsugae and C. orientalis are used as outgroup. This dataset is made available under the Open Database License (http://opendatacommons.org/licenses/odbl/1.0/).
Figure S2. One of the most parsimonious trees from Bt1 sequence datasets. Data type: Alignment of genomic sequences. Explanation note: One of the most parsimonious trees from Bt1 sequence datasets is shown (CI = 0.9268, RI = 0.9840, RC = 0.936428, HI = 0.912039). The MP and Bayesian posterior probability are indicated next to the branches. C. pseudotsugae and C. orientalis are used as outgroup. This dataset is made available under the Open Database License (http://opendatacommons.org/licenses/odbl/1.0/).
Keywords
Caliciopsis canker, Caliciopsis spp., Forest pathogen, One new species, Pine trees, Taxonomy
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Migliorini D, Luchi N, Pepori AL, Pecori F, Aglietti C, Maccioni F, Munck I, Wyka S, Broders K, Wingfield MJ, Santini A (2020) Caliciopsis moriondi, a new species for a fungus long confused with the pine pathogen C. pinea. MycoKeys 73: 87–108. https://doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.73.53028.