Discovery of Ophiostoma tsotsi on Eucalyptus wood chips in China

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Authors

Grobbelaar, J.W. (Johanna Wilhelmina)
De Beer, Z. Wilhelm
Bloomer, Paulette
Wingfield, Michael J.
Zhou, Xudong
Wingfield, Brenda D.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer

Abstract

Ophiostoma species such as O. quercus are the most frequent causal agents of sapstain of freshly felled hardwood timber and pulpwood. Many species are regarded as economically important agents of wood degradation. The aim of this study was to identify a collection of Ophiostoma isolates, resembling O. quercus, found on stained Eucalyptus pulpwood chips in China. DNA sequences of the internal transcribed spacer regions, including the 5.8S region, of the ribosomal DNA, and parts of the β-tubulin and elongation factor-1α genes, revealed that the isolates were not O. quercus. Surprisingly, they represented O. tsotsi, a wound-infesting fungus recently described from hardwoods in Africa. In addition, sequence data from an isolate from agarwood in Vietnam, identified in a previous study as belonging to an unknown Pesotum species, were also shown to represent O. tsotsi. A high level of genetic variability was observed among isolates of both O. quercus and O. tsotsi. This was unexpected and suggests that both species have been present in Asia for a significant amount of time.

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Keywords

Beta tubulin, Ophiostoma piceae complex

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Grobbelaar, JW, De Beer, ZW, Bloomer, P, Wingfield, MJ, Zhou, XD & Wingfield, BD 2011, 'Discovery of Ophiostoma tsotsi on Eucalyptus wood chips in China', Mycoscience, vol. 52, no. 2, pp. 111-118. [http://www.springerlink.com/content/1340-3540/]