Academic literature on the topic 'Chaetosphaeriaceae'

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Journal articles on the topic "Chaetosphaeriaceae"

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Sivanesan, Asaipillai, and John L. Alcorn. "Australiasca queenslandica gen. et sp. nov. (Chaetosphaeriaceae: Ascomycota) and its anamorph Dischloridium camelliae sp. nov. from Australia." Australian Systematic Botany 15, no. 5 (2002): 741. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/sb01049.

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A new ascomycete, Australiasca queenslandica gen. et sp. nov., belonging to Chaetosphaeriaceae, is described and illustrated from Queensland, Australia with Dischloridium camelliae sp. nov. as its anamorph from Camellia sinensis. This is the first report of a substantiated connection between a teleomorph and a Dischloridium anamorph.
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Silva, Priscila da, and Rosely Ana Piccolo Grandi. "Taxonomic studies of Thozetella Kuntze (anamorphic Chaetosphaeriaceae, Ascomycota)." Nova Hedwigia 97, no. 3 (November 1, 2013): 361–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1127/0029-5035/2013/0121.

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YANG, JING, JIAN-KUI LIU, KEVIN D. HYDE, D. JAYARAMA BHAT, E. B. GARETH JONES, and ZUO-YI LIU. "New species of Sporoschisma (Chaetosphaeriaceae) from aquatic habitats in Thailand." Phytotaxa 289, no. 2 (December 22, 2016): 147. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.289.2.4.

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Collections of submerged wood in streams in Prachuap Khiri Khan Province, Thailand yielded three sporoschisma-like taxa. Morphological examination and phylogenetic analysis of LSU sequence data support the separation of two isolates as new species (S. palauense and S. longicatenatum) and the other as collection of S. hemipsila. The sexual morph (Melanochaeta) is again linked to the asexual genus Sporoschisma by molecular data. The new species are introduced with descriptions and illustrations and compared with the most similar species.
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HSIEH, SUNG-YUAN, TEIK-KHIANG GOH, and CHANG-HSIN KUO. "A taxonomic revision of Stanjehughesia (Chaetosphaeriaceae, Sordariomycetes), with a novel species S. kaohsiungensis from Taiwan." Phytotaxa 484, no. 3 (February 18, 2021): 261–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.484.3.2.

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Stanjehughesia kaohsiungensis sp. nov. is described from decaying wood submerged in freshwater streams from Taoyuan District, Kaohsiung City, Taiwan. The phylogenetic relationship between Stanjehughesia species was sought among representative taxa from related fungal lineages within Sordariomycetes using LSU sequence data. Molecular data revealed the phylogenetic placement of S. kaohsiungensis is within Chaetosphaeriaceae and distinct from Sporidesmiaceae. While the genus is polyphyletic, a synopsis of morphological characters and a taxonomic key for Stanjehughesia species are provided to ease identification.
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Zheng, Hua, Yake Wan, Jie Li, Rafael F. Castañeda-Ruiz, and Zefen Yu. "Phialolunulospora vermispora (Chaetosphaeriaceae, Sordariomycetes), a novel asexual genus and species from freshwater in southern China." MycoKeys 76 (December 22, 2020): 17–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.76.57410.

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The asexual taxon Phialolunulospora vermisporagen. et sp. nov., collected from submerged dicotyledonous leaves in Hainan, China, is described and illustrated herein. Phialolunulosporagen. nov. is characterized by macronematous, semimacronematous, septate and pigmented conidiophores and acrogenous, long lunate, vermiform to sigmoid, hyaline conidia with an eccentric basal appendage. Complete sequences of internal transcribed spacer (ITS) and partial sequences of nuclear large subunits ribosomal DNA (LSU) genes are provided. Phylogenetic analyses of combined ITS and LSU sequences revealed its placement in the Chaetosphaeriaceae. The new fungus is compared with morphologically similar genera.
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Lu, YZ. "Brunneodinemasporium jonesii and Tainosphaeria jonesii spp. nov. (Chaetosphaeriaceae, Chaetosphaeriales) from southern China." Mycosphere 7, no. 9 (2016): 1323–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.5943/mycosphere/7/9/6.

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Réblová, Martina, Jana Nekvindová, Jacques Fournier, and Andrew N. Miller. "Delimitation, new species and teleomorph-anamorph relationships in Codinaea, Dendrophoma, Paragaeumannomyces and Striatosphaeria (Chaetosphaeriaceae)." MycoKeys 74 (October 19, 2020): 17–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.74.57824.

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The Chaetosphaeriaceae are a diverse group of pigmented, predominantly phialidic hyphomycetes comprised of several holomorphic genera including Chaetosphaeria, the most prominent genus of the family. Although the morphology of the teleomorphs of the majority of Chaetosphaeria is rather uniform, their associated anamorphs primarily exhibit the variability and evolutionary change observed in the genus. An exception from the morphological monotony among Chaetosphaeria species is a group characterised by scolecosporous, hyaline to light pink, multiseptate, asymmetrical ascospores and a unique three-layered ascomatal wall. Paragaeumannomyces sphaerocellularis, the type species of the genus, exhibits these morphological traits and is compared with similar Chaetosphaeria with craspedodidymum- and chloridium-like synanamorphs. Morphological comparison and phylogenetic analyses of the combined ITS-28S sequences of 35 isolates and vouchers with these characteristics revealed a strongly-supported, morphologically well-delimited clade in the Chaetosphaeriaceae containing 16 species. The generic name Paragaeumannomyces is applied to this monophyletic clade; eight new combinations and five new species, i.e. P. abietinussp. nov., P. eleganssp. nov., P. granulatussp. nov., P. sabinianussp. nov. and P. smokiensissp. nov., are proposed. A key to Paragaeumannomyces is provided. Using morphology, cultivation studies and phylogenetic analyses of ITS and 28S rDNA, two additional new species from freshwater and terrestrial habitats, Codinaea paniculatasp. nov. and Striatosphaeria castaneasp. nov., are described in the family. A codinaea-like anamorph of S. castanea forms conidia with setulae at each end in axenic culture; this feature expands the known morphology of Striatosphaeria. A chaetosphaeria-like teleomorph is experimentally linked to Dendrophoma cytisporoides, a sporodochial hyphomycete and type species of Dendrophoma, for the first time.
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Lin, CG. "Hyaline-spored chaetosphaeriaceous hyphomycetes from Thailand and China, with a review of the family Chaetosphaeriaceae." Mycosphere 10, no. 1 (2019): 655–700. http://dx.doi.org/10.5943/mycosphere/10/1/14.

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Atkinson, Toni J., Andrew N. Miller, Sabine M. Huhndorf, and David A. Orlovich. "Unusual newChaetosphaeriaspecies from New Zealand: Intrafamilial diversity and elucidations of the Chaetosphaeriaceae ‐Lasiosphaeriaceae relationship (Sordariomycetes, Ascomycotina)." New Zealand Journal of Botany 45, no. 4 (December 2007): 685–706. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00288250709509744.

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Jeewon, R., S. Y. Q. Yeung, and K. D. Hyde. "A novel phylogenetic group withinThozetella(Chaetosphaeriaceae): a new taxon based on morphology and DNA sequence analyses." Canadian Journal of Microbiology 55, no. 6 (June 2009): 680–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/w08-148.

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A new species, Thozetella pinicola , was isolated from leaf litter of Pinus elliottii Engelm. in Hong Kong. This taxon is described and compared with existing species in the genus. It occurs on the substrate as creamy white sporodochia and has short black conidiophores. Morphological characters are typical of Thozetella and it most closely resembles Thozetella falcata , Thozetella gigantea and Thozetella nivea , but may be distinguished by its distinct microawns and different conidial size. To gain further taxonomic insight into the phylogenetic relationships of our new taxon and its allies, we sequenced and analysed 6 different regions of 3 genes (ribosomal DNA and protein coding genes: RNA polymerase II largest subunit (RBP2) and β-tubulin). Resulting phylogenies are compared with existing morphological information. Molecular data support the relationship between Thozetella species and the Chaetosphaeriaceae (Chaetosphaeriales, Sordariomycetes). In addition, we recovered a new phylogenetic lineage (or group) within the existing phylogenetic framework of Thozetella as previously proposed. In particular, there is a close association between T. pinicola and T. nivea, which is strongly supported. The affinities of these 2 newly sequenced taxa are discussed in light of morphological and molecular characters.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Chaetosphaeriaceae"

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Atkinson, Toni June, and n/a. "Unexpected microfungal diversity : woody decay Lasiosphaeriaceae, Chaetosphaeriaceae and Helminthosphaeriaceae of New Zealand." University of Otago. Department of Botany, 2007. http://adt.otago.ac.nz./public/adt-NZDU20080207.093747.

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New Zealand�s lignicolous pyrenomycete flora has been little studied. The cosmopolitan Lasiosphaeriaceae, largest and least studied family in the Sordariales, has long been noted for its morphological diversity and the artificiality of its grouping. This first systematic study of lignicolous Lasiosphaeriaceae in New Zealand uses morphology and phylogenetics to elucidate relationships within the New Zealand mycota and facilitate comparisons with relatives worldwide. Collection areas spanned New Zealand�s 13 degrees of latitude and included a range of native forest types. The novel application of recently-available molecular biology techniques allowed sequencing from single pyrenomycete fruitbodies. Two new genera and 15 new species or species complexes are proposed in total. A new genus is proposed within the Lasiosphaeriaceae to accommodate an interesting new collection. Seven new species are described in the known genera Lasiosphacria and Lasiosphaeris and the polyphyly of certain Lasiosphacria taxa is discussed. Five new taxa are described within the Chaetosphaeriaceae, including a pair with surprisingly unique morphology. All are currently placed within Chaetosphaeria, but comprise part of a recently recognised long-spored clade that is sister to that which includes the type genus. Within the Helminthosphaeriaceae one new genus is proposed to accommodate an unusual new collection; and a new species described within Hilberina, but its transference to a new genus predicted as knowledge of this recent family grows. Phylogenetic results support the separation of the Chaetosphaeriaceae and Helminthosphaeriaceae from the Lasiosphaeriaceae where many of these taxa were previously. The traditional morphological character of ascospore shape is shown to have little use in the delimitation of genera. More recently emphasised characters such as peridial wall structure may have more value, however the fruitbody wall of some New Zealand taxa could not be more different from their phylogenetic relatives. New Zealand taxa are noted for their frequently unprecedented morphology and/or unique genetics in comparison with other known taxa, which are predominantly from the northern hemisphere. The high levels of morphological and genetic divergence among New Zealand taxa appear to reflect extensive microfungal endemism on these relatively isolated islands; but surveys of diversity in other parts of Gondwana are desperately needed. A Key to New Zealand taxa within the Lasiosphaeriaceae, Helminthosphaeriaceae and long-spored Chaetosphaeriaceae is provided.
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