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The species-rich species complex (FSAMSC; ) is well-known for including devastating plant pathogens and toxigenic species. However, this group of grass-loving fungi also accommodates soil saprobes, endophytes, mycoparasites and rare opportunistic pathogens of humans and other animals. Recent publications have highlighted the vast phylogenetic and biochemical diversity of the FSAMSC, although a large number of taxa in FSAMSC have not been systematically described and still lack Latin binomials. In this study we established the phylogenetic breadth of the FSAMSC using an integrative approach including morphological, multilocus phylogenetic, and coalescence analyses based on five gene regions (calmodulin, RNA polymerase II largest and second largest subunits, translation elongation factor 1-α, and β-tubulin). Results obtained support the recognition of 75 taxa in FSAMSC, including all the currently known species segregates of the Fusarium head-blight pathogen Thirty novel species are formally described and illustrated, while four phylogenetic species remain undescribed. An epitype is proposed for the generic type of , from recently collected material identified by means of morphology, phylogenetics and mating experiments, fixing the phylogenetic application of the name. Additional notes are included on the typification of (syn. ). : Sand.-Den., J.Z. Groenew. & Crous, Sand.-Den., M.M. Costa, Sand.-Den., M.M. Costa, Sand.-Den., J.Z. Groenew. & Crous, Sand.-Den., J.Z. Groenew. & Crous, Sand.-Den., J.Z. Groenew. & Crous, Sand.-Den., M.M. Costa, Sand.-Den., J.Z. Groenew. & Crous, Sand.-Den., J.Z. Groenew. & Crous, Sand.-Den., M.M. Costa, J.Z. Groenew. & Crous, Sand.-Den., J.Z. Groenew. & Crous, Sand.-Den., J.Z. Groenew. & Crous, Sand.-Den., M.M. Costa, J.Z. Groenew. & Crous, Sand.-Den., J.Z. Groenew. & Crous, Sand.-Den., J.Z. Groenew. & Crous, Sand.-Den., J.Z. Groenew. & Crous, Sand.-Den., M.M. Costa, J.Z. Groenew. & Crous, Sand.-Den., J.Z. Groenew. & Crous, Sand.-Den., J.Z. Groenew. & Crous, Sand.-Den., J.Z. Groenew. & Crous, Sand.-Den., J.Z. Groenew. & Crous, Sand.-Den., J.Z. Groenew. & Crous, Sand.-Den., J.Z. Groenew. & Crous, Sand.-Den., J.Z. Groenew. & Crous, Sand.-Den., J.Z. Groenew. & Crous, Sand.-Den., J.Z. Groenew. & Crous, Sand.-Den., J.Z. Groenew. & Crous, Sand.-Den., J.Z. Groenew. & Crous, Sand.-Den., M.M. Costa, J.Z. Groenew. & Crous, Sand.-Den., J.Z. Groenew. & Crous. : Fuckel. Sandoval-Denis M, Costa MM, Broders K, Becker Y, Maier W, Yurkov A, Kermode A, Buddie AG, Ryan MJ, Schumacher RK, Groenewald JZ, Crous PW (2024). An integrative re-evaluation of the species complex. : 1-110 doi: 10.3114/sim.2025.110.01.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3114/sim.2025.110.01 | DOI Listing |
Stud Mycol
March 2025
Westerdijk Fungal Biodiversity Institute, Uppsalalaan 8, 3584 CT Utrecht, The Netherlands.
The species-rich species complex (FSAMSC; ) is well-known for including devastating plant pathogens and toxigenic species. However, this group of grass-loving fungi also accommodates soil saprobes, endophytes, mycoparasites and rare opportunistic pathogens of humans and other animals. Recent publications have highlighted the vast phylogenetic and biochemical diversity of the FSAMSC, although a large number of taxa in FSAMSC have not been systematically described and still lack Latin binomials.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Dis
April 2013
Institute for Sustainable Horticulture, Kwantlen Polytechnic University, Langley, British Columbia, V3A 8G9, Canada.
Boxwoods (Buxus spp.) are common woody ornamental hedging plants in Europe and North America, typically propagated by cuttings. In October 2011, shoot dieback and defoliation was observed on Buxus sempervirens 'Suffruticosa' (dwarf English boxwood) and 'Green Balloon' in outdoor, 10-cm pots at a wholesale nursery in Chilliwack, British Columbia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Dis
July 2012
The Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station, Windsor, CT 06095, and New Haven, CT 06504.
Cylindrocladium pseudonaviculatum Crous, J.Z., Groenew.
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