Why everlastings don’t last

The Cape Floral Region represents one of the world's biodiversity hot spots, with a high level of plant, animal and insect endemism. The fungi occurring in this region, however, remain poorly studied. It is widely postulated that each plant species should harbour at least five to six unique fungal species, a number that we regard to be a huge underestimate. To test this hypothesis, we decided to study a single senescent flower of Phaenocoma prolifera ('everlasting'; Asteraceae) collected in South Africa, and posed the question as to how many different species of fungi could be isolated and cultivated from 10 leaf bracts. Using a damp chamber technique, numerous microfungi could be induced to sporulate, enabling most of them to be successfully isolated on artificial agar media. Isolates were subsequently subjected to DNA sequencing of the ITS and LSU nrDNA regions. During the course of this study 17 species could be cultivated and identified, of which 11 appeared to be new to science. These in clude Catenulostroma hermanusense, Cladosporium phaenocomae, Devriesia tardicrescens, Exophiala capensis, Penidiella aggregata, P. ellipsoidea, Teratosphaeria karinae, Toxicocladosporium pseudoveloxum spp. nov., and Xenophacidiella pseudocatenata gen. & sp. nov. Further studies are now required to determine if these fungi also occur as endophytes in healthy flowers. If this trend holds true for other plant hosts from southern Africa, it would suggest that there are many more fungi present in the Cape Floral Region than estimated in previous studies.

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Main Authors: Crous, P.W., Groenewald, J.Z.
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:biodiversity, capnodiales, complex davidiellaceae, flyspeck complex, fungal diversity, mycosphaerella, proteaceae, sooty blotch, south-africa, teratosphaeria,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/why-everlastings-dont-last
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-4144992024-12-04 Crous, P.W. Groenewald, J.Z. Article/Letter to editor Persoonia 26 (2011) ISSN: 0031-5850 Why everlastings don’t last 2011 The Cape Floral Region represents one of the world's biodiversity hot spots, with a high level of plant, animal and insect endemism. The fungi occurring in this region, however, remain poorly studied. It is widely postulated that each plant species should harbour at least five to six unique fungal species, a number that we regard to be a huge underestimate. To test this hypothesis, we decided to study a single senescent flower of Phaenocoma prolifera ('everlasting'; Asteraceae) collected in South Africa, and posed the question as to how many different species of fungi could be isolated and cultivated from 10 leaf bracts. Using a damp chamber technique, numerous microfungi could be induced to sporulate, enabling most of them to be successfully isolated on artificial agar media. Isolates were subsequently subjected to DNA sequencing of the ITS and LSU nrDNA regions. During the course of this study 17 species could be cultivated and identified, of which 11 appeared to be new to science. These in clude Catenulostroma hermanusense, Cladosporium phaenocomae, Devriesia tardicrescens, Exophiala capensis, Penidiella aggregata, P. ellipsoidea, Teratosphaeria karinae, Toxicocladosporium pseudoveloxum spp. nov., and Xenophacidiella pseudocatenata gen. & sp. nov. Further studies are now required to determine if these fungi also occur as endophytes in healthy flowers. If this trend holds true for other plant hosts from southern Africa, it would suggest that there are many more fungi present in the Cape Floral Region than estimated in previous studies. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/why-everlastings-dont-last 10.3767/003158511X574532 https://edepot.wur.nl/188693 biodiversity capnodiales complex davidiellaceae flyspeck complex fungal diversity mycosphaerella proteaceae sooty blotch south-africa teratosphaeria Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic biodiversity
capnodiales
complex davidiellaceae
flyspeck complex
fungal diversity
mycosphaerella
proteaceae
sooty blotch
south-africa
teratosphaeria
biodiversity
capnodiales
complex davidiellaceae
flyspeck complex
fungal diversity
mycosphaerella
proteaceae
sooty blotch
south-africa
teratosphaeria
spellingShingle biodiversity
capnodiales
complex davidiellaceae
flyspeck complex
fungal diversity
mycosphaerella
proteaceae
sooty blotch
south-africa
teratosphaeria
biodiversity
capnodiales
complex davidiellaceae
flyspeck complex
fungal diversity
mycosphaerella
proteaceae
sooty blotch
south-africa
teratosphaeria
Crous, P.W.
Groenewald, J.Z.
Why everlastings don’t last
description The Cape Floral Region represents one of the world's biodiversity hot spots, with a high level of plant, animal and insect endemism. The fungi occurring in this region, however, remain poorly studied. It is widely postulated that each plant species should harbour at least five to six unique fungal species, a number that we regard to be a huge underestimate. To test this hypothesis, we decided to study a single senescent flower of Phaenocoma prolifera ('everlasting'; Asteraceae) collected in South Africa, and posed the question as to how many different species of fungi could be isolated and cultivated from 10 leaf bracts. Using a damp chamber technique, numerous microfungi could be induced to sporulate, enabling most of them to be successfully isolated on artificial agar media. Isolates were subsequently subjected to DNA sequencing of the ITS and LSU nrDNA regions. During the course of this study 17 species could be cultivated and identified, of which 11 appeared to be new to science. These in clude Catenulostroma hermanusense, Cladosporium phaenocomae, Devriesia tardicrescens, Exophiala capensis, Penidiella aggregata, P. ellipsoidea, Teratosphaeria karinae, Toxicocladosporium pseudoveloxum spp. nov., and Xenophacidiella pseudocatenata gen. & sp. nov. Further studies are now required to determine if these fungi also occur as endophytes in healthy flowers. If this trend holds true for other plant hosts from southern Africa, it would suggest that there are many more fungi present in the Cape Floral Region than estimated in previous studies.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet biodiversity
capnodiales
complex davidiellaceae
flyspeck complex
fungal diversity
mycosphaerella
proteaceae
sooty blotch
south-africa
teratosphaeria
author Crous, P.W.
Groenewald, J.Z.
author_facet Crous, P.W.
Groenewald, J.Z.
author_sort Crous, P.W.
title Why everlastings don’t last
title_short Why everlastings don’t last
title_full Why everlastings don’t last
title_fullStr Why everlastings don’t last
title_full_unstemmed Why everlastings don’t last
title_sort why everlastings don’t last
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/why-everlastings-dont-last
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