Ophiostomatoid fungi associated with pine bark beetles and infested pines in south-eastern Australia, including Graphilbum ipis-grandicollis sp. nov.

IF 5.2 1区 生物学 Q1 MYCOLOGY
Conrad Trollip, Angus J Carnegie, Quang Dinh, Jatinder Kaur, David Smith, Ross Mann, Brendan Rodoni, Jacqueline Edwards
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引用次数: 13

Abstract

The ophiostomatoid fungi are an assemblage of ascomycetes which are arguably best-known for their associations with bark and ambrosia beetles (Curculonidae) and blue stain (sap stain) of many economically important tree species. These fungi are considered a significant threat to coniferous forests, which has resulted in numerous studies characterising the diversity of bark beetles and their ophiostomatoid associates globally. The diversity of ophiostomatoid fungi present in Australian pine plantations, however, remains largely undetermined. The aims of this study were therefore to reconsider the diversity of ophiostomatoid fungi associated with Pinus in Australia, and to establish the baseline of expected taxa found within these plantation ecosystems. To achieve this, we reviewed Australian plant pathogen reference collections, and analysed samples collected during forest health surveillance programs from the major pine growing regions in south-eastern Australia. In total, 135 ophiostomatoid isolates (15 from reference collections and 120 collected during the current study) were assessed using morphological identification and ITS screening which putatively distinguished 15 taxonomic groups. Whole genome sequencing (WGS) of representative isolates from each taxon was performed to obtain high-quality sequence data for multi-locus phylogenetic analysis. Our results revealed a greater than expected diversity, expanding the status of ophiostomatoid fungi associated with Pinus in Australia to include 14 species from six genera in the Ophiostomatales and a single species residing in the Microascales. While most of these were already known to science, our study includes seven first records for Australia and the description of one new species, Graphilbum ipis-grandicollis sp. nov.. This study also provides an early example of whole genome sequencing (WGS) approaches replacing traditional PCR-based methods for taxonomic surveys. This not only allowed for robust multi-locus sequence extraction during taxonomic assessment, but also permitted the rapid establishment of a curated genomic database for ophiostomatoid fungi which will continue to aid in the development of improved diagnostic resources and capabilities for Australian biosecurity.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

与澳大利亚东南部松树树皮甲虫和侵染松树有关的类蛇口真菌,包括Graphilbum ipis-grandicollis sp. nov。
蛇孔菌是子囊菌的一个组合,可以说,子囊菌最著名的是与许多经济上重要的树种的树皮和氨溴索甲虫(Curculonidae)以及蓝染色(树液染色)有关。这些真菌被认为是对针叶林的重大威胁,这导致了全球范围内对树皮甲虫及其蛇口类伙伴多样性的大量研究。然而,澳大利亚松树种植园中存在的麦冬类真菌的多样性在很大程度上仍未确定。因此,本研究的目的是重新考虑与澳大利亚松属相关的麦冬类真菌的多样性,并建立在这些人工林生态系统中发现的预期分类群的基线。为了实现这一目标,我们审查了澳大利亚植物病原体参考资料,并分析了在森林健康监测项目期间从澳大利亚东南部主要松树种植区收集的样本。总共有135个麦冬分离株(15个来自参考文献,120个在本研究中收集)通过形态学鉴定和ITS筛选进行了评估,这些鉴定和筛选假定区分了15个分类群。对每个分类单元的代表性分离株进行全基因组测序(WGS),以获得用于多位点系统发育分析的高质量序列数据。我们的研究结果显示了比预期更大的多样性,扩大了与澳大利亚松属相关的蛇口真菌的地位,包括蛇口目6属的14个物种和微尺度中的一个物种。虽然其中大多数已经为科学所知,但我们的研究包括澳大利亚的七个首次记录和一个新物种Graphilbum ipis grandcolis sp.nov.的描述。这项研究还提供了一个早期的例子,说明全基因组测序(WGS)方法取代了传统的基于PCR的分类调查方法。这不仅允许在分类评估过程中进行稳健的多基因座序列提取,还允许快速建立麦冬类真菌的精心策划的基因组数据库,这将继续有助于开发澳大利亚生物安全的改进诊断资源和能力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Ima Fungus
Ima Fungus Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
11.00
自引率
3.70%
发文量
18
审稿时长
20 weeks
期刊介绍: The flagship journal of the International Mycological Association. IMA Fungus is an international, peer-reviewed, open-access, full colour, fast-track journal. Papers on any aspect of mycology are considered, and published on-line with final pagination after proofs have been corrected; they are then effectively published under the International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants. The journal strongly supports good practice policies, and requires voucher specimens or cultures to be deposited in a public collection with an online database, DNA sequences in GenBank, alignments in TreeBASE, and validating information on new scientific names, including typifications, to be lodged in MycoBank. News, meeting reports, personalia, research news, correspondence, book news, and information on forthcoming international meetings are included in each issue
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