Ambrosiella | |
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Genus: | Ambrosiella Brader ex Arx & Hennebert 1965
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Ambrosiella is a genus of ambrosia fungi within the family Ceratocystidaceae. It was circumscribed by mycologists Josef Adolph von Arx and Grégoire L. Hennebert in 1965 with Ambrosiella xylebori designated as the type species.[1] All Ambrosiella species are obligate symbionts of ambrosia beetles. Several former species were moved to genera Raffaelea, Hyalorhinocladiella, or Phialophoropsis,[2][3] and there were nine species recognized 2017.[3][4][5] Twelve species in as of 2023[update].[6] One species, Ambrosiella cleistominuta, has been observed to produce a fertile sexual state with cleistothecious ascomata.[5]
Species
As accepted by Species Fungorum;[6]
- Ambrosiella batrae C. Mayers, McNew & T.C. Harr. (2015)
- Ambrosiella beaveri Six, Z.W. de Beer & W.D. Stone (2009)
- Ambrosiella catenulata Y.T. Lin & H.H. Shih (2017)
- Ambrosiella cleistominuta C. Mayers & T.C. Harr. (2017)
- Ambrosiella grosmanniae C. Mayers, McNew & T.C. Harr. (2015)
- Ambrosiella hartigii L.R. Batra (1968)
- Ambrosiella nakashimae C. Mayers, McNew & T.C. Harr. (2015)
- Ambrosiella remansi C. Mayers & T.C. Harr. (2019)
- Ambrosiella roeperi T.C. Harr. & McNew (2014)
- Ambrosiella sulcati A. Funk (1970)
- Ambrosiella trypodendri (L.R. Batra) T.C. Harr. (2010)
- Ambrosiella xylebori Brader ex Arx & Hennebert (1965)
Former species;[6]
- A. brunnea L.R. Batra (1968) = Raffaelea brunnea, Ophiostomataceae
- A. ferruginea L.R. Batra (1968) = Phialophoropsis ferruginea, Ceratocystidaceae
- A. gnathotrichi L.R. Batra (1968) = Raffaelea gnathotrichi, Ophiostomataceae
- A. ips (J.G. Leach, L.W. Orr & C.M. Chr.) L.R. Batra (1968) = Hyalorhinocladiella ips, Ophiostomataceae
- A. macrospora (Francke-Grosm.) L.R. Batra (1968) = Ophiostoma macrosporum, Ceratocystidaceae
- A. sulphurea L.R. Batra (1968) = Raffaelea sulphurea, Ophiostomataceae
- A. tingens (Lagerb. & Melin) L.R. Batra (1968) = Ophiostoma tingens, Ceratocystidaceae
References
- ^ von Arx, J. A.; Hennebert, G. L. (1965). "Deux champignons ambrosia". Mycopathologia et Mycologia Applicata. 25 (3–4): 309–315. doi:10.1007/BF02049918. S2CID 35541534.
- ^ Harrington, T.C.; Aghayeva, D.N.; Fraedrich, S.W. (1 January 2010). "New combinations in Raffaelea, Ambrosiella, and Hyalorhinocladiella, and four new species from the redbay ambrosia beetle, Xyleborus glabratus". Mycotaxon. 111 (1): 337–361. doi:10.5248/111.337.
- ^ a b Mayers, Chase G.; Mcnew, Douglas L.; Harrington, Thomas C.; Roeper, Richard A.; Fraedrich, Stephen W.; Biedermann, Peter H.W.; Castrillo, Louela A.; Reed, Sharon E. (August 2015). "Three genera in the Ceratocystidaceae are the respective symbionts of three independent lineages of ambrosia beetles with large, complex mycangia". Fungal Biology. 119 (11): 1075–1092. doi:10.1016/j.funbio.2015.08.002. PMID 26466881.
- ^ Lin, Yu-Ting; Shih, Hsin-Hui; Hulcr, Jiri; Lin, Ching-Shan; Lu, Sheng-Shan; Chen, Chi-Yu (April 2017). "Ambrosiella in Taiwan including one new species". Mycoscience. 58 (4): 242–252. doi:10.1016/j.myc.2017.02.004.
- ^ a b Mayers, Chase G.; Harrington, Thomas C.; Ranger, Christopher M. (May 2017). "First report of a sexual state in an ambrosia fungus: Ambrosiella cleistominuta sp. nov. associated with the ambrosia beetle Anisandrus maiche". Botany. 95 (5): 503–512. doi:10.1139/cjb-2016-0297. hdl:1807/77270.
- ^ a b c "Species Fungorum - Search Page - Ambrosiella". www.speciesfungorum.org. Retrieved 22 July 2023.
External links