A new species of Penicillium, P. ramulosum sp. nov., from the natural environment

Date
2009
Authors
Visagie C.M.
Roets F.
Jacobs K.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
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Abstract
During a recent survey of Penicillium spp. from fynbos soils in the Western Cape Province of South Africa, several undescribed species were isolated. Similar isolates of one of these species also were collected in the Western Cape from Protea infructescences. These strains were compared morphologically to known species of Penicillium but could not be identified with previously published keys. Morphologically these strains belong to subgenus Biverticillium. They are distinguished by strongly funiculose colonies covered by glutinous exudates and conidiophores with thin acerose phialides (8.5-10[-12] × 2.0- 2.5 μm) that give rise to chains of subspheroidal to ellipsoidal conidia (2.5-3.0 × 1.5-2.5 μm). Characteristically short (100-150[-250] μm) determinate synnemata are produced in culture after prolonged incubation with much longer synnemata produced in nature. Based on differences in morphology and molecular characters, the strains are described here as Penicillium ramulosum sp. nov. © 2009 by The Mycological Society of America, Lawrence, KS 66044-8897.
Description
Keywords
fungal DNA, ribosomal spacer DNA, tubulin, fruit, fungus, fynbos, isolated population, morphology, new species, soil microorganism, article, cytology, DNA sequence, environment, fungus spore, genetics, isolation and purification, Penicillium, phylogeny, physiology, South Africa, species difference, DNA, Fungal, DNA, Ribosomal Spacer, Environment, Penicillium, Phylogeny, Sequence Analysis, DNA, South Africa, Species Specificity, Spores, Fungal, Tubulin, South Africa, Western Cape, Penicillium, Penicillium cecidicola, Penicillium dendriticum, Protea burchellii, Protea infructescences, Vitaceae
Citation
Mycologia
101
6