Aplosporella yalgorensis explained
Aplosporella yalgorensis is an endophytic fungus that might be a canker pathogen, specifically for Eucalyptus gomphocephala. It was isolated from said trees in Western Australia.[1]
The epithet of the species, yalgorensis, is derived from the name of Yalgorup National Park, meaning the type location was at 'yalgor'.[2]
Further reading
- Slippers . B. . et al . 2009 . A diverse assemblage of Botryosphaeriaceae infect Eucalyptus in native and non-native environments . Southern Forests: A Journal of Forest Science . 71 . 2. 101–110 . 10.2989/sf.2009.71.2.3.818. 55578013 . 10.1.1.704.5086 .
- Degreef . Jérôme . et al . 2013 . cryptogamie . Cryptogamie, Mycologie . 34 . 1. 35–44 .
- Hoffmann . Kerstin . Walther . Grit . Voigt . Kerstin . 2009 . Mycocladus vs. Lichtheimia: a correction (Lichtheimiaceae fam. nov., Mucorales, Mucoromycotina) . 10.1016/j.mycres.2009.02.001 . Mycological Research . 113 . 277–278 .
External links
Notes and References
- Taylor. Katherine. Barber. Paul A.. St J. Hardy. Giles E.. Burgess. Treena I.. Botryosphaeriaceae from tuart (Eucalyptus gomphocephala) woodland, including descriptions of four new species. Mycological Research. 113. 3. 2009. 337–353. 0953-7562. 10.1016/j.mycres.2008.11.010. 19070663.
- Web site: Aplosporella yalgorensis . www.mycobank.org . 10 October 2018 . en.