Craterellus fallax, a Black Trumpet mushroom from eastern North America with a broad host range
PB Matheny, EA Austin, JM Birkebak, AD Wolfenbarger - Mycorrhiza, 2010 - Springer
PB Matheny, EA Austin, JM Birkebak, AD Wolfenbarger
Mycorrhiza, 2010•SpringerPhylogenetic analysis of ITS sequences of members of the Craterellus cornucopioides
complex (Black Trumpet mushrooms) supports the taxonomic separation of Craterellus fallax
apart from C. cornucopioides, with which it has been synonymized in the past. Examination
of Pinus virginiana ectomycorrhizal (ECM) root tips and sequence comparison with other
insufficiently identified environmental sequences from roots of Tsuga, Quercus, and possibly
Castanea supports a broad host range in North America for the ECM symbiont C. fallax. This …
complex (Black Trumpet mushrooms) supports the taxonomic separation of Craterellus fallax
apart from C. cornucopioides, with which it has been synonymized in the past. Examination
of Pinus virginiana ectomycorrhizal (ECM) root tips and sequence comparison with other
insufficiently identified environmental sequences from roots of Tsuga, Quercus, and possibly
Castanea supports a broad host range in North America for the ECM symbiont C. fallax. This …
Abstract
Phylogenetic analysis of ITS sequences of members of the Craterellus cornucopioides complex (Black Trumpet mushrooms) supports the taxonomic separation of Craterellus fallax apart from C. cornucopioides, with which it has been synonymized in the past. Examination of Pinus virginiana ectomycorrhizal (ECM) root tips and sequence comparison with other insufficiently identified environmental sequences from roots of Tsuga, Quercus, and possibly Castanea supports a broad host range in North America for the ECM symbiont C. fallax. This is the first molecular confirmation of an ECM symbiont with P. virginiana, which associates with a wide diversity of ECM fungi, and the first report of a Cantharellaceae symbiont with this tree, an eastern North American two-needled pine. Three unique species in the C. cornucopioides complex are recovered based on phylogenetic analysis: C. fallax, C. cornucopioides, and an unidentified Craterellus species similar to C. fallax but smaller in stature with smaller spores.
Springer
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