Author/Authors :
Mehrabioon Mohammadi, M Plant Protection Department - Faculty of Agriculture - University of Tabriz, Tabriz, Iran , Arzanlou, M Plant Protection Department - Faculty of Agriculture - University of Tabriz, Tabriz, Iran , Pertot, I Agriculture Food Environment - University of Trento/Fondazione Edmund Mach, via Mach, S. Michele all'Adige, Italy
Abstract :
Bark beetles dig galleries in bark tissue
and can transmit fungi in the forest. Their
association with the members of the orders
Microascales and Ophiostomatales are among the
most exciting examples of symbioses in nature. In
the present study, several synnematous fungal
isolates were recovered from bark beetle galleries on
declining woody hosts in Arasbaran and Toskestan
forests in the northwestern and north zone of Iran.
By the integration of morphological features with
sequence data of ITS-rDNA region and TUB gene,
the isolates were identified as Scedosporium
minutisporum. A phylogeny inferred based on
combined data set of the ITS-rDNA and TUB
sequences clustered our isolate together with
reference stain of S. minutisporum in the family
Microascaceae. To the best of our knowledge S.
minutisporum is new to the mycobiota of Iran. The
pathogenic relevance of this species on bark beetles
remains to be studied.
Keywords :
Microascaceae , Scedosporium , TUB , ITS