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1.
The behavior of rust fungi in their host plants has been elucidated by electron microscopy. However, most of the ultrastructural studies on rust fungi have focused on the uredial stage. In order to elucidate the features of the sporidial stage, we studied the fine structure of Kuehneola japonica, a short-cycle rust, in rose leaves. Infection pegs arising from appressoria penetrated the host walls. Papillae formed at the time of penetration against the outer epidermal cell walls. The papillae which had formed at the penetration sites grew extensively and partially surrounded the intracellular hyphae which were connected with the infection pegs. The intracellular hyphae in the epidermal cells developed further and entered adjacent parenchyma cells. Walls of parenchyma cells either invaginated or thin papillae formed at penetration sites and the invaginated walls or papillae surrounded the necks of the intracellular hyphae. Intracellular hyphae in both epidermal and parenchyma cells were not enveloped by the sheath before 20 days after inoculation. In specimens prepared 20 days after inoculation, some of the intracellular hyphae were enveloped by a sheath in both palisade and spongy parenchyma cells. The sheathed hyphae resembled haustoria of other rust fungi which had been described previously. Teliospore initials were formed in mycelial masses in intercellular spaces between the epidermal cells and palisade parenchyma cells 20 days after inoculation. Uninucleate teliospores developed from teliospore initials 30 days after inoculation.Contribution No. 32.  相似文献   

2.
A native fungus, Plectosporium tabacinum (van Beyma) M. E. Palm, W. Gams et Nirenberg, has potential as a bioherbicide for the control of both herbicide-resistant and herbicide-susceptible false cleavers. Limited information is available on the infection process of P. tabacinum. P. tabacinum spore distribution pattern, germination, penetration, and colonization on false cleavers leaves were examined using confocal, light, and scanning electron microscopy. The results demonstrated that conidia were distributed over the entire surface of leaves and cotyledons. More than 90% of the conidia germinated on the leaf surface 6-8 h after inoculation. Penetration of the leaf epidermis by conidia started 8-10 h after inoculation. Histological observation showed that no appressoria were formed by P. tabacinum, but its hyphae produced appressed club-like structures that penetrated the cuticle and epidermal layers. No stomata or other natural openings were observed on the upper leaf surface of false cleavers seedlings. Penetration occurs directly on epidermal cells with more frequent intercellular penetrations. Hyphal penetration was visualized at a depth of 30 and 40 üm after 8 and 16 h of incubation, respectively. Secondary hyphae colonized mesophyll cells 16 h after inoculation. Even spore distribution, short spore germination time, club-like infection structure formation, direct penetration, quick colonization, and mucous secretion on false cleavers leaves may contribute to the kill of false cleavers by P. tabacinum. Slow spore germination and germ tube growth, low spore germination numbers, and no infection structure formation on Brassica napus leaves may be factors affecting the host selectivity of P. tabacinum.  相似文献   

3.
Atelocauda koae, a rust of the native HawaiianAcacia koa, is considered as a demicyclic species, having spermogonial, aecial, and telial states, but is unusual in production of aeciospores simultaneously with teliospores rather than consecutively. Host inoculation with spores of each state separately confirmed that the life cycle was perpetuated by the telial state, but the aeciospores, while capable of germination and stomal penetration, did not produce detectable infection. This rust therefore behaves as a microcyclic species, and appears to be in evolutionary transition toward this reduced state. Teliospores produced vestigial, permanently attached basidiosopores which germinated to produce infective hyphae. The hyphae entered the host either through stomata or penetrated the epidermis directly, with the latter method being more common. Unusual nuclear associated with teliospore germination, in which meiosis occurs in more than one diploid nucleus was observed, in confirmation of an earlier study.  相似文献   

4.
Babu  A. M.  Kumar  Jalaja S.  Kumar  Vineet  Sarkar  A.  Datta  R. K. 《Mycopathologia》2003,156(3):207-213
Different mulberry genotypes show great variation in their resistance to the powdery mildew Phyllactinia corylea. Conidial germination and hyphal growth of P. corylea on the leaf surface of two susceptible mulberry genotypes, viz., Kanva 2 (K2) and Victory 1 (V1) varieties of Morus indica, and on two resistant species, viz., M. laevigata and M. serrata were studied by scanning electron microscopy. Conidial germination and growth of germ tubes were normal on all the leaves. The hyphae of P. coryleaidentify stomata on host leaves by their topographical features to produce the stomatopodia precisely over them. The holes and/or the grooves of stomata appear to provide the signals for the initiation of stomatopodia and similar structures are erratically developed over many local depressions or grooves on leaf surface. The abaxial surface of K2 leaf is smooth without prominent undulations of epidermal cell surface, and the stomata are flush with the leaf surface. Although successful penetration is also achieved on V1 leaf, its slightly undulated surface occasionally provides inaccurate tropic signals to the hyphae, inducing the development of stomatopodia away from the stomata. The leaf surfaces of M. laevigata and M. serrata are very rough with highly sculptured cuticle and abundant epidermal outgrowths. Stomata mostly remain sunken or hidden amidst the cuticular ornamentations and the hyphae fail to recognise the precise signals from them. As the surface architecture of the leaves provides many immense sources of tropic signals, stomatopodia are often produced over local depressions or grooves. In these cases the fungus fails to penetrate the leaf, does not develop beyond 24 h and penetration is rarely achieved on the leaves of the resistant plants. The study indicates that the stimulatory effect of the leaf surface topography of resistant varieties misleads the pathogen from successful penetration, thus contributing to the plant's resistance.This revised version was published online in October 2005 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

5.
Chinese cabbage roots colonized by the dematiaceous fungal taxon Heteroconium chaetospira were previously found to become highly resistant to clubroot and Verticillium yellows. The dematiaceous fungus possesses an endophytic nature, but no detailed anatomical studies on endophyte–host plant interactions have so far been provided. Light and electron microscopy revealed that hyphae of H. chaetospira were abundant on and inside the root epidermal cells by 3 weeks following inoculation. The penetration pegs easily breached into epidermal cells, and the infection hyphae penetrated into cortical cells. Some appressorium-like swollen structures formed from intracellular hyphae, but no visible degradation of the host cell walls was evident where the hyphae contacted. No visible signs of host reactions and no invagination of the host plasma membrane around the hyphae were seen in the host cells. By 8 weeks following inoculation, masses of closely packed fungal cells had been formed in some cells of the epidermis and cortical layers, but further hyphal ingress was halted, mostly in the inner cortical cell layer. Thus, root vascular cylinders remained intact.  相似文献   

6.
The mechanisms of penetration of Phytophthora cinnamomi Rands into seedling eucalypt roots were studied by light and electron microscopy. Culture grown seedlings of root-rot tolerant Eucalyptus st johnii and root-rot susceptible Eucalyptus obliqua were inoculated with both zoospores and mycelium. Zoospores encysted on roots of both species and the germ tubes penetrated without the formation of appressoria. Swellings, previously described as appressoria, were formed when the germ tube was slow to enter the host by intracellular penetration. Vegetative hyphae penetrated both inter- and intracellularly into the zones of root elongation and differentiation, often through root hairs. Evidence of hydrolysis of the host cell-wall at the point of penetration was observed in electron micrographs. Several hours after the germ tube penetrated the epidermis, a thick plug of amorphous material formed in the germ tube slightly below the level of the outer walls of the epidermal cells, sealing off the hypha within the root. Behaviour of zoospores and germ tubes and the mechanism of penetration were similar on both hosts. Micrographs do not suggest any kind of a hypersensitive reaction by the host cells during the early stages of infection.  相似文献   

7.
Experiments were conducted with leek (Allium porrum L.) leaves to investigate whether aqueous solutions are able to penetrate stomata. Epidermal strips were used for the determination of transport rates. Stomata were opened by fusicoccin or closed by darkness or abscisic acid. A droplet containing the anionic fluorescent dye, uranine, was placed on the physiologically outer side of the epidermis and allowed to dry. With open stomata 30 times more uranine penetrated through the epidermal strips than with closed stomata (comparison of medians). In another experiment droplets of uranine solution were placed on leaf segments and epidermal strips were removed after drying of the droplets. Penetration of uranine through stomata was detectable under the microscope both with epidermal strips from the transport experiments and with strips obtained after application on leaf segments. As maximum uptake rates occurred during the drying process, it is concluded that penetration took place via water films. These results show that the physical restrictions preventing stomatal penetration of static droplets are not decisive for drying droplets and that stomatal uptake of dissolved ionic substances occurs under natural conditions, i.e. without surfactants or applied pressure.  相似文献   

8.
Schizophyllum commune Fr. was shown, by light, scanning, and transmission electron microscopy, to be a destructive mycoparasite on several phytopathogenic and nematode-trapping fungi. The hyphae of S. commune coiled around host hyphae and fruiting structures and penetrated them by means of either unspecialized hyphae or by penetration pegs that developed from terminal appressoria. The host cell walls were usually chemically degraded after which the parasite grew through an electron-dense, papillate, reaction region and its underlying membrane(s) produce trophic hyphae inside the host cells.  相似文献   

9.
The infection of lentil roots by Fusarium oxysporum Schlecht and the responses of the host cells to invading hyphae were examined by light microscopy. Hyphae from inoculum placed on the zone of cell elongation entered the roots at the juncture of epidermal cells within 8 h after inoculation. Although swollen hyphal apices were observed on the epidermal cells, root penetration occurred without formation of these structures or appressoria. The sheath of material found on the surface of uninoculated roots was absent from inoculated roots penetrated by hyphae. Prior to penetration, the epidermal cells became irregular in shape and their cytoplasm appeared to be plasmolysed or granular. Hyphae were observed in the cortex 10—12 h after inoculation and non–penetrated cortical cells were distinctly lobate. Often these lobed cells had a broad, peripheral band of diffuse cytoplasm. When hyphae were first observed in the cortical cells, the walls were ruptured and only slightly stained or unstained by toluidine blue. The inability of such walls to bind the stain may have been the result of the removal of wall components by fungal enzymes. Although extensive proliferation of hyphae was evident throughout the cortex after 24 h of incubation, the endodermis and vascular cylinder were free of hyphae for at least 72 h. Hyphae from inoculum placed on the root hairs or the root apex failed to penetrate the roots during the first 24 h of incubation. The cytological results herein are discussed in relation to the infection of field plantings by this pathogen.  相似文献   

10.
Anatomical observations of leaves infected by Taphrina deformans were studied in tolerant peach trees (TPT) and in very susceptible (VSPT) ones. Leaves from the first sampling (2nd April) showed hyphae penetrating through the stomata or into the cuticle of the host tissue; anatomical structures of leaf sections were similar for both TPT and VSPT. The ultrastructure of the leaves of TPT showed seemingly normal mesophyll cells. In contrast, mesophyll cells of the VSPT showed important signs of degradation. Cells were organelle‐free and the middle lamella was expanded and invaded by hyphae of T. deformans. In some samples, the leaves of TPT showed deformed epidermal cells, loss of some spongy cells and increase of the intercellular spaces and division of the palisade cells. The pathogen proliferation in the leaves of the VSPT was considerably superior. In this case, stimulation of cell division occurred in the abaxial epidermis. Cells showed periclinal and oblique divisions, with an increased number of plasmodesmata; palisade or spongy cells were not differentiable. Leaves from TPT collected on 26th April showed hyphae with a non‐cylindrical section and with a squashed aspect. The hyphae were very evident in the intercellular spaces, showing abundant endoplasmic reticulum of rough type (RER) in the cytoplasm. On the other hand, epidermis of the leaves of the VSPT had numerous hyphae under the cuticle, which were growing in a thick pectin matrix. Leaves from TPT and VSPT collected on 6th May showed relevant differences. The leaves of TPT had a palisade mesophyll with fewer cells but with active chloroplasts. In contrast, the leaves from VSPT showed empty mesophyll cells, the cytoplasm was collapsed and the adaxial epidermis was covered with the fungus fructification. The observed anatomical and ultrastructural differences of leaves from TPT and VSPT confirm a different behaviour in plant‐host reaction at early stages of infection.  相似文献   

11.
The infecting hyphae of Phytophthora capsici grew intercellularly in infected tissues of roots and stems of pepper (Capsicum annuum). The vascular tissues were not markedly disorganized even when heavily infected. Intercellularly growing hyphae penetrated the host cells by forming haustorium-like bodies. The consistent features of ultrastructural changes in infected tissues of pepper roots and stems were degeneration of cell organelles and dissolution of host cell walls. The cytoplasm detached from the cell wall aggregated abundantly around some haustorium-like bodies or the penetration sites of fungal hyphae. The host cell walls were palely stained, thinned and swollen, possibly being biochemically altered by the action of fungal macerating enzymes. Electron-dense, wall-like material was apposed on the outer wall of xylem vessel contacted by fungal hyphae. The infecting hyphae were also surrounded by granular, dark-staining cytoplasm. Characteristics of host cell responses to the invading P. capsici were the deposition of papilla-like material on host cell walls next to hyphae and the encasement of haustorium-like bodies with wall appositions.  相似文献   

12.
The influence exerted by Pseudomonas fluorescens, strain 63-28R, in stimulating plant defense reactions was investigated using an in-vitro system in which Ri T-DNA-transformed pea (Pisum sativum L.) roots were subsequently infected with Pythium ultimum. Cytological investigations of samples from P. fluorescens-inoculated roots revealed that the bacteria multiplied abundantly at the root surface and colonized a small number of epidermal and cortical cells. Penetration of the epidermis occurred through the openings made by the disruption of the fibrillar network at the junction of adjacent epidermal cell walls. Direct cell wall penetration was never observed and bacterial ingress into the root tissues proceeded via an intercellular route. Striking differences in the extent of fungal colonization were observed between bacterized and non-bacterized pea roots following inoculation with P. ultimum. In non-bacterized roots, the pathogen multiplied abundantly through most of the tissues while in bacterized roots, pathogen growth was restricted to the epidermis and the outer cortex. At the root surface, the bacteria interacted with the pathogen, in a way similar to that observed in dual culture tests. Most Pythium cells were severely damaged but fungal penetration by the bacteria was never observed. Droplets of the amorphous material formed upon interaction between the bacteria and the host root were frequently found at the fungal cell surface. Incubation of sections with a -1,4-exoglucanase-gold complex revealed that the cell wall of markedly altered Pythium hyphae was structurally preserved. Successful penetration of the root epidermis was achieved by the few hyphae of P. ultimum that could escape the first defensive line in the rhizosphere. Most hyphae of the pathogen that penetrated the epidermis exhibited considerable changes. The unusual occurrence of polymorphic wall appositions along the host epidermal cells was an indication that the host plant was signalled to defend itself through the elaboration of physical barriers.Abbreviations AGL Aplysia gonad lectin - PGPR plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria The authors wish to thank Sylvain Noël for excellent technical assistance. This study was supported by grants from the Fonds Québécois pour la formation de chercheurs et l'Aide à la Recherche (FCAR), the Natural Sciences and Engineering Council of Canada (NSERC) and the Ministère de l'Industrie, du Commerce, de la Science et de la Technologie (SYNERGIE).  相似文献   

13.
Microorganisms including bacteria, actinomycetes and fungi were recovered from the leaves of Withania somnifera, which were collected from two altitudinal ranges (0–300 m and 1700–2000 m) in the Asir region, Saudi Arabia. Types and numbers of microorganisms varied according to the altitude and the month of collection. The number of microorganisms was higher on old leaves than that on young ones in most cases. Low altitude exhibited more microorganisms than high altitude. The relationship between meteorological factors and type and number of the recovered microorganisms is discussed. Inoculation of detached healthy leaves of Withania by all recovered fungal species revealed only Alternaria solani as a pathogen of this plant. To confirm pathogenicity, scanning and transmission electron microscopic examination revealed the colonization of this pathogen inside the leaf tissue. Penetration of Withania leaves by the fungus occurred only through stomata, and the invading hyphae were located in the intercellular spaces of leaf tissues. Ultrastructural changes noted in infected cells included changes in chloroplasts and the invagination of the host plasma membrane.  相似文献   

14.
Arbutoid mycorrhizae were synthesized in growth pouches between Arbutus menziesii Pursch. (Pacific madrone) and two broad host range basidiomycete fungi, Pisolithus tinctorius (Pers.) Coker and Couch and Piloderma bicolor (Peck) Jülich. P. tinctorius induced the formation of dense, pinnate mycorrhizal root clusters enveloped by a thick fungal mantle. P. bicolor mycorrhizae were usually unbranched, and had a thin or non-existent mantle. Both associations had the well-developed para-epidermal Hartig nets and intracellular penetration of host epidermal cells by hyphae typical of arbutoid interactions. A. menziesii roots developed a suberized exodermis which acted as a barrier to cortical cell penetration by the fungi. Ultrastructurally, the suberin appeared non-lamellar, but this may have been due to the imbedding resin. Histochemical analyses indicated that phenolic substances present in epidermal cells may be an important factor in mycorrhiza establishment. Analyses with X-ray energy dispersive spectroscopy showed that some of the granular inclusions present in fungal hyphae of the mantle and Hartig net were polyphosphate. Other inclusions were either protein or polysaccharides.  相似文献   

15.
Different mulberry genotypes show great variation in their resistance to the powdery mildew Phyllactinia corylea. Conidial germination and hyphal growth of P. corylea on the leaf surface of two susceptible mulberry genotypes, viz., Kanva 2 (K2) and Victory 1 (V1) varieties of Morus indica, and on two resistant species, viz,, M. laevigata and M. serrata were studied by scanning electron microscopy. Conidial germination and growth of germ tubes were normal on all the leaves. The hyphae of P. corylea identify stomata on host leaves by their topographical features to produce the stomatopodia precisely over them. The holes and/or the grooves of stomata appear to provide the signals for the initiation of stomatopodia and similar structures are erratically developed over many local depressions or grooves on leaf surface. The abaxial surface of K2 leaf is smooth without prominent undulations of epidermal cell surface, and the stomata are flush with the leaf surface. Although successful penetration is also achieved on V1 leaf, its slightly undulated surface occasionally provides inaccurate tropic signals to the hyphae, inducing the development of stomatopodia away from the stomata. The leaf surfaces of M. laevigata and M. serrata are very rough with highly sculptured cuticle and abundant epidermal outgrowths. Stomata mostly remain sunken or hidden amidst the cuticular ornamentations and the hyphae fail to recognise the precise signals from them. As the surface architecture of the leaves provides many immense sources of tropic signals, stomatopodia are often produced over local depressions or grooves. In these cases the fungus fails to penetrate the leaf, does not develop beyond 24 h and penetration is rarely achieved on the leaves of the resistant plants. The study indicates that the stimulatory effect of the leaf surface topography of resistant varieties misleads the pathogen from successful penetration, thus contributing to the plant's resistance.  相似文献   

16.
Species in the subfamily Monotropoideae (family Ericaceae) are achlorophyllous and myco-heterotrophic. They have become highly specialized in that each plant species is associated with a limited number of fungal species which in turn are linked to autotrophic plants. This study provides an updated and comprehensive examination of the anatomical features of two species that have recently received attention with respect to their host-fungal specificity. Root systems of Monotropa uniflora and Pterospora andromedea collected from the field were characterized by light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy. All roots of both species were associated with fungi, each root having a well-developed mantle, paraepidermal Hartig net, and intracellular fungal pegs within epidermal cells. The mantle of M. uniflora was multi-layered and numerous outer mantle hyphae developed into cystidia of two distinct morphologies. Large calcium oxalate crystals were present, primarily on the mantle surface. The outer mantle of P. andromedea was more loosely organized, lacked cystidia, and had smaller plate-like as well as cylindrical crystals on the surface and between outer mantle hyphae. Fungal pegs in M. uniflora originated from inner mantle hyphae that penetrated the outer tangential wall of epidermal cells; in P. andromedea, these structures were initiated either from inner mantle hyphae or Hartig net hyphae and penetrated radial walls of epidermal cells. With respect to function, fungal pegs occurred frequently in both host species and, although presumed to be the sites of active nutrient exchange, no direct evidence exists to support this. Differences between these two monotropoid hosts, resulting from the mycorrhizal fungi with which each associates, are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
The cytoskeleton in plant cells is a dynamic structure that can rapidly respond to extracellular stimuli. Alteration of the organization of microtubules and actin microfilaments was examined in mesophyll cells of flax, Linum usitatissimum L., during attempted infection by the flax rust fungus, Melampsora lini (Ehrenb.) Lev. Flax leaves that had been inoculated with either a compatible (yielding a susceptible reaction) or an incompatible (yielding a resistant reaction) strain of M. lini were embedded in butyl-methylmethacrylate resin; sections of this material were immunofluorescently labelled with anti-tubulin or anti-actin and examined using confocal laser scanning microscopy. In uninfected leaves, microtubules in the mesophyll cells formed a transverse array in the cell cortex. Microfilaments radiated through the cytoplasm from the nucleus. In an incompatible interaction, microtubules and microfilaments were extensively reorganized in mesophyll cells that were in contact with fungal infection hyphae or haustorial mother cells before penetration of the cell by the infection peg. After the initiation of haustorium development, microtubules disappeared from the infected cells, and growth of the haustoria ceased. In an incompatible interaction, hypersensitive cell death occurred in more than 70% of infected cells but occurred in less than 20% of cells in compatible interactions. After the infected cell had undergone hypersensitive cell death, the cytoskeleton in neighbouring cells became focused on the walls shared with the necrotic cell. In compatible interactions, reorganization of the cytoskeleton was either not observed at all or was observed much less frequently up to 48 h after inoculation.Abbreviations FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - WGA wheatgerm agglutinin We thank Dr. G.J. Lawrence for providing valuable discussions and materials.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Conidia ofFusarium oxysporum f. sp.vasinfectum started to germinate on the roots of cotton (Gossypium barbadense L.) 6 h after inoculation and formed a compact mycelium covering the root surface. 18 h later, penetration hyphae branched off and infected the root. The number of penetration hyphae increased with the number of conidia used for inoculation. The optimal temperature for penetration was between 28 and 30 °C. The highest numbers of penetration hyphae were found in the meristematic zone, 40 percent less in the elongation and root hair zones, and none in the lateral root zone. The fine structure of the infection process was studied in protodermal cells of the meristematic zone and in rhizodermal cells of the elongation zone. The penetration hyphae were well preserved after freeze substitution and showed a Golgi equivalent consisting of three populations of smooth cisternae. Plant reactions were found already during fungal growth on the root surface. In the meristematic zone, a thickening of the plant cell wall due to an apposition of dark and lightly staining material below the hyphae occurred. This wall apposition increased in size around the hypha invading the plant cell and led to the formation of a prominent wall apposition with finger-like projections into the host cytoplasm. In the elongation zone, the deposits around the penetration hypha appeared less thick and the dark inclusions were less pronounced. High pressure freezing of infected cells revealed, thatF. oxysporum penetrates and grows within the host cells without inducing damages such as plasmolysis, cell degeneration or even host necrosis. We suggest thatF. oxysporum has an endophytic or biotrophic phase during colonization of the root tips.Abbreviation Ph penetration hyphae  相似文献   

19.
Inspection of naturally or artificially infected Hevea roots showed that Forms lignosus can penetrate undamaged roots directly, but does so more readily through wounds or natural openings like lenticels, or through the bases of lateral roots and bark scales. Therefore, Pomes-infected trees should be identified by leaf symptoms rather than by uncovering and inspecting roots, as this generally leads to root injury, which facilitates fungal penetration. Initial fungal entry into host tissue appears to be by mechanical pressure alone, but deeper penetration is through the action of extracellular enzymes. The fungus remains intercellular in the cortex but is intracellular in the woody tissue. Ray cell walls are penetrated mechanically, but the xylem through pits. The time taken for various stages of infection to occur is assessed. The amount of damage done by the fungus to roots and the blocking of xylem vessels by tyloses suggest that yellowing, curling and buckling of leaves on infected trees are drought symptoms and not a reaction to fungal toxins. The host reacts to the invasion of the cortex by forming a cork cambium and to the invasion of the woody tissue by blocking individual cells with phenols and resins, which could be important when breeding disease resistant Hevea root stocks.  相似文献   

20.
A fungus parasitic on a fern, Dennstaedtia wilfordii (Dennstaedtiaceae), was found at the foothill of Mt. Fuji, Yamanashi Prefecture, Japan. Its hyphae spread within host mesophyll cells and through intercellular spaces, forming coiled haustoria in the epidermal and mesophyll cells. The hyphae emerged either through stomata or by disrupting epidermal cell junctions. The hyphae spreading over the abaxial leaf surface generated one-septate, thin-walled basidia. All the morphological features observed were characteristic of the genus Herpobasidium. The species identification of the fungus as H. filicinum by morphology was supported by molecular phylogenetic analyses of the D1/D2 region of the large subunit rRNA gene.  相似文献   

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