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Ophiostomatoid fungi including two new fungal species associated with pine root-feeding beetles in northern Spain
Authors:Pedro Romón  Z. Wilhelm De Beer  Mercedes Fernández  Julio Diez  Brenda D. Wingfield  Michael J. Wingfield
Affiliation:1. Department of Genetics, Forestry and Agricultural Biotechnology Institute (FABI), University of Pretoria, Pretoria, 0002, South Africa
2. Department of Microbiology, Forestry and Agricultural Biotechnology Institute (FABI), University of Pretoria, Pretoria, 0002, South Africa
3. Department of Agroforestry Sciences, University of Valladolid, ETSIIAA Palencia, Avda. Madrid 57, 34071, Palencia, Spain
4. Department of Plant Production and Forest Resources, University of Valladolid, ETSIIAA Palencia, Avda. Madrid 57, 34071, Palencia, Spain
Abstract:
Many bark beetles live in a symbiosis with ophiostomatoid fungi but very little is known regarding these fungi in Spain. In this study, we considered the fungi associated with nine bark beetle species and one weevil infesting two native tree species (Pinus sylvestris and Pinus nigra) and one non-native (Pinus radiata) in Cantabria (Northern Spain). This included examination of 239 bark beetles or their galleries. Isolations yielded a total of 110 cultures that included 11 fungal species (five species of Leptographium sensu lato including Leptographium absconditum sp. nov., five species of Ophiostoma sensu lato including Ophiostoma cantabriense sp. nov, and one species of Graphilbum). The most commonly encountered fungal associates of the bark beetles were Grosmannia olivacea, Leptographium procerum, and Ophiostoma canum. The aggressiveness of the collected fungal species was evaluated using inoculations on two-year-old P. radiata seedlings. Leptographium wingfieldii, Leptographium guttulatum, and Ophiostoma ips were the only species capable of causing significant lesions.
Keywords:
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