Biology and life cycle ofAtelocauda koae,an unusual demicyclic rust |
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Authors: | Wan-Quan Chen Donald E. Gardner David T. Webb |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Botany, University of Hawaii at Manoa, 96822 Honolulu, Hawaii, USA;(2) Institute of Plant Protection, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Science, West Yuan Ming Yuan Road, 100094 Beijing, China |
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Abstract: | 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. |
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Keywords: | Acacia koa Atelocauda koae fluorochrome staining native Hawaiian fungi teliospore germination |
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