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Pythium polare, a new heterothallic oomycete causing brown discolouration of Sanionia uncinata in the Arctic and Antarctic
Authors:Tojo Motoaki  van West Pieter  Hoshino Tamotsu  Kida Kenichi  Fujii Hirokazu  Hakoda Akiho  Kawaguchi Yuki  Mühlhauser Hermann A  Van Den Berg Albert H  Küpper Frithjof C  Herrero María L  Klemsdal Sonja S  Tronsmo Anne Marte  Kanda Hiroshi
Institution:Graduate School of Life and Environmental Sciences, Osaka Prefecture University, Sakai, Osaka 599-8531, Japan. tojo@plant.osakafu-u.ac.jp
Abstract:Pythium polare sp. nov. is a new heterothallic oomycete species isolated from fresh water and moss from various locations in both the Arctic and Antarctic. This water mould is able to infect stems and leaves of Sanionia moss (Sanionia uncinata). Pythium polare causes brown discolouration in in vitro inoculation tests at 5 °C after 5 weeks of inoculation. It is characterized by globose sporangia with various lengths of discharge tubes releasing zoospores and aplerotic oospores with usually one to five antheridia. The sexual structures are only produced in a dual culture of antheridial and oogonial isolates. Phylogenetic analysis, based on ITS sequencing, places all isolated strains of P. polare in a unique new clade, hence it is considered a novel species. Pythium canariense and Pythium violae are the most closely related species of P. polare based both on morphology and the phylogenetic analysis.
Keywords:Bipolar distribution  Moss  Oomycete  Plant pathogen  Pythium polare  Sanionia uncinata
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