Nine novel species of Huntiella from southern China with three distinct mating strategies and variable levels of pathogenicity.
FeiFei LiuGuoQing LiJolanda RouxIrene BarnesAndrea M WilsonMichael J WingfieldShuaifei ChenPublished in: Mycologia (2018)
The ascomycete genus Huntiella (Microascales) has a cosmopolitan distribution and occurs on a wide range of woody plants. Little is known regarding the identity, diversity, origin, or impact of these fungi in China. Recently, isolates of Huntiella spp. were collected from stumps of freshly felled trees or wounds on plantation-grown Eucalyptus in Guangdong, Guangxi, Fujian, and Hainan provinces of southern China. Additional isolates were obtained from stumps of Acacia confusa near Eucalyptus plantations in Hainan Province. The aim of this study was to identify these Huntiella species and to test their pathogenicity on Eucalyptus seedlings. Morphology and multigene phylogenies of the nuclear rDNA internal transcribed spacer (ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 = ITS) region and partial β-tubulin (BT1) and translation elongation factor 1α (TEF1α) genes revealed nine previously unknown Huntiella species, eight from Eucalyptus and one from A. confusa. The mating types of these species were determined, showing that seven are heterothallic, one is homothallic, and one is unisexual (MAT1-2-1 gene). Pathogenicity tests showed that the nine Huntiella species can produce lesions on Eucalyptus seedlings, larger than wounds caused by controls on these plants. This study provides a basic understanding of the distribution, diversity, and pathogenicity of Huntiella species in southern China.