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Diversity of xylariaceous symbionts in Xiphydria woodwasps: role of vector and a host tree
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SYSNO ASEP 0351449 Document Type J - Journal Article R&D Document Type Journal Article Subsidiary J Článek ve WOS Title Diversity of xylariaceous symbionts in Xiphydria woodwasps: role of vector and a host tree Author(s) Pažoutová, Sylvie (MBU-M)
Šrůtka, P. (CZ)
Holuša, J. (CZ)
Chudíčková, Milada (MBU-M)
Kolařík, Miroslav (MBU-M) RID, ORCIDSource Title Fungal Ecology. - : Elsevier - ISSN 1754-5048
Roč. 3, č. 4 (2010), s. 392-401Number of pages 10 s. Language eng - English Country GB - United Kingdom Keywords Daldinia ; Endophyte ; Floodplain forest Subject RIV EE - Microbiology, Virology R&D Projects GA206/07/0283 GA ČR - Czech Science Foundation (CSF) CEZ AV0Z50200510 - MBU-M (2005-2011) UT WOS 000283695900016 DOI 10.1016/j.funeco.2010.07.002 Annotation Siricid woodwasps live in obligatory nutritional symbiosis with fungi. Screening of symbionts from mycetangia of emerging Xiphydria females (X. longicollis, X. prolongata, X. camelus, X. picta) from 28 locations and four tree genera yielded 1 389 isolates. Each female carried a pure culture of a single fungus. In X. longicollis (Quercus), Daldinia childiae was either the only fungus or a highly dominant one in the samples from moderately dry oak-hornbeam (QuercuseCarpinus betula) forests. Females from the alluvial sites harboured D. childiae and Daldinia decipiens X. camelus and X. picta (Alnus) shared the dominant symbiont D. decipiens whereas X. camelus from Betula carried D. decipiens and D. petriniae In X. prolongata, D. childiae was the dominant species followed by an undescribed Daldinia sp. (0e20 percent of isolates); D. decipiens was rare and in three females Hypoxylon macrocarpum was found Workplace Institute of Microbiology Contact Eliška Spurná, eliska.spurna@biomed.cas.cz, Tel.: 241 062 231 Year of Publishing 2011
Number of the records: 1