Jewelweed ( spp., Balsaminaceae) is a common native annual plant within Pennsylvania wetland ecosystems, many of which are under threat from invasive non-native plants, and is an important wetland indicator plant (code FACW; facultative wetland). In May 2014, rust disease symptoms on native jewelweed ( Meerb.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCommon groundsel (Senecio vulgaris L.), is an aster native to Eurasia and is now a common weed in gardens, roadsides and vacant lots worldwide. In 2001, Scholler and Toike were first to report that common groundsel was a host for the rust fungus Puccinia lagenophorae Cooke in North America (Scholler and Toike 2001).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe ambrosia fungus Flavodon ambrosius is the primary nutritional mutualist of ambrosia beetles Ambrosiodmus and Ambrosiophilus in North America. F. ambrosius is the only known ambrosial basidiomycete, unique in its efficient lignocellulose degradation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIncreasing numbers of sequences of basal fungi from environmental DNA studies are being deposited in public databases. Many of these sequences remain unclassified below the phylum level because sequence information from identified species is sparse. Lack of basic biological knowledge due to a dearth of identified species is extreme in Cryptomycota, a new phylum widespread in the environment and phylogenetically basal within the fungal lineage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAmbrosia symbiosis is an obligate, farming-like mutualism between wood-boring beetles and fungi. It evolved at least 11 times and includes many notorious invasive pests. All ambrosia beetles studied to date cultivate ascomycotan fungi: early colonizers of recently killed trees with poor wood digestion.
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