2005
DOI: 10.1111/j.1744-7348.2005.00010.x
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Morphological and molecular characterisation of Puccinia lagenophorae, now present in central North America

Abstract: In June 2004, a rust fungus not previously reported for Oklahoma was found occurring naturally on the weed, common groundsel, Senecio vulgaris, in pots in a commercial container nursery in northeastern Oklahoma. Host symptoms and morphology of teliospores and aeciospores of the fungus were consistent with those of Puccinia lagenophorae, a recent introduction into North America that has, as yet, been reported only on the East and West Coasts of the USA. This is the first report of the rust in central regions of… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…The ITS region has successfully distinguished phylogenetic species in Uromyces (Barilli et al 2011) and it was used in combination with TEF to resolve the taxonomy of P. melampodii (Seier et al 2009). However, the ITS region was polymorphic in Puccinia lagenophorae (Littlefield et al 2005;Scholler et al 2011), and Morin et al (2009) discovered a paralagous copy of the ITS region, which may have resulted from a hybridization event. A paralagous copy of the ITS region was also reported in P. kuehnii in the study by Virtudazo et al (2001).…”
Section: Species Identification and Numbersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The ITS region has successfully distinguished phylogenetic species in Uromyces (Barilli et al 2011) and it was used in combination with TEF to resolve the taxonomy of P. melampodii (Seier et al 2009). However, the ITS region was polymorphic in Puccinia lagenophorae (Littlefield et al 2005;Scholler et al 2011), and Morin et al (2009) discovered a paralagous copy of the ITS region, which may have resulted from a hybridization event. A paralagous copy of the ITS region was also reported in P. kuehnii in the study by Virtudazo et al (2001).…”
Section: Species Identification and Numbersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The aeciospores were yellow, strongly verrucose, 22.5-32.5 Â 15-20 lm having a cell wall 2.5 lm thick. Cytoplasm and cell walls of these aeciospores showed a great morphological similarity to previously published descriptions of these spores (Weber and Davoli, 2002;Littlefield et al, 2005). Figure 4 illustrates aeciospores before and after germination in distilled water for 4 h at 20°C.…”
mentioning
confidence: 68%
“…Interestingly, the spreading features of P. glechomatis bear a great resemblance to those of Puccinia lagenophorae Cooke (=P. distincta McAlpine), a species from Australia on species of Senecionae that was found first on the West Coast in 2000 , on the East Coast in 2002(Hernandez et al 2003, and in the central United States in Oklahoma in 2004 (Littlefield et al 2005), but not in regions between. The major host of P. lagenophorae is the common groundsel (Senecio vulgaris).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%