2007
DOI: 10.1111/j.1095-8339.2007.00658.x
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Sarcinomyces sideticae, a new black yeast from historical marble monuments in Side (Antalya, Turkey)

Abstract: A new species of Sarcinomyces , a melanized fungus with meristematic development, is described. On the basis of small subunit and internal transcribed sequence regions of ribosomal DNA sequencing, the new species was accommodated in the anamorph genus Sarcinomyces (Herpotrichiellaceae, Chaetothyriales) close to S. petricola .

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Cited by 22 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Sarcinomyces crustaceus Lindner is superficially similar to Endosporium in forming cellular clumps that give rise to blastic conidia, but its cellular clumps do not produce endoconidia (Sigler et al 1981). Furthermore, this species occupies an unresolved phylogenetic position and has been suggested to have affinities to either the Chaetothyriomycetes (Sterflinger et al 1997) or the Dothideales (Sert et al 2007). Phylogenetic analysis of the combined LSU, SSU, and ITS regions suggests that the black meristematic fungi Phaeosclera dematioides Sigler,Tsuneda,& Carmichael and Fungal sp.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Sarcinomyces crustaceus Lindner is superficially similar to Endosporium in forming cellular clumps that give rise to blastic conidia, but its cellular clumps do not produce endoconidia (Sigler et al 1981). Furthermore, this species occupies an unresolved phylogenetic position and has been suggested to have affinities to either the Chaetothyriomycetes (Sterflinger et al 1997) or the Dothideales (Sert et al 2007). Phylogenetic analysis of the combined LSU, SSU, and ITS regions suggests that the black meristematic fungi Phaeosclera dematioides Sigler,Tsuneda,& Carmichael and Fungal sp.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Rock-inhabiting fungi have been repeatedly isolated from stone monuments in Greece, Turkey (e.g., Gorbushina et al 1993;Bogomolova and Minter 2003;Sert et al 2007aSert et al , 2007bSert et al , 2007cSert and Sterflinger 2010) and, to a less extent, Georgia (Caneva et al 2013) and Italy (De Leo et al 2003, Marvasi et al 2012. Some RIF colonizing monuments in urban environments are prone to additional external stresses than sun exposition, oligotrophy, and prolonged dryness, due to air pollution, while others may have a competitive advantage by their ability to assimilate toxic hydrocarbons (Prenafeta-Boldú et al 2006).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Despite being worldwide distributed in natural rock formations [ 16 ] and manmade materials [ 8 , 11 , 17 , 18 , 19 , 20 ], RIF have been overlooked due to their slow growth and inconspicuous morphology [ 21 ]. The development of phylogenetic classification by multi-locus analyses has provided powerful tools for revealing the immense phylogenetic breadth and diversity of RIF [ 11 , 22 , 23 , 24 ].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%