208 results on '"Uwe Braun"'
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202. Zur Typisierung der von Schlechtendal beschriebenen Pilze
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Uwe Braun
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Plant Science ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
In der vorliegenden Arbeit werden einige von Schlechtendal beschriebene Pilze lectotypisiert. Es handelt sich dabei um Puccinia saxifragae, Caeoma ornithogali (= Ustilago ornithogali), Caeoma colchici ( = Urocystis colchici), Caeoma ambiguum, Caeoma fritillariae, Peronospora chenopodii und Botrytis sonchicola (= Bremia sonchicola). The present paper deals with a lectotypification of some fungi described by Schlechtendal. This lectotypification concerns Puccinia saxifragae, Caeoma ornithogali (= Ustilago ornithogali), Caeoma colchici (= Urocystis colchici), Caeoma ambiguum, Caeoma fritillariae, Peronospora chenopodii and Botrytis sonchicola (= Bremia sonchicola).
- Published
- 1979
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203. Vorarbeiten zu einer Rostpilzflora der DDR
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Uwe Braun
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Political science ,Plant Science ,Humanities ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Rust fungi - Abstract
Die vorliegende Arbeit behandelt taxonomische Probleme europaischer Rostpilze. Es werden einige kritische Formenkreise diskutiert. Der Autor stellt seine Auffassungen zur jeweiligen Artumgrenzung dar. Die vorliegenden Untersuchungen wurden in Vorbereitung einer Rostpilzflora der DDR durchgefuhrt. Einige Neubeschreibungen und Kombinationen werden vorgeschlagen. The present paper deals with taxonomic problems of European rust fungi. Some critical groups of related species are discussed. These investigations were carried out in order to provide a taxonomic basis for a rust flora of the GDR. Some new descriptions and combinations are proposed.
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- 1981
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204. Species and ecological diversity within the Cladosporium cladosporioides complex (Davidiellaceae, Capnodiales)
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Hans-Josef Schroers, Jan Dijksterhuis, Brett A. Summerell, F.M. Dugan, Hyeon Dong Shin, Johannes Z. Groenewald, Birgitte Andersen, Uwe Braun, K. Bensch, Pedro W. Crous, and M. Starink-Willemse
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0106 biological sciences ,Cladosporium cladosporioides ,Plant Science ,Hyphomycetes ,phylogeny ,01 natural sciences ,030308 mycology & parasitology ,Epitypification ,03 medical and health sciences ,Monophyly ,taxonomy ,Genus ,Botany ,Internal transcribed spacer ,epitypification ,Phylogeny ,Taxonomy ,new species ,0303 health sciences ,biology ,Phylogenetic tree ,Cladosporium oxysporum ,Articles ,biology.organism_classification ,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Davidiellaceae ,New species ,Capnodiales ,Cladosporium tenuissimum ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
The genus Cladosporium is one of the largest genera of dematiaceous hyphomycetes, and is characterised by a coronate scar structure, conidia in acropetal chains and Davidiella teleomorphs. Based on morphology and DNA phylogeny, the species complexes of C. herbarum and C. sphaerospermum have been resolved, resulting in the elucidation of numerous new taxa. In the present study, more than 200 isolates belonging to the C. cladosporioides complex were examined and phylogenetically analysed on the basis of DNA sequences of the nuclear ribosomal RNA gene operon, including the internal transcribed spacer regions ITS1 and ITS2, the 5.8S nrDNA, as well as partial actin and translation elongation factor 1-α gene sequences. For the saprobic, widely distributed species Cladosporium cladosporioides, both a neotype and epitype are designated in order to specify a well established circumscription and concept of this species. Cladosporium tenuissimum and C. oxysporum, two saprobes abundant in the tropics, are epitypified and shown to be allied to, but distinct from C. cladosporioides. Twenty-two species are newly described on the basis of phylogenetic characters and cryptic morphological differences. The most important phenotypic characters for distinguishing species within the C. cladosporioides complex, which represents a monophyletic subclade within the genus, are shape, width, length, septation and surface ornamentation of conidia and conidiophores; length and branching patterns of conidial chains and hyphal shape, width and arrangement. Many of the treated species, e.g., C. acalyphae, C. angustisporum, C. australiense, C. basiinflatum, C. chalastosporoides, C. colocasiae, C. cucumerinum, C. exasperatum, C. exile, C. flabelliforme, C. gamsianum, and C. globisporum are currently known only from specific hosts, or have a restricted geographical distribution. A key to all species recognised within the C. cladosporioides complex is provided.Taxonomic novelties: Cladosporium acalyphae Bensch, H.D. Shin, Crous & U. Braun, sp. nov., C. angustisporum Bensch, Summerell, Crous & U. Braun, sp. nov., C. asperulatum Bensch, Crous & U. Braun, sp. nov., C. australiense Bensch, Summerell, Crous & U. Braun, sp. nov., C. basiinflatum Bensch, Crous & U. Braun, sp. nov., C. chalastosporoides Bensch, Crous & U. Braun, sp. nov., C. exasperatum Bensch, Summerell, Crous & U. Braun, sp. nov., C. exile Bensch, Glawe, Crous & U. Braun, sp. nov., C. flabelliforme Bensch, Summerell, Crous & U. Braun, sp. nov., C. globisporum Bensch, Crous & U. Braun, sp. nov., C. hillianum Bensch, Crous & U. Braun, sp. nov., C. inversicolor Bensch, Crous & U. Braun, sp. nov., C. iranicum Bensch, Crous & U. Braun, sp. nov., C. paracladosporioides Bensch, Crous & U. Braun, sp. nov., C. perangustum Bensch, Crous & U. Braun, sp. nov., C. phyllactiniicola Bensch, Glawe, Crous & U. Braun, sp. nov., C. pseudocladosporioides Bensch, Crous & U. Braun, sp. nov., C. rectoides Bensch, H.D. Shin, Crous & U. Braun, sp. nov., C. scabrellum Bensch, Schroers, Crous & U. Braun, sp. nov., C. subuliforme Bensch, Crous & U. Braun, sp. nov., C. verrucocladosporioides Bensch, H.D. Shin, Crous & U. Braun, sp. nov., C. xylophilum Bensch, Shabunin, Crous & U. Braun, sp. nov.
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205. Phylogenetic lineages in Pseudocercospora
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Johannes Z. Groenewald, Pedro W. Crous, Uwe Braun, Michael J. Wingfield, Chiharu Nakashima, G.J.M. Verkley, Hyeon Dong Shin, and Gavin C. Hunter
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0106 biological sciences ,Mycosphaerellaceae ,Plant Science ,leaf-spot ,01 natural sciences ,030308 mycology & parasitology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Septoria ,Cercospora ,Pseudocercospora ,Genus ,Botany ,genus mycosphaerella ,korean cercosporae ,Teratosphaeriaceae ,Paracercospora ,systematics ,sooty blotch ,rdna sequence ,0303 health sciences ,biology ,taxonomic notes ,eucalyptus leaves ,ribosomal dna-sequences ,EPS-4 ,Mycosphaerella ,allied genera ,Articles ,15. Life on land ,biology.organism_classification ,Capnodiales ,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Laboratorium voor Phytopathologie ,Pseudocercosporella ,Laboratory of Phytopathology ,Multi-Locus Sequence Typing (MLST) ,cercosporoid ,010606 plant biology & botany ,mycosphaerella-spp - Abstract
UNLABELLED: Pseudocercospora is a large cosmopolitan genus of plant pathogenic fungi that are commonly associated with leaf and fruit spots as well as blights on a wide range of plant hosts. They occur in arid as well as wet environments and in a wide range of climates including cool temperate, sub-tropical and tropical regions. Pseudocercospora is now treated as a genus in its own right, although formerly recognised as either an anamorphic state of Mycosphaerella or having mycosphaerella-like teleomorphs. The aim of this study was to sequence the partial 28S nuclear ribosomal RNA gene of a selected set of isolates to resolve phylogenetic generic limits within the Pseudocercospora complex. From these data, 14 clades are recognised, six of which cluster in Mycosphaerellaceae. Pseudocercospora s. str. represents a distinct clade, sister to Passalora eucalypti, and a clade representing the genera Scolecostigmina, Trochophora and Pallidocercospora gen. nov., taxa formerly accommodated in the Mycosphaerella heimii complex and characterised by smooth, pale brown conidia, as well as the formation of red crystals in agar media. Other clades in Mycosphaerellaceae include Sonderhenia, Microcyclosporella, and Paracercospora. Pseudocercosporella resides in a large clade along with Phloeospora, Miuraea, Cercospora and Septoria. Additional clades represent Dissoconiaceae, Teratosphaeriaceae, Cladosporiaceae, and the genera Xenostigmina, Strelitziana, Cyphellophora and Thedgonia. The genus Phaeomycocentrospora is introduced to accommodate Mycocentrospora cantuariensis, primarily distinguished from Pseudocercospora based on its hyaline hyphae, broad conidiogenous loci and hila. Host specificity was considered for 146 species of Pseudocercospora occurring on 115 host genera from 33 countries. Partial nucleotide sequence data for three gene loci, ITS, EF-1α, and ACT suggest that the majority of these species are host specific. Species identified on the basis of host, symptomatology and general morphology, within the same geographic region, frequently differed phylogenetically, indicating that the application of European and American names to Asian taxa, and vice versa, was often not warranted. TAXONOMIC NOVELTIES: New genera - Pallidocercospora Crous, Phaeomycocentrospora Crous, H.D. Shin & U. Braun; New species - Cercospora eucommiae Crous, U. Braun & H.D. Shin, Microcyclospora quercina Crous & Verkley, Pseudocercospora ampelopsis Crous, U. Braun & H.D. Shin, Pseudocercospora cercidicola Crous, U. Braun & C. Nakash., Pseudocercospora crispans G.C. Hunter & Crous, Pseudocercospora crocea Crous, U. Braun, G.C. Hunter & H.D. Shin, Pseudocercospora haiweiensis Crous & X. Zhou, Pseudocercospora humulicola Crous, U. Braun & H.D. Shin, Pseudocercospora marginalis G.C. Hunter, Crous, U. Braun & H.D. Shin, Pseudocercospora ocimi-basilici Crous, M.E. Palm & U. Braun, Pseudocercospora plectranthi G.C. Hunter, Crous, U. Braun & H.D. Shin, Pseudocercospora proteae Crous, Pseudocercospora pseudostigmina-platani Crous, U. Braun & H.D. Shin, Pseudocercospora pyracanthigena Crous, U. Braun & H.D. Shin, Pseudocercospora ravenalicola G.C. Hunter & Crous, Pseudocercospora rhamnellae G.C. Hunter, H.D. Shin, U. Braun & Crous, Pseudocercospora rhododendri-indici Crous, U. Braun & H.D. Shin, Pseudocercospora tibouchinigena Crous & U. Braun, Pseudocercospora xanthocercidis Crous, U. Braun & A. Wood, Pseudocercosporella koreana Crous, U. Braun & H.D. Shin; New combinations - Pallidocercospora acaciigena (Crous & M.J. Wingf.) Crous & M.J. Wingf., Pallidocercospora crystallina (Crous & M.J. Wingf.) Crous & M.J. Wingf., Pallidocercospora heimii (Crous) Crous, Pallidocercospora heimioides (Crous & M.J. Wingf.) Crous & M.J. Wingf., Pallidocercospora holualoana (Crous, Joanne E. Taylor & M.E. Palm) Crous, Pallidocercospora konae (Crous, Joanne E. Taylor & M.E. Palm) Crous, Pallidoocercospora irregulariramosa (Crous & M.J. Wingf.) Crous & M.J. Wingf., Phaeomycocentrospora cantuariensis (E.S. Salmon & Wormald) Crous, H.D. Shin & U. Braun, Pseudocercospora hakeae (U. Braun & Crous) U. Braun & Crous, Pseudocercospora leucadendri (Cooke) U. Braun & Crous, Pseudocercospora snelliana (Reichert) U. Braun, H.D. Shin, C. Nakash. & Crous, Pseudocercosporella chaenomelis (Y. Suto) C. Nakash., Crous, U. Braun & H.D. Shin; Typifications: Epitypifications - Pseudocercospora angolensis (T. Carvalho & O. Mendes) Crous & U. Braun, Pseudocercospora araliae (Henn.) Deighton, Pseudocercospora cercidis-chinensis H.D. Shin & U. Braun, Pseudocercospora corylopsidis (Togashi & Katsuki) C. Nakash. & Tak. Kobay., Pseudocercospora dovyalidis (Chupp & Doidge) Deighton, Pseudocercospora fukuokaensis (Chupp) X.J. Liu & Y.L. Guo, Pseudocercospora humuli (Hori) Y.L. Guo & X.J. Liu, Pseudocercospora kiggelariae (Syd.) Crous & U. Braun, Pseudocercospora lyoniae (Katsuki & Tak. Kobay.) Deighton, Pseudocercospora lythri H.D. Shin & U. Braun, Pseudocercospora sambucigena U. Braun, Crous & K. Schub., Pseudocercospora stephanandrae (Tak. Kobay. & H. Horie) C. Nakash. & Tak. Kobay., Pseudocercospora viburnigena U. Braun & Crous, Pseudocercosporella chaenomelis (Y. Suto) C. Nakash., Crous, U. Braun & H.D. Shin, Xenostigmina zilleri (A. Funk) Crous; Lectotypification - Pseudocercospora ocimicola (Petr. & Cif.) Deighton; Neotypifications - Pseudocercospora kiggelariae (Syd.) Crous & U. Braun, Pseudocercospora lonicericola (W. Yamam.) Deighton, Pseudocercospora zelkovae (Hori) X.J. Liu & Y.L. Guo.
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206. Biodiversity in the Cladosporium herbarum complex (Davidiellaceae, Capnodiales), with standardisation of methods for Cladosporium taxonomy and diagnostics
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Johannes Z. Groenewald, Polona Zalar, Konstanze Schubert, Jan Dijksterhuis, G.S. de Hoog, M. Starink, C.F. Hill, Uwe Braun, and Pedro W. Crous
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Species complex ,Plant Science ,leaf-spot ,phylogeny ,Fuchsia excorticata ,030308 mycology & parasitology ,genera ,03 medical and health sciences ,taxonomy ,sensu-lato ,Botany ,medicine ,030304 developmental biology ,new species ,0303 health sciences ,inference ,biology ,multilocus genotype data ,EPS-4 ,anamorphs ,Articles ,sequence ,biology.organism_classification ,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Davidiellaceae ,recombination ,Laboratorium voor Phytopathologie ,medicine.drug_formulation_ingredient ,Capnodiales ,Cladosporium herbarum ,Laboratory of Phytopathology ,loci ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Mycosphaerella ,Davidiella ,homothallism ,Cladosporium ,mycosphaerella ,Clonality - Abstract
The Cladosporium herbarum complex comprises five species for which Davidiella teleomorphs are known. Cladosporium herbarum s. str. (D. tassiana), C. macrocarpum (D. macrocarpa) and C. bruhnei (D. allicina) are distinguishable by having conidia of different width, and by teleomorph characters. Davidiella variabile is introduced as teleomorph of C. variabile, a homothallic species occurring on Spinacia, and D. macrospora is known to be the teleomorph of C. iridis on Iris spp. The C. herbarum complex combines low molecular distance with a high degree of clonal or inbreeding diversity. Entities differ from each other by multilocus sequence data and by phenetic differences, and thus can be interpreted to represent individual taxa. Isolates of the C. herbarum complex that were formerly associated with opportunistic human infections, cluster with C. bruhnei. Several species are newly described from hypersaline water, namely C. ramotenellum, C. tenellum, C. subinflatum, and C. herbaroides. Cladosporium pseudiridis collected from Iris sp. in New Zealand, is also a member of this species complex and shown to be distinct from C. iridis that occurs on this host elsewhere in the world. A further new species from New Zealand is C. sinuosum on Fuchsia excorticata. Cladosporium antarcticum is newly described from a lichen, Caloplaca regalis, collected in Antarctica, and C. subtilissimum from grape berries in the U.S.A., while the new combination C. ossifragi, the oldest valid name of the Cladosporium known from Narthecium in Europe, is proposed. Standard protocols and media are herewith proposed to facilitate future morphological examination of Cladosporium spp. in culture, and neotypes or epitypes are proposed for all species treated.Taxonomic novelties: Cladosporium antarcticum K. Schub., Crous & U. Braun, sp. nov., C. herbaroides K. Schub., Zalar, Crous & U. Braun, sp. nov., C. ossifragi (Rostr.) U. Braun & K. Schub., comb. nov., C. pseudiridis K. Schub., C.F. Hill, Crous& U. Braun, sp. nov., C. ramotenellum K. Schub., Zalar, Crous& U. Braun, sp. nov., C. sinuosum K. Schub., C.F. Hill, Crous& U. Braun, sp. nov., C. subinflatum K. Schub., Zalar, Crous& U. Braun, sp. nov., C. subtilissimum K. Schub., Dugan, Crous& U. Braun, sp. nov., C. tenellum K. Schub., Zalar, Crous & U. Braun sp. nov., Davidiella macrocarpa Crous, K. Schub. & U. Braun, sp. nov., D. variabile Crous, K. Schub. & U. Braun, sp. nov.
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207. Caespitotheca gen. nov., an ancestral genus in the Erysiphales.
- Author
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Susumu TAKAMATSU, Seiko NIINOMI, Maria G. CABRERA DE ÁLVAREZ, Roberto E. ÁLVAREZ, Maria HAVRYLENKO, and Uwe BRAUN
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ERYSIPHALES , *RECOMBINANT DNA , *NUCLEOTIDE sequence , *ASCOMYCETES , *MICROSPHAERA - Abstract
The phylogenetic position of Uncinula forestalis within the Erysiphales has been inferred from 5.8S, 18S, and 28S rDNA sequences. Although the appendages of the ascomata are Uncinula-like, i.e. unbranched with curved-coiled apices, U. forestalis is situated at the very base of the large Erysiphales cluster, far from the ‘Pseudoidium’ clade (Erysiphe, including Microsphaera and Uncinula) and separate from the recently introduced basal genus Parauncinula. U. forestalis differs morphologically from the species of Erysiphe sect. Uncinula in having terminal, fasciculate (as in Podosphaera tridactyla), septate ascoma appendages and a Euoidium-like anamorph (conidia catenate). In Parauncinula, the appendages are also terminal but not fasciculate, the ascospores are curved, and the anamorph is lacking. Uncinula forestalis is a basal, tree-inhabiting powdery mildew with some additional ancestral characteristics, including Uncinula-like appendages and 6–8-spored asci. The new genus Caespitotheca gen. nov. is described with C. forestalis comb. nov. (syn. Uncinula forestalis) as the type species. We calculated the timing of the divergence of U. forestalis and P. septata using a molecular clock of the Erysiphales (6.5×10−10 changes per site per year in domains D1 and D2 of 28S rDNA) and a 28S rDNA data set. The results suggest that the divergence of U. forestalis and P. septata from other Erysiphales occurred between 90 and 80 Myr ago; i.e. the divergence of the two ancestral species may have occurred in the late Cretaceous. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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208. Hifomicetos cercosporoides associados a plantas do Estado do Ceará
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FREIRE, F. das C. O., BRAUN, U., Francisco das Chagas Oliveira Freire, CNPAT, and Uwe Braun, MLU.
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Novas espécies ,Passalora ,Pseudocercospora ,Stenella ,Levantamento taxonômico - Published
- 2009
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