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Introducing palmfungi.org, an integrated fungal-host data platform.

Authors :
Xiong, Yinru
Manawasinghe, Ishara S.
Hyde, Kevin D.
Taylor, Joanne E.
Phillips, Alan
Pereira, Diana Santos
Lu, Li
Zhang, Sheng-Nan
Mapook, Ausana
Xu, Biao
Source :
Biodiversity Data Journal; Oct2024, p1-23, 23p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Palm fungi are a diverse and unique group mostly found on Arecaceae hosts. They have been studied for approximately 200 years resulting in a large number of known fungal species representing over 700 genera. The timeline of palm fungal studies could be roughly divided into three phases, based on the methods and frequency of reports. They are the "Historical palm fungi era", "Classical palm fungi era" and "Molecular palm fungi era". In the first two periods, the identification of palm fungi was based on morphology, which resulted in a considerable number of morphological species scattered across the data in books, monographs and papers. With the advancement of molecular techniques, studies on palm fungi accelerated. A large number of new species were introduced in the molecular era, especially from Asia, including China and Thailand. However, there is a necessity to link these three generations of studies into a single platform combining data related to host factors, geography and utilisation. Herein, we introduce the palm fungi website: https://palmfungi.org, an integrated data platform for interactive retrieval, based on palm and fungal species. This website is not only a portal for the latest, comprehensive species information on palm fungi, but also provides a new platform for fungal researchers to explore the host-specificity of palm fungi. Additionally, this study uses palmfungi.org and related data to briefly discuss the current status of research on the distribution of palm fungi populations, showing how palmfungi.org links fungi with their palm hosts. Furthermore, the website will act as a platform for collaboration amongst taxonomists, plant pathologists, botanists, ecologists and those who are interested in palms and their relationship with ecological sustainability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13142836
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Biodiversity Data Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
180625790
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3897/BDJ.12.e126553