Taphrina

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Taphrina is fungal genus within the Ascomycota that causes leaf and catkin curl diseases and witch's brooms of certain flowering plants. One of the more commonly observed species causes peach leaf curl. Taphrina typically grow as yeasts during one phase of their life-cycles, then infect plant tissues in which typical hyphae are formed, and ultimately they form a naked layer of asci on the deformed, often brightly pigmented surfaces of their hosts. No discrete fruitbody is formed outside of the gall-like or blister-like tissues of the hosts. The asci form a layer lacking paraphyses, and they lack croziers. The acospores frequently bud into multiple yeast cells within the asci. Phylogenetically, Taphrina is a member of a basal group within the Ascomycota, and type genus for the subphylum Taphrinomycotina, the class Taphrinomycetes, and order Taphrinales[1][2].

[edit] References

  1. Broad leaf plant diseases in Canada (BC)- leaf spot example of Taphrina
  2. Biology of fungi - microphoto of Taphrina
  3. Witches Broom image
  4. Palaeos "Introduction to the Ascomycota"
  5. The Oregon Coalition of Interdisciplinary Databases: "Archiascomycetes: Early Diverging Ascomycetes"

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Lutzoni et al (2004). "Assembling the fungal tree of life: progress, classification, and evolution of subcellular traits". Amer J Bot 91: 1446-1480. 
  2. ^ James TY et al (2006). "Reconstructing the early evolution of Fungi using a six-gene phylogeny". Nature 443: 818-822. PMID 17051209.