Wilcoxina
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Wilcoxina | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Fungi |
Phylum: | Ascomycota |
Class: | Pezizomycetes |
Order: | Pezizales |
Family: | Pyronemataceae |
Genus: | Wilcoxina Chin S. Yang & Korf (1985) |
Type species | |
Wilcoxina mikolae (Chin S. Yang & H.E. Wilcox) Chin S. Yang & Korf (1985) | |
Species | |
W. alaskana | |
Wilcoxina is a genus of fungi in the family Pyronemataceae. Species are cosmopolitan in distribution, and have been found growing with host plants in a wide variety on environments, such as nursery soils with high pH, mining sites with low pH and heavy metal contamination, natural forests and plantations, urban areas and peat soils.[1] Wilcoxina species are mycorrhizal, and commonly infect a variety of conifers and deciduous trees such as Pinus, Betula, and Quercus.[2] Some species have been shown to produce the siderophore compound ferricrocin. [3]
References
- ↑ Mikola P. (1988). Ectendomycorrhiza of conifers. Silva Fennica 22: 19–27.
- ↑ Hagedorn, Charles; Nakas, James P. (1990). Biotechnology of plant microbe interactions. New York: McGraw-Hill. pp. 227–255. ISBN 0-07-045867-7.
- ↑ Prabhu V, Biolchini PF, Boyer GL. (1996). Detection and identification of ferricrocin produced by ectendomycorrhizal fungi in the genus Wilcoxina. BioMetals 9: 229–234.
External links
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