Neotyphodium chilense
Appearance
Neotyphodium chilense | |
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Species: | N. chilense
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Binomial name | |
Neotyphodium chilense (Morgan-Jones, J.F.White & Point.) Glenn, C.W.Bacon & Hanlin (1996)
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Neotyphodium chilense is a species of fungus in the Clavicipitaceae family, which is an endophyte that lives in the grass Dactylis glomerata in southern Chile. Originally known as Acremonium chilense when it was first described in 1990,[1] it was transferred from Acremonium to Neotyphodium in 1996.[2] Currently, it should be treated as Acremonium chilense since the previous transfer to Neotyphodium is untested.[3]
References
- ^ Morgan-Jones, G.; White, J.F. Jr; Piontelli, E.L. (1990). "Endophyte-host associations of forage grasses. XIII. Acremonium chilense, an undescribed endophyte occurring in Dactylis glomerata in Chile". Mycotaxon. 39: 441–54.
- ^ Glenn, A.E.; Bacon, C.W.; Price, R.; Hanlin, R.T. (1996). "Molecular phylogeny of Acremonium and its taxonomic implications" (PDF). Mycologia. 88 (3): 369–83. doi:10.2307/3760878. JSTOR 3760878. (subscription required)
- ^ Leuchtmann, A.; Bacon, C. W.; Schardl, C. L.; White, J. F.; Tadych, M. (2014). "Nomenclatural realignment of Neotyphodium species with genus Epichloë". Mycologia. 106 (2): 202–215. doi:10.3852/13-251. ISSN 0027-5514. PMID 24459125.