New publication - Wanted on Agave americana!

November 10, 2021
New publication - Wanted on Agave americana!

In Wanted on Agave americana! Hymenobolus agaves, an overlooked introduced pathogen in the western palearctic region, a new publication in the journal Fungal Systematics and Evolution, the authors use integrative taxonomy to conclude Hymenobolus' systematic position. (Ribes MA, Escobio V, Negrín R, Baral HO, Pfister DH, Quijada L (2021). Wanted on Agave americana! Hymenobolus agaves, an overlooked introduced pathogen in the western palearctic region. Fungal Systematics and Evolution 8: 129–142. doi: 10.3114/fuse.2021.08.10)

Read the full paper here: https://www.fuse-journal.org/images/Issues/Vol8Art10.pdf

Abstract: Hymenobolus agaves has been reported only in Europe and Africa on the American plant Agave americana (Asparagaceae). This fungus has never been found in the native range of its host, in arid ecosystems of northern and central Mexico and Texas, USA. It has been suggested to be a pathogen that can kill its host. The fungus grows on succulent leaf bases of the plant. The morphology – black apothecia with a hymenium that disintegrates when asci mature and dark ornamented ascospores – make this species very distinctive, but it has been collected and reported only a few times since its first description. Its systematic position has been unclear, and it has been treated as incertae sedis, that is of uncertain placement, in Leotiomycetes. With recent collections and additional data on the ecology of H. agaves, we use integrative taxonomy (DNA sequences, morphology, ecology) to show its relationships is with Cenangiaceae.