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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Glomus ibericum, Septoglomus mediterraneum, and Funneliformis pilosus, three new species of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi

Fernando Javier Serrano-tamayIsabel ArrillagaAlberto GuillénJuan Bautista Peris

subject

0106 biological sciencesfood.ingredientPhysiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences030308 mycology & parasitology03 medical and health sciencesfoodFunneliformisBotanyGeneticsPoaceaeInternal transcribed spacerMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGlomusAmmophila arenaria0303 health sciencesbiologyCell BiologyGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationOtanthusEchinophoracomic_bookscomic_books.characterElymus farctus

description

Three new arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal species—Glomus ibericum, Septoglomus mediterraneum, and Funneliformis pilosus—are described and illustrated. In the field, the three species were associated with roots of Ammophila arenaria (Poaceae), Elymus farctus (Poaceae), Otanthus maritimus (Asteraceae), and Echinophora spinosa (Apiaceae) colonizing maritime dunes located along the Mediterranean coast in eastern Spain. The novelty of these species is supported by morphological, molecular, and phylogenetic analyses. Single-species cultures of S. mediterraneum and F. pilosus were obtained using Trifolium repens as a host plant, both forming arbuscular mycorrhizae, whereas single-species cultures from G. ibericum could not be obtained. Spores of G. ibericum usually occur in sporocarps, rarely singly in soil or inside roots. In contrast, S. mediterraneum only forms single spores in soil and F. pilosus occurs in sporocarps and singly in soil or inside roots. The respective small subunit, internal transcribed spacer, and large subunit (SSU-ITS1-5.8S-ITS2-LSU) nrDNA sequences placed the new species in the genera Glomus, Septoglomus, and Funneliformis, all of them separated from previously described species.

https://doi.org/10.1080/00275514.2020.1771992