Abstract:
Palm fungi are a taxonomically diverse group, with more than 1770 described
species (340 Basidiomycota and 1430 Ascomycota have been described from palm
substrates), with representatives from almost all major fungal classes. The nonlichenized
ascomycetes which have been described from palms are a very diverse
assemblage with 1059 species distributed in 121 families and 436 genera, and their
lifestyle ranges from saprobic, pathogenic, and endophytic to parasitic. A checklist of
non-lichenized ascomycetes described from palms is provided. Most of the previous
studies, only focused on morphology, and few phylogenetic studies have been carried
out on palm fungi. Molecular phylogenetic studies of palm fungi are needed as the
taxonomic placements of some genera/families are unresolved. By employing
molecular approaches based on the ex-type and ex-epitype cultures, as well as the
morphological studies of the type specimens, a better understanding of this group can
be established.
In this study, phylogeny of Dothideomycetes was investigated. A class-wide
phylogenetic assessment of Dothideomycetes was carried out based on the multi-gene
(LSU, SSU, TEF1 and RPB2) analysis in order to provide a natural classification.
This involved selecting and clarifying types and ex-types of most genera in the class, making new collections from Europe and Thailand and using existing and novel
sequence data. The phylogenetic tree presents 22 orders including 64 families (the
current accepted families are 105) in Dothideomycetes, and it provides a working
document for Dothideomycetes. Type specimens of the genus Astrosphaeriella and families Botryosphaeriaceae
and Roussoellaceae were examined; cultures were isolated from fresh collections.
Phylogenetic and taxonomic studies of these taxa were carried out based on the multigene
analysis and examination of types. The phylogenies showed that Astrosphaeriella was
polyphyletic with species in Fissuroma and Neoastrosphaeriella, and Astrosphaeriellalike
taxa clustering in four clades, two clades, including species with slit-like ostioles,
clustered in Aigialaceae; the clade that includes the generic type clustered together
with Delitschia; and Astrosphaeriella afrocana, which has striate ascospores, deviated
from these three clades and had a basal position in the Pleosporales. With
phylogenetic and morphological study, a natural classification of Botryosphaeriales is
provided, and 29 accepted genera with 20 genera represented by molecular data were
assigned to this order; the asexual and sexual morphs are linked to some genera. It is
also suggests that there is more than one family in Botryosphaeriales; the phylogeny
showed that the genera Aplosporella, Melanops, Phyllosticta and Saccharata formed
distinct clades from Botryosphaeriaceae within Botryosphaeriales. In addition, the
phylogeny showed that the Roussoella-like taxa formed a distinct clade within the
Pleosporales; the Roussoellaceae clade can be distinguished into three well-supported
sections, namely Roussoella/Roussoellopsis, Roussoella and Neoroussoella. Based on
both morphology and phylogenetic analyses, and a new family Roussoellaceae was
introduced to accommodate Roussoella, Roussoellopsis and Neoroussoella.