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Original Articles

Regiocrella, a new entomopathogenic genus with a pycnidial anamorph and its phylogenetic placement in the Clavicipitaceae

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Pages 1225-1237 | Accepted 24 Oct 2005, Published online: 27 Jan 2017
 

Abstract

A new genus, Regiocrella, is described with two species, R. camerunensis and R. sinensis, based on specimens collected in Cameroon and China. Both species are parasitic on scale insects (Coccidae, Homoptera). Morphological and molecular evidence place the new genus in the Clavicipitaceae (Hypocreales), despite its combination of characters that are atypical of that family; Regiocrella is characterized by having perithecia partly immersed in a subiculum, noncapitate asci, unicellular fusiform ascospores and pycnidial-acervular conidiomata. The two new species, R. camerunensis and R. sinensis, are distinguished based on ascospore and perithecium size. Morphological characters were evaluated and compared to other genera in the Clavicipitaceae, especially those parasitic on scale insects or with pycnidial-acervular anamorphs or synanamorphs (i.e. Aschersonia, Ephelis or Sphacelia): Atkinsonella, Balansia, Claviceps, Epichlöe, Hypocrella, Myriogenospora and Neoclaviceps. The phylogenetic relationships of Regiocrella were examined with three gene loci: large subunit nuclear ribosomal DNA (LSU), translation elongation factor 1-α (TEF), and RNA polymerase II subunit 1 (RPB1). The results of this study confirm that Regiocrella is distinct from other genera in the Clavicipitaceae and that its two species form a monophyletic group. Regiocrella is shown to be closely related to the scale insect pathogen Hypocrella and the plant-associated genera Balansia, Claviceps, Epichlöe, Myriogenospora and Neoclaviceps. This study also provides insights into the evolution of pycnidial-acervular conidiomata and scale insect parasitism within the Clavicipitaceae. Plant-associated genera form a monophyletic group correlated with Clavicipitaceae subfamily Clavicipitoideae sensu Diehl. We also demonstrate that scale insect parasites have multiple evolutionary origins within the family and genera with pycnidial-acervular anamorphs or synanamorphs have a single origin.

We appreciate Drs Amy Y. Rossman’s and Gary J. Samuels’s comments on the manuscript. We are also grateful to Dr Walter Gams for his help with the Latin diagnoses. We greatly acknowledge the USDA-ARS Systematic Botany and Mycology Laboratory, especially D.M. Catherine Aime, for letting the senior author P.C. use their facilities. Dr. Bo Huang kindly provided us with the Chinese specimen of Regiocrella. This project was supported by the National Research Initiative of the USDA Cooperative State Research, Education and Extension Service, grant 2002-35316-12263, and by the National Science Foundation under grant 0212719 to K.T. Hodge.

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