Taxonomy of Acaulospora gerdemannii and Glomus leptotichum, synanamorphs of an arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus in Glomales
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Cited by (26)
The Early Devonian fungus Mycokidstonia sphaerialoides from the Rhynie chert is a member of the Ambisporaceae (Glomeromycota, Archaeosporales), not an ascomycete
2021, Review of Palaeobotany and PalynologyCitation Excerpt :However, none of the clusters could be traced back to an acaulospore with a common mycelium. Nonetheless, in species descriptions of Ambispora spp., a connection between acaulospores and co-occurring glomoid spores was not made, until Morton et al. (1997) discovered that cultures established from, or producing acaulospores of Acaulospora gerdemannii also generated glomoid spores of identical morphology to those in type specimens of Glomus leptotichum N.C. Schenck et G.S. Smith. Subsequently, Sawaki et al. (1998) showed, by molecular analysis of spores from single spore isolates, that A. gerdemannii and G. leptotichum were indeed conspecific.
Molecular phylogeny and new taxa in the Archaeosporales (Glomeromycota): Ambispora fennica gen. sp. nov., Ambisporaceae fam. nov., and emendation of Archaeospora and Archaeosporaceae
2007, Mycological ResearchCitation Excerpt :Moreover, some AM fungi (AMF) were shown to produce two types of spores, each of which had been placed in a separate genus (Glomus and Acaulospora) in two different families, the Glomeraceae and Acaulosporaceae. This anomalous situation has been discussed several times (Walker 1992; Morton et al. 1997; Murakoshi et al. 1998). From studies based on SSU ribosomal RNA (rRNA) gene sequences, Sawaki et al. (1998), were the first to show that a dimorphic spore forming fungus named as both Acaulospora gerdemannii and Glomus leptotichum did not belong phylogenetically to any of the AMF families defined at the time.
Ancestral lineages of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (Glomales)
2000, Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution