Uromycladium
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Uromycladium
''Uromycladium'' is a genus of rust fungi in the family Pileolariaceae. It was circumscribed by mycologist Daniel McAlpine in 1905.McAlpine, D. 1905. A new genus of Uredineae — ''Uromycladium''. Ann Mycol 3(4):303–322 The genus was established by McAlpine for rusts on ''Acacia'' (Fabaceae, subfamily Mimosoideae) with teliospores that clustered at the top of a pedicel.Doungsa-ard, C., McTaggart, A.R., Geering, A.D.W., Dalisay, T.U., Ray, J. Shivas, R.G. 2015. ''Uromycladium falcatarium'' sp. nov., the cause of gall rust on ''Paraserianthes falcataria'' in south-east Asia. Australasian Plant Pathol. 44: 25–30. DOI 10.1007/s13313-014-0301-z The genus contains at least 11 species. Some of these species infect plants in the family Mimosoideae including ''Acacia'', ''Paraserianthes'' and ''Falcataria''. Most species are considered to be specific to only one host species of plant, such as ''Uromycladium simplex'' on ''Acacia pycnantha''McAlpine, Daniel (1906). The rusts of Austral ...
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Uromycladium Simplex
''Uromycladium'' is a genus of rust fungi in the family Pileolariaceae. It was circumscribed by mycologist Daniel McAlpine in 1905.McAlpine, D. 1905. A new genus of Uredineae — ''Uromycladium''. Ann Mycol 3(4):303–322 The genus was established by McAlpine for rusts on ''Acacia'' (Fabaceae, subfamily Mimosoideae) with teliospores that clustered at the top of a pedicel.Doungsa-ard, C., McTaggart, A.R., Geering, A.D.W., Dalisay, T.U., Ray, J. Shivas, R.G. 2015. ''Uromycladium falcatarium'' sp. nov., the cause of gall rust on ''Paraserianthes falcataria'' in south-east Asia. Australasian Plant Pathol. 44: 25–30. DOI 10.1007/s13313-014-0301-z The genus contains at least 11 species. Some of these species infect plants in the family Mimosoideae including ''Acacia'', ''Paraserianthes'' and ''Falcataria''. Most species are considered to be specific to only one host species of plant, such as '' Uromycladium simplex'' on ''Acacia pycnantha''McAlpine, Daniel (1906). The rusts of Austra ...
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Uromycladium Bisporum
''Uromycladium'' is a genus of rust fungi in the family Pileolariaceae. It was circumscribed by mycologist Daniel McAlpine in 1905.McAlpine, D. 1905. A new genus of Uredineae — ''Uromycladium''. Ann Mycol 3(4):303–322 The genus was established by McAlpine for rusts on ''Acacia'' (Fabaceae, subfamily Mimosoideae) with teliospores that clustered at the top of a pedicel.Doungsa-ard, C., McTaggart, A.R., Geering, A.D.W., Dalisay, T.U., Ray, J. Shivas, R.G. 2015. ''Uromycladium falcatarium'' sp. nov., the cause of gall rust on ''Paraserianthes falcataria'' in south-east Asia. Australasian Plant Pathol. 44: 25–30. DOI 10.1007/s13313-014-0301-z The genus contains at least 11 species. Some of these species infect plants in the family Mimosoideae including ''Acacia'', ''Paraserianthes'' and ''Falcataria''. Most species are considered to be specific to only one host species of plant, such as ''Uromycladium simplex'' on ''Acacia pycnantha''McAlpine, Daniel (1906). The rusts of Austral ...
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Uromycladium Cubense
''Uromycladium'' is a genus of rust fungi in the family Pileolariaceae. It was circumscribed by mycologist Daniel McAlpine in 1905.McAlpine, D. 1905. A new genus of Uredineae — ''Uromycladium''. Ann Mycol 3(4):303–322 The genus was established by McAlpine for rusts on ''Acacia'' (Fabaceae, subfamily Mimosoideae) with teliospores that clustered at the top of a pedicel.Doungsa-ard, C., McTaggart, A.R., Geering, A.D.W., Dalisay, T.U., Ray, J. Shivas, R.G. 2015. ''Uromycladium falcatarium'' sp. nov., the cause of gall rust on ''Paraserianthes falcataria'' in south-east Asia. Australasian Plant Pathol. 44: 25–30. DOI 10.1007/s13313-014-0301-z The genus contains at least 11 species. Some of these species infect plants in the family Mimosoideae including ''Acacia'', ''Paraserianthes'' and ''Falcataria''. Most species are considered to be specific to only one host species of plant, such as ''Uromycladium simplex'' on ''Acacia pycnantha''McAlpine, Daniel (1906). The rusts of Austral ...
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Uromycladium Acaciae
''Uromycladium'' is a genus of rust fungi in the family Pileolariaceae. It was circumscribed by mycologist Daniel McAlpine in 1905.McAlpine, D. 1905. A new genus of Uredineae — ''Uromycladium''. Ann Mycol 3(4):303–322 The genus was established by McAlpine for rusts on ''Acacia'' (Fabaceae, subfamily Mimosoideae) with teliospores that clustered at the top of a pedicel.Doungsa-ard, C., McTaggart, A.R., Geering, A.D.W., Dalisay, T.U., Ray, J. Shivas, R.G. 2015. ''Uromycladium falcatarium'' sp. nov., the cause of gall rust on ''Paraserianthes falcataria'' in south-east Asia. Australasian Plant Pathol. 44: 25–30. DOI 10.1007/s13313-014-0301-z The genus contains at least 11 species. Some of these species infect plants in the family Mimosoideae including ''Acacia'', ''Paraserianthes'' and ''Falcataria''. Most species are considered to be specific to only one host species of plant, such as ''Uromycladium simplex'' on ''Acacia pycnantha''McAlpine, Daniel (1906). The rusts of Austral ...
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Uromycladium Alpinum
''Uromycladium'' is a genus of rust fungi in the family Pileolariaceae. It was circumscribed by mycologist Daniel McAlpine in 1905.McAlpine, D. 1905. A new genus of Uredineae — ''Uromycladium''. Ann Mycol 3(4):303–322 The genus was established by McAlpine for rusts on ''Acacia'' (Fabaceae, subfamily Mimosoideae) with teliospores that clustered at the top of a pedicel.Doungsa-ard, C., McTaggart, A.R., Geering, A.D.W., Dalisay, T.U., Ray, J. Shivas, R.G. 2015. ''Uromycladium falcatarium'' sp. nov., the cause of gall rust on ''Paraserianthes falcataria'' in south-east Asia. Australasian Plant Pathol. 44: 25–30. DOI 10.1007/s13313-014-0301-z The genus contains at least 11 species. Some of these species infect plants in the family Mimosoideae including ''Acacia'', ''Paraserianthes'' and ''Falcataria''. Most species are considered to be specific to only one host species of plant, such as ''Uromycladium simplex'' on ''Acacia pycnantha''McAlpine, Daniel (1906). The rusts of Austral ...
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Uromycladium Falcatarium
''Uromycladium falcatarium'' (falcataria gall rust fungus) is a species of rust fungus in the genus ''Uromycladium''. It was circumscribed by mycologists Doungsa-ard, McTaggart & Shivasin in 2015.Doungsa-ard, C., McTaggart, A.R., Geering, A.D.W., Dalisay, T.U., Ray, J. Shivas, R.G. 2015. ''Uromycladium falcatarium'' sp. nov., the cause of gall rust on ''Paraserianthes falcataria'' in south-east Asia. Australasian Plant Pathol. 44: 25–30. DOI 10.1007/s13313-014-0301-z The species infects the Fabaceae tree ''Falcataria moluccana'' (= ''Paraserianthes falcataria'') in south-east Asia. Taxonomy and host specificity Falcataria gall rust fungus (''Uromycladium falcatarium'') is potentially specific to only one host plant, ''Falcataria moluccana''. However, ''U. falcatarium'' is closely related to the acacia gall rust fungus '' U. tepperianum'', which has almost 100 known hosts including plants from several tribes of Mimosoideae. Research suggests that '' U. tepperianum'' may comprise ...
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Uromycladium Tepperianum
''Uromycladium tepperianum'' is a rust fungus that infects over 100 species of ''Acacia'' and related genera including ''Paraserianthes'' in Australia, south-east Asia, the south Pacific and New Zealand.Morris, M.J. (1987). Biology of the ''Acacia'' gall rust, ''Uromycladium tepperianum''. Plant Pathol. 36: 100–106.Shivas, R.G. (1989). Fungal and bacterial diseases of plants in Western Australia. Jour. Royal Soc. West. Aust. 72:1–62.Walker, J. (1983). Pacific mycogeography: deficiencies and irregularities in the distribution of plant parasitic fungi. Aust. Jour. Bot. Suppl. Ser. 10: 89–136.McKenzie, E.H.C. (1998). Rust fungi of New Zealand – an introduction and list of recorded species. N.Z. Jour. Bot. 36: 233–271. The acacia gall rust fungus species ''Uromycladium tepperianum'' has been introduced to South Africa as a biological control on the invasive Australian shrub ''Acacia saligna''. ''Uromycladium tepperianum'' is differentiated from other species of '' Uromycl ...
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Acacia Pycnantha
''Acacia pycnantha'', most commonly known as the golden wattle, is a tree of the family Fabaceae native to southeastern Australia. It grows to a height of and has phyllodes (flattened leaf stalks) instead of true leaves. Sickle-shaped, these are between long, and wide. The profuse fragrant, golden flowers appear in late winter and spring, followed by long seed pods. Plants are cross-pollinated by several species of honeyeater and thornbill, which visit nectaries on the phyllodes and brush against flowers, transferring pollen between them. An understorey plant in eucalyptus forest, it is found from southern New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory, through Victoria and into southeastern South Australia. Explorer Thomas Mitchell collected the type specimen, from which George Bentham wrote the species description in 1842. No subspecies are recognised. The bark of ''A. pycnantha'' produces more tannin than any other wattle species, resulting in its commercial culti ...
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Falcataria Moluccana
''Falcataria falcata'' (syns. ''Albizia falcata'', ''Falcataria moluccana'' and ''Paraserianthes falcataria''), commonly known as the Moluccan albizia, is a species of fast-growing tree in the family Fabaceae. It is native to the Maluku Islands, New Guinea, the Bismarck Archipelago, and the Solomon Islands. It is cultivated for timber throughout South Asian and Southeast Asian countries. This tree is considered to be invasive in Hawaii, American Samoa and several other island nations in the Pacific and Indian Oceans. It reaches about tall in nature, and has a massive trunk and an open crown. Common names ''Falcataria falcata'' is cultivated throughout the wet tropical and subtropical regions of the world and so has many common names. These include: albizia (Hawaii), Moluccan albizia, sengon (Java), salawaku ( Maluku), jeungjing (Indonesia), ai-samtuco (Tetun, Timor-Leste), batai (Malaysia), kerosin tree (Pohnpei), sau, Moluccan sau, and falcata (Philippines), Tamaligi (Samoa). D ...
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Daniel McAlpine
Daniel McAlpine (21 January 1849 – 12 October 1932) was a Scottish-born Australian mycologist known for his research in plant pathology. He wrote several publications on plant disease in many crops and other plants. McAlpine was a lecturer in biology at the University of Melbourne from 1884, and, with his appointment to the Victorian Department of Agriculture from 1890 to 1911, became the British Empire's first professional plant pathologist. Early life He was born in Saltcoats, Scotland, the third son of schoolmaster Daniel McAlpine and his wife Flora. The young Daniel attended Ardeer School, where his father taught. McAlpine graduated from the University of London in 1873, where he attended lectures given by such luminaries as Thomas Henry Huxley (biology), William Turner Thiselton-Dyer (botany), Archibald Geikie (geology), and Robert Etheridge (paleontology). McAlpine was later appointed professor of natural history at the New Veterinary College in Edinburgh, and then lect ...
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Pileolariaceae
The Pileolariaceae are a family of rust fungi in the order Pucciniales. A 2008 estimate places contains 4 genera and 34 species In biology, a species is the basic unit of classification and a taxonomic rank of an organism, as well as a unit of biodiversity. A species is often defined as the largest group of organisms in which any two individuals of the appropriate s ... in the family. References External links * Pucciniales Basidiomycota families {{Basidiomycota-stub ...
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Host (biology)
In biology and medicine, a host is a larger organism that harbours a smaller organism; whether a parasite, parasitic, a mutualism (biology), mutualistic, or a commensalism, commensalist ''guest'' (symbiont). The guest is typically provided with nourishment and shelter. Examples include animals playing host to parasitic worms (e.g. nematodes), cell (biology), cells harbouring pathogenic (disease-causing) viruses, a Fabaceae, bean plant hosting mutualistic (helpful) Rhizobia, nitrogen-fixing bacteria. More specifically in botany, a host plant supplies nutrient, food resources to micropredators, which have an evolutionarily stable strategy, evolutionarily stable relationship with their hosts similar to ectoparasitism. The host range is the collection of hosts that an organism can use as a partner. Symbiosis Symbiosis spans a wide variety of possible relationships between organisms, differing in their permanence and their effects on the two parties. If one of the partners in an ass ...
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