Rosettozyma cystopteridis Q.M. Wang, F.Y. Bai & A.H. Li, 2020
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1016/j.simyco.2020.01.002 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10474957 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DF87BD-557F-FF9E-53E3-3FF4FC2BFAA5 |
treatment provided by |
Jonas |
scientific name |
Rosettozyma cystopteridis Q.M. Wang, F.Y. Bai & A.H. Li |
status |
sp. nov. |
Rosettozyma cystopteridis Q.M. Wang, F.Y. Bai & A.H. Li View in CoL sp. nov. MycoBank MB828833. Figs 16C, D View Fig and 17A, B View Fig .
Etymology: the specific epithet cystopteridis refers to Cystopteris , the plant genus from which the type strain was isolated.
Culture characteristics: In YM broth, after 7 d at 17 °C, cells are ellipsoidal, either singly or in rosettes, 2.2–2.8 × 11.4 –20.3 μm, budding is polar ( Fig. 16C View Fig ), a sediment is formed. After 1 mo at 17 °C, a pellicle and a sediment are present. On YM agar, after 1 mo at 17 °C, the streak culture is whitish to cream, butyrous, slightly wrinkle, semi-glistening. The margin is entire. In Dalmau plate culture on corn meal agar, pseudohyphae are not formed. Sexual structures are not observed on YM, PDA, V8 and CM agar. Ballistoconidia are allantoid or falcate, 1.7– 2.8 × 7.7– 15.4 μm ( Fig. 16D View Fig ).
Physiological and biochemical characteristics: Glucose fermentation is absent. Glucose, sucrose, maltose, trehalose, melezitose, L-arabinose (variable), D-arabinose, ethanol, erythritol (variable), D-mannitol, D-glucitol, Methyl-α- D-glucoside (variable) and salicin are assimilated as sole carbon sources. Galactose, L-sorbose, cellobiose, lactose, melibiose, raffinose, inulin, soluble starch, D-xylose, D-ribose, L-rhamnose, Dglucosamine, methanol, glycerol, ribitol, galactitol, DL-lactate, succinate, citrate, myo-inositol and hexadecane are not assimilated. Ammonium sulfate, potassium nitrate, L-lysine, ethylamine hydrochloride and cadaverine dihydrochloride are assimilated as sole nitrogen sources. Sodium nitrite is not assimilated. Maximum growth temperature is 27 °C. Growth in vitamin-free medium is negative. Starch-like substances are not produced. Growth on 50 % (w/w) glucose-yeast extract agar is negative. Urease activity is positive. Diazonium Blue B reaction is positive.
Physiologically, Ro. cystopteridis and its two closely related species, Ro. petaloides and Ro. motuoensis , can be distinguished from one another by the assimilation of D-xylose, Larabinose, D-arabinose, glycerol and succinate. Ro. cystopteridis differs from Ro. petaloides in its inability to assimilate D-xylose and glycerol. Ro. cystopteridis differs from Ro. motuoensis in its inability to assimilate succinate and its ability to assimilate Darabinose ( Table S1.28 View Table 1 ).
Typus: China, Bomi county, Tibet, obtained from a leaf of Cystopteris moupinensis, Sep. 2004 , F.-Y. Bai (holotype CGMCC 2.2615 T preserved in a metabolically inactive state, ex-type CBS 15448 = XZ16E1).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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