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Dettman, Jeremy R.; Gerdis, Suzanne 2024: Alternaria sections Infectoriae and Pseudoalternaria: New genomic resources, phylogenomic analyses, and biodiversity. Mycologia 116(5): 659-672.

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Dettman, Jeremy R.; Gerdis, Suzanne 2024: Alternaria sections Infectoriae and Pseudoalternaria: New genomic resources, phylogenomic analyses, and biodiversity. Mycologia 116(5): 659-672.
10.1080/00275514.2024.2354149
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Species in Alternaria sections Infectoriae and Pseudoalternaria are commonly isolated from agri-cultural crops and a variety of other plant hosts. With the increasing appreciation that species from these two sections are often the dominant taxa recovered from important cereal crops, the need for improved understanding of their biodiversity and taxonomy has grown. Given that morphological characteristics and existing molecular markers are not sufficient for distinguishing among species, we expanded the genomic resources for these sections to support research in biosystematics and species diagnostics. Whole genome assemblies for 22 strains were generated, including the first genomes from section Infectoriae or Pseudoalternaria strains sampled from Canada, which significantly increases the number of publicly released genomes, particularly for section Pseudoalternaria. We performed comprehensive phylogenomic analyses of all available genomes (n = 39) and present the first robust phylogeny for these taxa. The segregation of the two sections was strongly supported by genome wide data, and multiple lineages were detected within each section. We then provide an overview of the biosystematics of these groups by analyzing two standard molecular markers from the largest sample of section Infectoriae and Pseudoalternaria strains studied to date. The patterns of relative diversity suggest that, in many cases, multiple species described based on minor morphological differences may actually represent different strains of the same species. A list of candidate loci for development into new informative molecular markers, which are diagnostic for sections and lineages, was created from analyses of phylogenetic signals from individual genes across the entire genome.

Fourth, our analyses revealed that diversity among strains is similar to that for diversity among species that have been described based on minor morphological differences. This result suggests that, in many cases, the previously erected morphospecies may represent different strains from the same species.

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853c9237-f8dd-4fef-93f9-e98020bd18ef
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11 September 2024
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