Abstract

Biscogniauxia mediterranea is one of the most frequent fungal pathogens involved in cork oak decline in the Mediterranean Basin, causing charcoal canker. In Portugal, this disease is widespread on adult declining trees but nowadays it increasingly affects young trees and exhibits atypical symptoms, leading to the hypothesis that some change in the fungus may have occurred. In order to evaluate the genetic diversity and phylogenetic relationship of B. mediterranea associated with cork oak, 102 isolates were obtained from young and adult trees of Quercus suber and other hosts species with different disease expression, from several Mediterranean countries. The collection of isolates was analyzed by individual and multigene phylogenies using Maximum-Likelihood approach based on nucleotide sequences of the internal transcribed spacers of ribosomal DNA, translation elongation factor 1-α and β-tubulin genes, and by microsatellite-primed PCR profiles. Sequence analyses separated the Mediterranean isolates from those from other regions, while MSP-PCR analysis revealed relevant but unstructured diversity among the Mediterranean isolates under study, making this a monophyletic but diverse population. Considering the adaptive capacity of the fungus in the Mediterranean-climate ecosystems and the present climatic change scenario, all conditions are gathered to favor aggravation of the disease in cork oak stands.

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