Abstract

Kuehneola japonica has a microcyclic life cycle with a regular alternation of generations. Single basidiospore inoculations onto Rosa wichuraiana resulted in teliospore production, indicating its homothallic nature. Dikaryotization in a vegetative mycelium in the host seemed to occur through nuclear division that was not followed by septum formation. Karyogamy and meiosis took place through teliospore and metabasidium development; this fungus was considered to reproduce genetically homogeneous progenies. Puccinia lantanae and P. patriniae were also microcyclic in their life cycle; however, these fungi differed from K. japonica in the mode of nuclear behavior. In the former two fungi, both vegetative and reproductive cells were uninucleate. No karyogamy was observed, and nuclear division in the metabasidium development was thought to be mitotic. In P. lantanae, a basidiospore was formed on a sterigma, whereas a whiplike hypha emerged from each metabasidium cell in P. patriniae. Inoculations of Justicia procumbens with a single basidiospore of P. lantanae resulted in teliospore production. The fungus seemed to remain uninucleate, either haploid or diploid, throughout the life cycle. Thus, reproduction was considered to be apomictic.

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