Abstract
ABSTRACTApiosphaeria guaranitica, the causal agent of brown crust disease of several bignoniaceous hosts, among them Handroanthus and Tabebuia species, has been traditionally placed in Phyllachoraceae, based exclusively on morphological studies, without supporting molecular evidence. Here, we provide molecular data for the link between sexual and asexual states of the fungus and elucidate the phylogeny of A. guaranitica. The multilocus phylogenetic analyses employed sequences from the 18S subunit (18S), 28S subunit (28S), and nuclear internal transcribed spacers (ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 = ITS) of the nuc rDNA, second-largest subunit of RNA polymerase II (RPB2), and translation elongation factor 1-α (TEF1) genetic loci. Estimates of the divergence time of this lineage were supported by fossil calibration (FC) and secondary calibration (SC) strategies. Our results indicate a natural placement of Apiosphaeria within Diaporthaceae (Diaporthales), where it represents an ancient lineage of the crown group of Diaporthaceae, diverging during the late Paleocene at 61.15 (FC) and 60.63 (SC) million years ago. This divergence time estimate within Diaporthales is based on Spataporthe taylori, a diaporthaceous fossil.
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