Author:
Kobmoo N.,Arnamnart N.,Pootakham W.,Sonthirod C.,Khonsanit A.,Kuephadungphan W.,Suntivich R.,Mosunova O.V.,Giraud T.,Luangsa-ard J.J.
Abstract
Fungi are rich in complexes of cryptic species that need a combination of different approaches to be delimited, including genomic information. Beauveria (Cordycipitaceae, Hypocreales) is a well-known genus of entomopathogenic fungi, used as a biocontrol agent. In this
study we present a polyphasic taxonomy regarding two widely distributed complexes of Beauveria: B. asiatica and B. bassiana s.lat. Some of the genetic groups as previously detected within both taxa were either confirmed or fused using population genomics. High levels of
divergence were found between two clades in B. asiatica and among three clades in B. bassiana, supporting their subdivision as distinct species. Morphological examination focusing on the width and the length of phialides and conidia showed no difference among the clades within
B. bassiana while conidial length was significantly different among clades within B. asiatica. The secondary metabolite profiles obtained by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) allowed a distinction between B. asiatica and B. bassiana, but not between
the clades therein. Based on these genomic, morphological, chemical data, we proposed a clade of B. asiatica as a new species, named B. thailandica, and two clades of B. bassiana to respectively represent B. namnaoensis and B. neobassiana spp. nov. Such closely
related but divergent species with different host ranges have potential to elucidate the evolution of host specificity, with potential biocontrol application.
Publisher
Naturalis Biodiversity Center
Subject
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
12 articles.
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