Author:
Samson R.A.,Visagie C.M.,Houbraken J.,Hong S.-B.,Hubka V.,Klaassen C.H.W.,Perrone G.,Seifert K.A.,Susca A.,Tanney J.B.,Varga J.,Kocsubé S.,Szigeti G.,Yaguchi T.,Frisvad J.C.
Abstract
Aspergillus comprises a diverse group of species based on morphological, physiological and phylogenetic characters, which significantly impact biotechnology, food production, indoor environments and human health. Aspergillus was traditionally associated with nine teleomorph
genera, but phylogenetic data suggest that together with genera such as Polypaecilum, Phialosimplex, Dichotomomyces and Cristaspora, Aspergillus forms a monophyletic clade closely related to Penicillium. Changes in the International Code of Nomenclature
for algae, fungi and plants resulted in the move to one name per species, meaning that a decision had to be made whether to keep Aspergillus as one big genus or to split it into several smaller genera. The International Commission of Penicillium and Aspergillus decided
to keep Aspergillus instead of using smaller genera. In this paper, we present the arguments for this decision. We introduce new combinations for accepted species presently lacking an Aspergillus name and provide an updated accepted species list for the genus, now containing
339 species. To add to the scientific value of the list, we include information about living ex-type culture collection numbers and GenBank accession numbers for available representative ITS, calmodulin, β-tubulin and RPB2 sequences. In addition, we recommend a standard working
technique for Aspergillus and propose calmodulin as a secondary identification marker.
Funder
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
European Social Fund
Hungarian Research Fund
Publisher
Westerdijk Fungal Biodiversity Institute
Subject
Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)
Cited by
869 articles.
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