Mycologia
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DOI: 10.3852/mycologia.100.2.227
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Mycologia, 100(2), 2008, pp. 227-235.
© 2008 by The Mycological Society of America

DNA sequence analysis of herbarium specimens facilitates the revival of Botrytis mali, a postharvest pathogen of apple


Daniel T. O’Gorman 1
Peter L. Sholberg
Sarah C. Stokes
J. Ginns

     Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Pacific Agri-Food Research Centre, Box 5000, 4200 Highway 97, Summerland, British Columbia, V0H 1Z0 Canada

The fungus Botrytis cinerea has been widely accepted as the species responsible for causing gray mold decay of apple, although a second species causing apple decay, B. mali, was reported in 1931. Botrytis mali was validly published in 1931, nevertheless it has always been considered a doubtful species. To study the relationship of Botrytis isolates causing gray mold on apple, DNA sequence analysis was employed. Twenty-eight Botrytis isolates consisting of 10 species were sampled, including two B. mali herbarium specimens from apple originally deposited in 1932. The DNA sequence analysis of the β-tubulin and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (G3PDH) genes placed the isolates into groupings with defined species boundaries that generally reflected the morphologically based model for Botrytis classification. The B. cinerea isolates from apple and other host plants were placed in a single clade. The B. mali herbarium specimens however always fell well outside that clade. The DNA sequence analysis reported in this study support the initial work by Ruehle (1931) describing the apple pathogen B. mali as a unique species.

Key words: morphology, phylogenetics, plant pathogen, systematics


1 Corresponding author. E-mail: ogormand{at}agr.gc.ca







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Copyright © 2008 by The Mycological Society of America.