Phytophthora bilorbang is a non-papillate homothallic plant pathogen known to infect Rubus anglocandicans (European blackberry) in Western Australia.[1] It produces non-papillate sporangia, oogonia with smooth walls containing thick-walled oospores, as well as paragynous antheridia.[1]
Phytophthora bilorbang | |
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Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Clade: | Diaphoretickes |
Clade: | SAR |
Clade: | Stramenopiles |
Phylum: | Oomycota |
Order: | Peronosporales |
Family: | Peronosporaceae |
Genus: | Phytophthora |
Species: | P. bilorbang
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Binomial name | |
Phytophthora bilorbang Aghighi et al., 2012
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References
edit- ^ a b Aghighi, Sonia; Hardy, Giles E. St. J.; Scott, John K.; Burgess, Treena I. (2012). "Phytophthora bilorbang sp. nov., a new species associated with the decline of Rubus anglocandicans (European blackberry) in Western Australia". European Journal of Plant Pathology. 133 (4): 841–855. doi:10.1007/s10658-012-0006-5. ISSN 0929-1873. S2CID 17509177.
Further reading
edit- Aghighi, Sonia, et al. "Blackberry decline: a major disease of Rubus anglocandicans in south-west Australia." (2012): 146–149.
- Parke, Jennifer L., et al. "Phytophthora community structure analyses in Oregon nurseries inform systems approaches to disease management."Phytopathology 104.10 (2014): 1052-1062.
- Aghighi, S., et al. "Phytophthora bilorbang prov. nom., a new species associated with declining Rubus anglocandicans (blackberry) in Western Australia." (2012).