Species pattern and genetic diversity of Trichoderma in a mid-European, primeval floodplain-forest

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Abstract

We investigated the occurrence and genetic diversity of Trichoderma in the river Danube national park, a primeval, riparian forest area located south-east of Vienna (Austria) which represents one of the last cases of an original European river-floodplain landscape. Forty-six strains were isolated and identified at the species level by analysis of morphological characters, by sequence analysis of their internal transcribed spacer regions 1 and 2 (ITS1 and 2) of the rDNA cluster and - in some cases - a fragment of the translation elongation factor 1α (tef1) gene, and RAPD-analysis. Twenty-one strains were positively identified as T. harzianum, thirteen as T. rossicum, four as T. cerinum, two as T. hamatum, and one each as T. atroviride and T. koningii; four strains yielded two different ITS1 and 2 as well as tef1 sequence types, which were not alignable with any known species. Our studies show that they represent two new taxa of Trichoderma.

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Wuczkowski, M., Druzhinina, I., Gherbawy, Y., Klug, B., Prillinger, H., & Kubicek, C. P. (2003). Species pattern and genetic diversity of Trichoderma in a mid-European, primeval floodplain-forest. Microbiological Research, 158(2), 125–133. https://doi.org/10.1078/0944-5013-00193

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