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Aspergillus diversity from the Gcwihaba Cave in Botswana and description of one new species
Author(s) -
Cobus M. Visagie,
M. Goodwell,
David O. Nkwe
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
fungal systematics and evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2589-3831
pISSN - 2589-3823
DOI - 10.3114/fuse.2021.08.07
Subject(s) - cave , phylogenetic tree , aspergillus , biology , botany , phylogenetics , conidium , fungal diversity , zoology , ecology , gene , genetics
A fungal survey of the Gcwihaba Cave from Botswana found Aspergillus to be one of the more common fungal genera isolated. The 81 Aspergillus strains were identified using CaM sequences and comparing these to a curated reference dataset. Nineteen species were identified representing eight sections (sections Candidi , Circumdati , Flavi , Flavipedes , Nidulantes , Nigri , Terrei and Usti ). One strain could not be identified. Morphological characterisation and multigene phylogenetic analyses confirmed it as a new species in section Flavipedes and we introduce it below as A. okavangoensis . The new species is most similar to A. iizukae , both producing conidiophores with vesicles typically wider than 20 µm. The new species, however, does not produce Hülle cells and its colonies grow slower than those of A. iizukae on CYA at 37 °C (14–15 vs 18–21 mm) and CREA (15–16 vs 23–41mm).

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