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      Value Addition of Horticultural Crops: Recent Trends and Future Directions 

      Phytophthora: A Member of the Sixth Kingdom Revisited as a Threat to Food Security in the Twenty-First Century

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      Springer India

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          The magnitude of fungal diversity: the 1.5 million species estimate revisited

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            The fungal dimension of biodiversity: magnitude, significance, and conservation

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              A molecular phylogeny of Phytophthora and related oomycetes.

              Phylogenetic relationships among 50 Phytophthora species and between Phytophthora and other oomycetes were examined on the basis of the ITS sequences of genomic rDNA. Phytophthora grouped with Pythium, Peronospora, and Halophytophthora, distant from genera in the Saprolegniales. Albugo was intermediate between these two groups. Unlike Pythium, Phytophthora was essentially monophyletic, all but three species forming a cluster of eight clades. Two clades contained only species with nonpapillate sporangia. The other six clades included either papillate and semipapillate, or semipapillate and nonpapillate types, transcending traditional morphological groupings, which are evidently not natural assemblages. Peronospora was related to P. megakarya and P. palmivora and appears to be derived from a Phytophthora that has both lost the ability to produce zoospores and become an obligate biotroph. Three other Phytophthoras located some distance from the main Phytophthora-Peronospora cluster probably represent one or more additional genera.
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                Author and book information

                Book Chapter
                2015
                February 12 2015
                : 325-337
                10.1007/978-81-322-2262-0_19
                6d2d6aa2-40dd-468a-9fa2-e1b7f5ad445c
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