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24 de enero de 2018
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Diversity of ectomycorrhizal Thelephoraceae in Tuber melanosporum-cultivated orchards of Northern Spain

Publicado en:Mycorrhiza. 26 (3): 227-236 - 2016-04-01 26(3), DOI: DOI 10.1007/s00572-015-0665-0

Autores: De Miguel, Ana Maria; Agueda, Beatriz; Saez, Raimundo; Sanchez, Sergio; Parlade, Javier

Afiliaciones

CITA Univ Zaragoza, Inst Agroalimentario Aragon IA2, Ctr Invest & Tecnol Agroalimentaria Aragon CITA, Unidad Recursos Forest, Ave Montanana 930, Zaragoza 50059, Spain - Autor o Coautor
Ctr Cabrils, IRTA, Ctra Cabrils Km 2, Barcelona 08348, Spain - Autor o Coautor
INTIA, Avda Serapio Huici 22, Navarra 31610, Spain - Autor o Coautor
Univ Navarra, Dept Biol Ambiental, Pamplona 31008, Spain - Autor o Coautor
Univ Valladolid, EU Ingn Agr, Dept Ciencias Agroforest, Area Bot, Campus Duques Soria, Soria 42004, Spain - Autor o Coautor
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Resumen

Truffles are edible hypogeous ascomycetes highly appreciated worldwide, especially the black truffle (Tuber melanosporum Vittad.). In recent decades, the cultivation of the black truffle has expanded across the Mediterranean climate regions in and outside its native range. Members of the Thelephoraceae (Thelephorales, Agaricomycetes, Basidiomycota) are commonly found in truffle plantations, but their co-occurrence with Tuber species and other members of the fungal community has been scarcely reported. Thelephoraceae is one of the most represented families of the ectomycorrhizal fungal community in boreal and Mediterranean forests. To reveal the diversity of these fungi in T. melanosporum-cultivated plantations, ten orchards located in the Navarra region (Northern Spain) were surveyed for 2 years. Morphological and molecular approaches were used to detect and identify the Thelephoraceae ectomycorrhizas present in those plantations. Ten different mycorrhizal types were detected and described. Four of them were morphologically identified as Tomentella galzinii, Quercirhiza cumulosa, Q. squamosa, and T39 Thelephoraceae type. Molecular analyses revealed 4-6 operational taxonomic units (OTUs), depending on the nucleotide database used, but similarities remained under 95 % and no clear species assignments could be done. The results confirm the diversity and abundance of this fungal family in the ectomycorrhizal community of black truffle plantations, generally established in Mediterranean areas. The occurrence and relative abundance of Thelephoraceae ectomycorrhizas is discussed in relation to their possible influence on truffle production.

Palabras clave

ectomycorrhizal fungal diversityfungal communityidentificationmorphotypesplantationpseudotomentellaquercirhiza squamosaseedlingsspecificitytemporal dynamicstomentellatomentella ectomycorrhizastruffletruffle plantationsAscomycotaBase sequenceBasidiomycotaBiodiversityDna, fungalDna, ribosomalEctomycorrhizal fungal diversityForestsMediterranean regionMycorrhizaePhylogenyPseudotomentellaQuercirhiza squamosaQuercus-ilexSoil microbiologySpainTomentellaTruffle plantations

Indicios de calidad

Impacto bibliométrico. Análisis de la aportación y canal de difusión

El trabajo ha sido publicado en la revista Mycorrhiza debido a la progresión y el buen impacto que ha alcanzado en los últimos años, según la agencia Scopus (SJR), se ha convertido en una referencia en su campo. En el año de publicación del trabajo, 2016, se encontraba en la posición , consiguiendo con ello situarse como revista Q1 (Primer Cuartil), en la categoría Plant Science.

2025-08-09:

  • Google Scholar: 5
  • WoS: 5
  • Scopus: 5
  • Europe PMC: 3