PYCC 10063

PYCC 10063
1 - Taxon name
Sugiyamaella chuxiongensis
2 - Classification
Ascomycota
3 - Strain (species name) changes
NA
4 - Status of the strain
Type strain of Sugiyamaella chuxiongensis
5 - Basis for identification
Molecular (D1D2 & ITS)
6 - Identified by
Cheng-Feng Shi et. al. 2021
7 - Original strain number
NYNU 181038
8 - Accession numbers in other collections
CBS 16006, CICC 33361
9 - Biological Safety Level
BSL-1
10 - Access and Benefit Sharing (CBD, Nagoya protocol)
No known ABS restrictions
11 - PYCC strain status
Open
12 - Mediterranean strain
No
13 - Substrate of isolation
rotting wood from a tropical rainforest
14 - Category of substrate
Vascular plants, mosses & algae
15 - Locality
Yunnan Province, Chuxiong City, Zixi Town
16 - Country of origin
China
17 - Latitude, longitude coordinates

25.05, 101.683333333

18 - Sample Collected by
August 2018, K.F. Liu & Z.W. Xi
19 - Isolated by and date of isolation
NA
20 - Isolation details
YMA with chloramphenicol, 20ºC
21 - Deposited by
Feng-Li, Nov. 2024
22 - History
Fen-Li > PYCC
23 - Preservation
Glass beads; 20% Glycerol; -150C
24 - Price per culture
85€
25 - Remarks
NA
26 - Medium for growth
YMA
DNA Sequence
Region
26S
Sequence Title
MK682795
DNA Sequence
Region
ITS
Sequence Title
MK682800
Title
Diversity of the genus Sugiyamaella and description of two new species from rotting wood in China

Author

Cheng-Feng Shi, Kai-Hong Zhang, Chun-Yue Chai, Zhen-Li Yan, Feng-Li Hui

Abstract

Species of the genus Sugiyamaella (Trichomonascaceae, Saccharomycetales), found in rotting wood in China, were investigated using morphology and the molecular phylogeny of a combined ITS and nrLSU dataset. Nine taxa were collected in China: two were new species (viz. Sugiyamaella chuxiongsp. nov. and S. yunanensissp. nov.) and seven were known species, S. americana, S. ayubii, S. novakii, S. paludigena, S. valenteae, S. valdiviana and S. xiaguanensis. The two new species are illustrated and their morphology and phylogenetic relationships with other Sugiyamaella species are discussed. Our results indicate a potentially great diversity of Sugiyamaella spp. inhabiting rotting wood in China just waiting to be discovered.

Publication Date

Link to Publication