Mahajabeen Padamsee
Landcare Research
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Featured researches published by Mahajabeen Padamsee.
Fungal Diversity | 2014
D. Jean Lodge; Mahajabeen Padamsee; P. Brandon Matheny; M. Catherine Aime; Sharon A. Cantrell; David Boertmann; Alexander E. Kovalenko; Alfredo Vizzini; Bryn T. M. Dentinger; Paul M. Kirk; A. Martyn Ainsworth; Jean-Marc Moncalvo; Rytas Vilgalys; Ellen Larsson; Robert Lücking; Gareth W. Griffith; Matthew E. Smith; Lorelei L. Norvell; Dennis E. Desjardin; Scott A. Redhead; Clark L. Ovrebo; Edgar B. Lickey; Enrico Ercole; Karen W. Hughes; Régis Courtecuisse; Anthony Young; Manfred Binder; Andrew M. Minnis; Daniel L. Lindner; Beatriz Ortiz-Santana
Molecular phylogenies using 1–4 gene regions and information on ecology, morphology and pigment chemistry were used in a partial revision of the agaric family Hygro- phoraceae. The phylogenetically supported genera we recognize here in the Hygrophoraceae based on these and previous analyses are: Acantholichen, Ampulloclitocybe, Arrhenia, Cantharellula, Cantharocybe, Chromosera, Chrysomphalina, Cora, Corella, Cuphophyllus, Cyphellostereum, Dictyonema, Eonema, Gliophorus, Haasiella, Humidicutis, Hygroaster, Hygrocybe, Hygrophorus, Lichenomphalia, Neohygrocybe, Porpolomopsis and Pseudoarmillariella. A new genus that is sister to Chromosera is described as Gloioxanthomyces. Revisions were made at the ranks of subfamily, tribe, genus, subgenus, section and subsection. We present three new subfamilies, eight tribes (five new), eight subgenera (one new, one new combination and one stat. nov.), 26 sections (five new and three new combinations and two stat. nov.) and 14 subsections (two new, two stat. nov.). Species of Chromosera, Gliophorus, Humidicutis, and Neohygrocybe are often treated within the genus Hygrocybe; we therefore provide valid names in both classification systems. We used a minimalist approach in transferring genera and creating new names and combinations. Consequently, we retain in the Hygrophoraceae the basal cuphophylloid grade comprising the genera Cuphophyllus, Ampulloclitocybe and Cantharocybe, despite weak phylogenetic support. We include Aeruginospora and Semiomphalina in Hygrophoraceae based on morphology though molecular data are lacking. The lower hygrophoroid clade is basal to Hygrophoraceae s.s., comprising the genera Aphroditeola, Macrotyphula, Phyllotopsis, Pleurocybella, Sarcomyxa, Tricholomopsis and Typhula.
Fungal Biology | 2016
Mahajabeen Padamsee; Renee B. Johansen; S. Alexander Stuckey; Stephen E. Williams; John E. Hooker; Bruce R. Burns; Stanley E. Bellgard
As the only endemic member in New Zealand of the ancient conifer family, Araucariaceae, Agathis australis is an ideal species to study putatively long-evolved mycorrhizal symbioses. However, little is known about A. australis root and nodular arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF), and how mycorrhizal colonisation occurs. We used light, scanning and transmission electron microscopy to characterise colonisation, and 454-sequencing to identify the AMF associated with A. australis roots and nodules. We interpreted the results in terms of the edaphic characteristics of the A. australis-influenced ecosystem. Representatives of five families of Glomeromycota were identified via high-throughput pyrosequencing. Imaging studies showed that there is abundant, but not ubiquitous, colonisation of nodules, which suggests that nodules are mostly colonised by horizontal transmission. Roots were also found to harbour AMF. This study is the first to demonstrate the multiple Glomeromycota lineages associated with A. australis including some that may not have been previously detected.
Mycologia | 2008
Thomas S. Jenkinson; Gail Celio; Mahajabeen Padamsee; Bryn T. M. Dentinger; Michelle L. Meyer; David J. McLaughlin
Cystidia of Suillus americanus and S. granulatus (Boletales) were examined cytochemically and ultrastructurally with cells prepared by freeze substitution. We present the first study showing ultrastructural details and cytological functions of the cystidium to be conserved in two closely related species. The results are presented for inclusion in the AFTOL Structural and Biochemical Database to aid in the application of morphological characters to phylogenetic studies. The cystidia of these Suillus species appear to be united by a series of conserved characters, including specialized secretion mechanisms, smooth tubular endoplasmic reticulum and abundant free ribosomes. The conservation of these subcellular traits among members of this genus suggests that ultrastructural details of cystidia may provide a suite of phylogenetically informative characters. Inclusion of such characters in phylogenetic analyses might resolve or provide support for monophyletic groups at the level of family or genus.
IMA Fungus | 2018
M. Catherine Aime; Lisa A. Castlebury; Mehrdad Abbasi; Dominik Begerow; Reinhard Berndt; Roland Kirschner; Ludmila Marvanová; Yoshitaka Ono; Mahajabeen Padamsee; Markus Scholler; Marco Thines; Amy Y. Rossman
With the change to one scientific name for pleomorphic fungi, generic names typified by sexual and asexual morphs have been evaluated to recommend which name to use when two names represent the same genus and thus compete for use. In this paper, generic names in Pucciniomycotina and Ustilaginomycotina are evaluated based on their type species to determine which names are synonyms. Twenty-one sets of sexually and asexually typified names in Pucciniomycotina and eight sets in Ustilaginomycotina were determined to be congeneric and compete for use. Recommendations are made as to which generic name to use. In most cases the principle of priority is followed. However, eight generic names in the Pucciniomycotina, and none in Ustilaginomycotina, are recommended for protection: Classicula over Naiadella, Gymnosporangium over Roestelia, Helicobasidium over Thanatophytum and Tuberculina, Melampsorella over Peridermium, Milesina over Milesia, Phragmidium over Aregma, Sporobolomyces over Blastoderma and Rhodomyces, and Uromyces over Uredo. In addition, eight new combinations are made: Blastospora juruensis, B. subneurophyla, Cronartium bethelii, C. kurilense, C. sahoanum, C. yamabense, Milesina polypodii, and Prospodium crusculum combs. nov.
Plant Pathology | 2017
Mahajabeen Padamsee; Eric H. C. McKenzie
Molecular phylogenetic analyses of New Zealand rust fungi suggested that four taxa, Aecidium otagense on Clematis spp., Puccinia tiritea on Muehlenbeckia spp., Puccinia rhei-undulati sensu auct. NZ, non (Dietel) Hirats. f. on Rheum ×rhabarbarum, and an unidentified Puccinia species on Rumex sagittatus, are a single species. Morphological studies and multilocus molecular data, together with inoculation studies, confirmed this finding. This species is only the third heteroecious rust fungus known to be native to New Zealand.
Mycologia | 2017
David J. McLaughlin; T.K. Arun Kumar; Mahajabeen Padamsee; Merje Toome-Heller; Elizabeth M. Frieders; M. Catherine Aime
ABSTRACT Early diverging taxa of Ascomycota and Basidiomycota share similarities in subcellular characters of the spindle pole body (SPB), nuclear division, and septal pore apparatus, but our understanding of character evolution is incomplete because of the limited number of structural studies within the earliest diverging subphyla of Dikarya, Taphrinomycotina and Pucciniomycotina. Two species of Helicogloea (Atractiellomycetes) were analyzed for these characters and provide data on SPB and nuclear division for an additional class of Pucciniomycotina. A detailed analysis of septal pore apparatus for the Helicogloea species permits comparisons with those of other Pucciniomycotina and Ascomycota. The endogenous origin of hyphal branches is shown to occur in a third class of Pucciniomycotina. The full set of characters supports a close relationship between Atractiellomycetes and Pucciniomycetes.
Australasian Plant Disease Notes | 2012
Mahajabeen Padamsee; Eric H. C. McKenzie
A rust disease was observed on leaves of a cultivated canna lily plant in Auckland, New Zealand in February 2012. Samples were collected and the causal agent determined by morphological and molecular techniques as Puccinia thaliae. This is the first record of P. thaliae in New Zealand. The rust is also reported for the first time from several countries in the Pacific islands.
Mycologia | 2006
Gail Celio; Mahajabeen Padamsee; Bryn T.M. Dentinger; R. Bauer; David J. McLaughlin
Mycologia | 2007
Gail Celio; Mahajabeen Padamsee; Bryn T.M. Dentinger; Kelly A. Josephsen; Thomas S. Jenkinson; Esther G. McLaughlin; David J. McLaughlin
Forest Pathology | 2016
Stanley E. Bellgard; Mahajabeen Padamsee; C. M. Probst; T. Lebel; Stephen E. Williams