Sclerospora graminicola
Sclerospora graminicola is a plant pathogen infecting maize and foxtail and pearl millet. Sclerospora graminicola was originally described by Saccardo in 1879 as Protomyces graminicola from infected Setaria verticillata. Schroeter examined infected Setaria viridis and determined that this species should be placed in a new genus that he named Sclerospora. [1] Sclerospora graminicola primarily infects C4 photosynthetic grasses of the subfamily Panicoideae, possibly due to C4 photosynthesis allowing for a greater complexity of carbohydrate substrates. [2]
Sclerospora graminicola | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Chromista |
Phylum: | Oomycota |
Order: | Peronosporales |
Family: | Peronosporaceae |
Genus: | Sclerospora |
Species: | S. graminicola |
Binomial name | |
Sclerospora graminicola (Sacc.) J. Schröt., (1886) | |
Synonyms | |
Peronospora graminicola |
References
- Safeeulla, K. M. (1976). Biology and control of the downy mildews of pearl millet, sorghum, and finger millet. Manasagangothri, Mysore University, Mysore, India: Wesley Press.
- Dick, M. W. (2001). Stramenipilous fungi: Systematics of the Peronosporomycetes including accounts of the marine straminipilous protists, the plasmodiophorids and similar organisms. Dordrecht/Boston/London: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
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