- Source: Aplosporella yalgorensis
Aplosporella yalgorensis is an endophytic fungus that might be a canker pathogen, specifically for Eucalyptus gomphocephala. It was isolated from said trees in Western Australia.
The epithet of the species, yalgorensis, is derived from the name of Yalgorup National Park, meaning the type location was at 'yalgor'.
References
Further reading
Slippers, B.; et al. (2009). "A diverse assemblage of Botryosphaeriaceae infect Eucalyptus in native and non-native environments". Southern Forests: A Journal of Forest Science. 71 (2): 101–110. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.704.5086. doi:10.2989/sf.2009.71.2.3.818. S2CID 55578013.
Degreef, Jérôme; et al. (2013). "cryptogamie". Cryptogamie, Mycologie. 34 (1): 35–44.
Hoffmann, Kerstin; Walther, Grit; Voigt, Kerstin (2009). "Mycocladus vs. Lichtheimia: a correction (Lichtheimiaceae fam. nov., Mucorales, Mucoromycotina)". Mycological Research. 113: 277–278. doi:10.1016/j.mycres.2009.02.001.
External links
MycoBank
"Aplosporella yalgorensis". The Encyclopedia of Life.