Ophiostoma tetropii
- Category
- fungi
- Primary role
- pathogen fungal
- Class
- Sordariomycetes
- Order
- Ophiostomatales
- Family
- Ophiostomataceae
- Genus
- Ophiostoma
Fungi | Ascomycota | Sordariomycetes | Microascales | Ceratocystidaceae | Ophiostoma
External: GBIF #5252307
0 AI-consensus-verified claims .
No verified claims involving this entity yet.
Genus-level evidence
1 claim where the source named the organism only at the genus or collective level (e.g. Ophiostoma sp.) and did not determine the species. Listed separately because they apply to the genus, not specifically to Ophiostoma tetropii.
- biocontrol · Melanospora spp. (anamorphs Phialophora and Gonatobotrys) → Ophiostoma spp. · effect: beneficial
“Melanospora, whose anamorphs Phialophora and Gonatobotrys parasitize the mycelium of many fungi, including the important plant pathogens Ophiostoma, Ceratocystis, Fusarium, and Verticillium”
Unknown (Unknown) · History of Plant Pathology and Early Significant Plant Diseases (Chapter 1 Introduction) · p. 394 #6494265
Aggregated via GloBI — not independently verified by AgroEco.
mutualism 2
- GloBI symbiontOf Ophiostoma tetropii Si, P., Shao, W., Yu, H., Yang, X., Gao, D., Qiao, X., Wang, Z. and Wu, G., 2018. Rhizosphere Microenvironments of Eight Common Deciduous Fruit Trees Were Shaped by Microbes in Northern China.. Frontiers in Microbiology. doi:10.3389/fmicb.2018.03147 DOI
- GloBI symbiontOf Ophiostoma tetropii Lankau, R.A. and Keymer, D.P., 2016. Ectomycorrhizal fungal richness declines towards the host species range edge. Molecular Ecology. doi:10.1111/mec.13628 DOI
crop interaction 2
- GloBI symbiontOf Ophiostoma tetropii Si, P., Shao, W., Yu, H., Yang, X., Gao, D., Qiao, X., Wang, Z. and Wu, G., 2018. Rhizosphere Microenvironments of Eight Common Deciduous Fruit Trees Were Shaped by Microbes in Northern China.. Frontiers in Microbiology. doi:10.3389/fmicb.2018.03147 DOI
- GloBI symbiontOf Ophiostoma tetropii Lankau, R.A. and Keymer, D.P., 2016. Ectomycorrhizal fungal richness declines towards the host species range edge. Molecular Ecology. doi:10.1111/mec.13628 DOI