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Teleomorph, anamorph and holomorph

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616:; Brandt, Mary E.; Brown, Daren W.; Burgess, Lester W.; Chulze, Sofia; Coleman, Jeffrey J.; Correll, James C.; Covert, Sarah F.; Crous, Pedro W.; Cuomo, Christina A.; De Hoog, G. Sybren; Di Pietro, Antonio; Elmer, Wade H.; Epstein, Lynn; Frandsen, Rasmus J. N.; Freeman, Stanley; Gagkaeva, Tatiana; Glenn, Anthony E.; Gordon, Thomas R.; Gregory, Nancy F.; Hammond-Kosack, Kim E.; Hanson, Linda E.; Jímenez-Gasco, María del Mar; Kang, Seogchan; Kistler, H. Corby; Kuldau, Gretchen A.; Leslie, John F.; Logrieco, Antonio; Lu, Guozhong; Lysøe, Erik; Ma, Li-Jun; McCormick, Susan P.; Migheli, Quirico; Moretti, Antonio; Munaut, Françoise; O'Donnell, Kerry; Pfenning, Ludwig; Ploetz, Randy C.; Proctor, Robert H.; Rehner, Stephen A.; Robert, Vincent A. R. G.; Rooney, Alejandro P.; bin Salleh, Baharuddin; Scandiani, Maria Mercedes; Scauflaire, Jonathan; Short, Dylan P. G.; Steenkamp, Emma; Suga, Haruhisa; Summerell, Brett A.; Sutton, Deanna A.; Thrane, Ulf; Trail, Francis; Van Diepeningen, Anne; VanEtten, Hans D.; Viljoen, Altus; Waalwijk, Cees; Ward, Todd J.; Wingfield, Michael J.; Xu, Jin-Rong; Yang, Xiao-Bing; Yli-Mattila, Tapani; Zhang, Ning (May 2013). 264:. It was further decided that no anamorph-typified name should be taken up to displace a widely used teleomorph-typified name without the case's having been considered by the General Committee established by the Congress. Recognizing that there were cases in some groups of fungi where there could be many names that might merit formal retention or rejection, a new provision was introduced: Lists of names can be submitted to the General Committee and, after due scrutiny, names accepted on those lists are to be treated as conserved over competing synonyms (and listed as Appendices to the 195:. A decade later, it was starting to become obvious that fungi with no known sexual stage could confidently be placed in genera which were typified by species in which the sexual stage was known. This possibility of abandoning the dual nomenclatural system was debated at subsequent International Mycological Congresses and on other occasions, and the need for change was increasingly recognized. At the International Botanical Congress in Vienna in 2005, some minor modifications were made which allowed anamorph-typified names to be 303: 971: 995: 983: 179:
in 1981 to clarify and simplify the procedures – and the new terms anamorph, teleomorph, and holomorph entered general use. An unfortunate effect of the simplification was that many name changes had to be made, including for some well-known and economically important species; at that date, the
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preceded sporulation. This is a controversial choice because it is not clear that the morphological differences which traditionally define anamorphs and teleomorphs line up completely with sexual practices, or whether those sexual practices are sufficiently well understood in some cases.
108:, which tend to be evolutionarily conserved. However, many fungi reproduce only asexually, and cannot easily be classified based on sexual characteristics; some produce both asexual and sexual states. These species are often members of the 116:. Even among fungi that reproduce both sexually and asexually, often only one method of reproduction can be observed at a specific point in time or under specific conditions. Additionally, fungi typically grow in mixed colonies and 149:
The dual naming system can be confusing. However, it is essential for workers in plant pathology, mold identification, medical mycology, and food microbiology, fields in which asexually reproducing fungi are commonly encountered.
167:, which were then modified several times, and often substantially. The rules have been updated regularly and become increasingly complex, and by the mid-1970s they were being interpreted in different ways by different 549:
McNeill, J.; Barrie, F.R.; Buck, W.R.; Demoulin, V.; Greuter, W.; Hawksworth, D.L.; Herendeen, P.S.; Knapp, S.; Marhold, K.; Prado, J.; Prud'homme Van Reine, W.F.; Smith, G.F.; Wiersema, J.H.; Turland, N.J. (2012),
260:. In order not to render illegitimate the names that had been introduced in the past for separate morphs, it was agreed that these should not be treated as superfluous alternative names in the sense of the 158:
The separate names for anamorphs of fungi with a pleomorphic life-cycle has been an issue of debate since the phenomenon was recognized in the mid-19th century. This was even before the first international
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and adopted the principle "one fungus, one name". After 1 January 2013, one fungus can only have one name; the system of permitting separate names to be used for anamorphs then ended. This means that all
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The Vienna Congress (2005) established a Special Committee to investigate the issue further, but it was unable to reach a consensus. Matters were becoming increasingly desperate as mycologists using
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permitted mycologists to give asexually reproducing fungi (anamorphs) separate names from their sexual states (teleomorphs); but this practice was discontinued as of 1 January 2013.
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allows accurate placement of species which are known from only part of their life cycle. Others retain the term "deuteromycetes," but give it a lowercase "d" and no taxonomic rank.
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International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants (Melbourne Code) adopted by the Eighteenth International Botanical Congress Melbourne, Australia, July 2011
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The problem of choosing one name among many remains to be examined for many large, agriculturally or medically-important genera like
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Cannon, P. F.; Kirk, P. M. (2000). "The philosophies and practicalities of amalgamating anamorph and teleomorph concepts".
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by material showing the sexual stage when it was discovered, and for that anamorph name to continue to be used.
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amongst each other. These facts have made it very difficult to link the various states of the same fungus.
999: 956: 579: 20: 82:-like. When a single fungus produces multiple morphologically distinct anamorphs, these are called 752: 171:– even ones working on the same genus. Following intensive discussions under the auspices of the 987: 227: 1026: 946: 257: 192: 123:
Fungi that are not known to produce a teleomorph were historically placed into an artificial
43: 941: 690: 8: 951: 530: 273: 136: 105: 135:," simply for convenience. Some workers hold that this is an obsolete concept, and that 723: 160: 376: 1021: 890: 649: 559: 397: 381: 363: 246: 238:
The International Botanical Congress in Melbourne in July 2011 made a change in the
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approaches started to ignore the provisions, or interpret them in different ways.
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Unforeseen in the 1970s, when the 1981 provisions were crafted, was the impact of
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Guarro, J; Genéj; Stchigel, Am (Jul 1999), "Developments in fungal taxonomy",
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were issued in 1867. Special provisions are to be found in the earliest
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Geiser, David M.; Aoki, Takayuki; Bacon, Charles W.; Baker, Scott E.;
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are classified primarily based on the structures associated with
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This article is about life cycles of fungi. For other uses, see
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International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants
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Taylor, John W.; Göker, Markus; Pitt, John I. (24 June 2016).
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This article incorporates CC-BY-3.0 text from the reference
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proposed for a species, regardless of what stage they are
153: 92:: the whole fungus, including anamorphs and teleomorph. 68:: the sexual reproductive stage (morph), typically a 611: 298: 253:
by, can serve as the correct name for that species.
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L. (2011). 184:was not allowed under the 18: 965: 957:List of mycology journals 934: 903: 863: 783: 776: 730: 717: 42:apply to portions of the 21:Anamorph (disambiguation) 272:-forming fungi (but not 614:Bhattacharyya, Madan K. 479:10.3897/mycokeys.1.2062 228:molecular phylogenetic 947:List of fungal orders 193:molecular systematics 942:Glossary of mycology 360:10.1128/CMR.12.3.454 234:One fungus, one name 210:and teleomorph with 97:Dual naming of fungi 952:List of mycologists 531:Studies in Mycology 274:lichenicolous fungi 137:molecular phylogeny 106:sexual reproduction 724:Outline of lichens 131:," also known as " 1009: 1008: 899: 898: 795:teleomorph/sexual 565:978-3-87429-425-6 212:meiosporic fungus 208:mitosporic fungus 1034: 997: 996: 985: 984: 973: 972: 830:anamorph/asexual 781: 780: 720:Outline of fungi 700: 693: 686: 677: 676: 658: 657: 647: 637: 609: 603: 602: 584: 575: 569: 568: 546: 540: 539: 525: 519: 518: 516: 514: 502: 490: 484: 483: 481: 455: 404: 395: 389: 388: 379: 343: 317:Fungi imperfecti 311: 306: 305: 304: 247:legitimate names 133:fungi imperfecti 1042: 1041: 1037: 1036: 1035: 1033: 1032: 1031: 1012: 1011: 1010: 1005: 961: 930: 911:Dimorphic fungi 904:Growth patterns 895: 859: 772: 753:Medicinal fungi 726: 713: 704: 666: 661: 610: 606: 599:10.12705/653.10 582: 576: 572: 566: 547: 543: 526: 522: 512: 510: 500: 492: 491: 487: 456: 407: 396: 392: 344: 337: 330: 307: 302: 300: 297: 236: 156: 99: 24: 17: 12: 11: 5: 1040: 1030: 1029: 1024: 1007: 1006: 1004: 1003: 991: 979: 966: 963: 962: 960: 959: 954: 949: 944: 938: 936: 932: 931: 929: 928: 923: 918: 913: 907: 905: 901: 900: 897: 896: 894: 893: 888: 883: 878: 873: 867: 865: 861: 860: 858: 857: 852: 847: 842: 837: 825: 824: 811: 802: 790: 788: 778: 774: 773: 771: 770: 768:Mycotoxicology 765: 760: 755: 750: 745: 740: 734: 732: 728: 727: 718: 715: 714: 703: 702: 695: 688: 680: 674: 673: 665: 664:External links 662: 660: 659: 628:(5): 400–408. 622:Phytopathology 604: 593:(3): 593–601. 570: 564: 541: 520: 509:. 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Retrieved 504: 495: 488: 469: 463: 393: 351: 347: 331: 309:Fungi portal 286: 280: 278: 265: 261: 255: 239: 237: 225: 211: 207: 203: 201: 190: 185: 164: 157: 148: 141: 122: 100: 89: 84:synanamorphs 83: 75: 65: 39: 35: 31: 30:, the terms 25: 1000:WikiProject 855:Pycniospore 743:Lichenology 472:(2): 7–20. 282:Aspergillus 197:epitypified 169:mycologists 44:life cycles 1016:Categories 876:Haustorium 835:Sporangium 822:Teliospore 645:2263/31751 513:October 1, 398:Article 59 328:References 110:Ascomycota 66:Teleomorph 55:Ascomycota 32:teleomorph 891:Sporocarp 886:Cell wall 805:Ascospore 800:Zygospore 777:Structure 552:"Preface" 368:0893-8512 118:sporulate 90:Holomorph 40:holomorph 1022:Mycology 976:Category 926:Mushroom 881:Mycelium 840:Conidium 818:Basidium 758:Mycology 654:23379853 538:: 19–25. 506:U.S. CDC 498:species" 465:MycoKeys 386:10398676 295:See also 288:Fusarium 258:priority 251:typified 76:Anamorph 36:anamorph 28:mycology 988:Commons 763:Mycosis 496:Candida 400:of the 220:meiosis 216:mitosis 127:, the " 50:in the 850:Oidium 731:Branch 711:Fungus 652:  562:  384:  377:100249 374:  366:  270:Lichen 125:phylum 38:, and 921:Yeast 871:Hypha 864:Other 809:Ascus 786:spore 587:Taxon 583:(PDF) 501:(PDF) 165:Codes 102:Fungi 52:phyla 48:fungi 935:List 916:Mold 650:PMID 560:ISBN 515:2023 382:PMID 364:ISSN 285:and 266:Code 262:Code 186:Code 80:mold 57:and 640:hdl 630:doi 626:103 595:doi 474:doi 372:PMC 356:doi 268:). 218:or 46:of 26:In 1018:: 722:· 709:: 648:. 638:. 624:. 620:. 591:65 589:. 585:. 554:, 536:45 534:. 503:. 468:. 462:. 408:^ 380:, 370:, 362:, 352:12 350:, 338:^ 188:. 61:: 34:, 832:: 820:/ 816:/ 807:/ 797:: 699:e 692:t 685:v 656:. 642:: 632:: 601:. 597:: 517:. 482:. 476:: 470:1 358:: 86:. 72:. 23:.

Index

Anamorph (disambiguation)
mycology
life cycles
fungi
phyla
Ascomycota
Basidiomycota
fruiting body
mold
Fungi
sexual reproduction
Ascomycota
Basidiomycota
sporulate
phylum
Deuteromycota
fungi imperfecti
molecular phylogeny
International Code of Botanical Nomenclature
rules for botanical nomenclature
mycologists
International Mycological Association
International Botanical Congress
conservation of species names
molecular systematics
epitypified
mitosis
meiosis
molecular phylogenetic
International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants

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