Hidden treasures of herbaria – even small collections contain a wealth of diversity: the powdery mildews of the North Carolina State Larry F. Grand Mycological Herbarium
- Author: mycolabadmin
- 6/10/2025
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Summary
This study examined a collection of powdery mildew fungi preserved in a university herbarium and used DNA analysis to identify which specimens had been misidentified over the years. The researchers found that about 83% of the specimens had incorrect identifications and discovered four completely new species that look very similar to known species but are genetically distinct. The findings show that old museum collections are valuable resources for discovering hidden biodiversity and that we should preserve these collections rather than discard them.
Background
Herbaria serve as critical infrastructure for biodiversity research and fungal evolution studies. The Larry F. Grand Mycological Herbarium (NCSLG) at North Carolina State University contains approximately 14,000 fungal specimens, with a significant collection of powdery mildew fungi accumulated by Professor Larry F. Grand.
Objective
This study assessed the fungal diversity within the NCSLG herbarium with focus on powdery mildew fungi (Erysiphaceae) to determine the number of phylogenetic species compared to morphologically identified species and to identify undescribed species.
Results
Sequencing revealed 60 species in 10 genera from 134 host plant species, with approximately 83% of specimens having incorrect and/or outdated identifications. Four new powdery mildew species were described: Erysiphe amphicarpaeicola, E. ulmi-alatae, E. quercus-virginianae, and Takamatsuella grandii. Multiple additional undescribed species were identified.
Conclusion
This research demonstrates the critical role of herbarium collections in uncovering fungal biodiversity and highlights the importance of preserving these resources despite financial and space constraints. The study emphasizes the value of sequence data for detecting cryptic species and correcting historical taxonomic identifications.
- Published in:IMA Fungus,
- Study Type:Collection-Based Research,
- Source: 10.3897/imafungus.16.156231; PMID: 40661123