Aspergillus longivesica is a species of fungus in the genus Aspergillus. It is from the Clavati section.[2] The species was first described in 1971.[1] A. longivesica has been reported to produce patulin, tryptoquivalones, tryptoquivalines, antafumicins, and pyripyropen.[2]
Aspergillus longivesica | |
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Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Fungi |
Division: | Ascomycota |
Class: | Eurotiomycetes |
Order: | Eurotiales |
Family: | Aspergillaceae |
Genus: | Aspergillus |
Species: | A. longivesica
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Binomial name | |
Aspergillus longivesica L.H. Huang & Raper (1971)[1]
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Growth and morphology
editA. longivesica has been cultivated on both Czapek yeast extract agar (CYA) plates and Malt Extract Agar Oxoid (MEAOX) plates.[citation needed] The growth morphology of the colonies can be seen in the pictures below.
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Aspergillus longivesica growing on CYA plate
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Aspergillus longivesica growing on MEAOX plate
References
edit- ^ a b Huang, L.H.; Raper, K.B. 1971. Aspergillus longivesica, a new species from Nigerian soil. Mycologia. 63(1):50-57
- ^ a b Varga, J.; Due, M.; Frisvad, J.C.; Samson, R.A. (2007). "Taxonomic revision of Aspergillus section Clavati based on molecular, morphological and physiological data". Studies in Mycology. 59: 89–106. doi:10.3114/sim.2007.59.11. PMC 2275193. PMID 18490946.