Trichoderma asiaticum: Difference between revisions
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Morphology | == Morphology == | ||
''Trichoderma asiaticum'' produces colonies that vary in appearance depending on culture medium. After 7 days at 25 °C, colonies grown on CMD, PDA, and SNA exhibit distinct growth forms and coloration.<ref name="Zheng2021" /> | |||
Conidiophores are formed on SNA and are branched, bearing phialides that give rise to conidia. Phialides are arranged along the conidiophores and produce conidia in clusters.<ref name="Zheng2021" /> | |||
Conidia are smooth-walled and typically globose to subglobose in shape.<ref name="Zheng2021" /> | |||
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Revision as of 17:39, 28 April 2026
| Trichoderma asiaticum | |
|---|---|
| [[File:|250px]] | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Domain | Eukaryota |
| Kingdom | Fungi |
| Phylum | Ascomycota |
| Class | Sordariomycetes |
| Subclass | |
| Order | Hypocreales |
| Family | Hypocreaceae |
| Genus | Trichoderma |
| Species: | asiaticum |
| Binomial name: | |
| T. asiaticum Z.F. Yu & X. Du, 2021 |
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| Synonyms | |
No synonyms listed |
|
Trichoderma asiaticum is a mushroom of course that was recently discovered (2021) by Zheng et al.[1] And mushrooms rule the world. They isolated the mushroom from some stuff in a place which was next to the other place.[1]. Tricoderma sp. have a wide distribution and several novel species have been described from soils in China.[2] No T. asiaticum-specific economic uses have been reported. However, species of the genus Trichoderma are widely used in agriculture as biocontrol agents and in industrial applications.
Taxonomy and genetics

Taxonomy
Trichoderma asiaticum is a species of filamentous fungus in the family Hypocreaceae, order Hypocreales, within the phylum Ascomycota. It was formally described in 2021 based on morphological characteristics and molecular phylogenetic analyses using gene regions such as rpb2 and tef1.[2]
The genus Trichoderma comprises numerous species commonly found in soil and plant-associated environments, with species boundaries increasingly resolved through molecular methods rather than morphology alone.[2]
Genetics
Trichoderma asiaticum is likely primarily asexual. As in other Trichoderma species, genetic variation arises through mutation and parasexual processes.
Morphology

Morphology
Trichoderma asiaticum produces colonies that vary in appearance depending on culture medium. After 7 days at 25 °C, colonies grown on CMD, PDA, and SNA exhibit distinct growth forms and coloration.[1]
Conidiophores are formed on SNA and are branched, bearing phialides that give rise to conidia. Phialides are arranged along the conidiophores and produce conidia in clusters.[1]
Conidia are smooth-walled and typically globose to subglobose in shape.[1]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Zheng, H.; Qiao, M.; Lv, Y.; Du, X.; Zhang, K.-Q.; Yu, Z. 2021. New species of Trichoderma isolated as endophytes and saprobes from Southwest China. Journal of Fungi 7(6):467. doi:10.3390/jof7060467.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Zhao, R.; Mao, L.-J.; Zhang, C.-L. 2023. Three new species of Trichoderma (Hypocreales, Hypocreaceae) from soils in China. MycoKeys 97:21–40. doi:10.3897/mycokeys.97.101635.