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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Kranderson719 (talk | contribs) at 19:59, 24 November 2017. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Suggested Outline Create an article for Flower-Mimicking Rust Fungi.

Based on the current article (Puccinia monoica), we can use some of the headers they have and add some more.

Headings 1) Species (4),(5),(6) a)Puccinia monoica (4),(5),(6) and Uromyces pisi (5). 2) Characteristics a)Pseudoflower (6),(7). 3) Life Cycle 4) Scent Chemistry (1) 5) Ecological Interaction (2) or Insect interaction a)Plant Species that Interact with the fungi (3),(4),(5),(6),(7). b)Insect species that Interact with the fungi (3),(5). 6) Taxonomic Variation

References

(1) Raguso, Robert A., and Barbara A. Roy. "‘Floral’scent production by Puccinia rust fungi that mimic flowers." Molecular Ecology 7.9 (1998): 1127-1136. (2) Roy, B. A. "The effects of pathogen‐induced pseudoflowers and buttercups on each other's insect visitation." Ecology 75.2 (1994): 352-358. (3) Pfunder, Monika, and Bitty A. Roy. "Fungal pseudoflowers can influence the fecundity of insect-pollinated flowers on Euphorbia cyparissias." Botanica Helvetica 116 (2006): 149 - 158. (4) Ngugi, H. K., and Harald Scherm. "Mimicry in plant-parasitic fungi." FEMS Microbiology Letters 257 (2006): 171 - 176. [1](6) Roy, B. A. "Floral Mimicry by a Plant Pathogen." Nature 362 (1993): 56 - 58. (7) Cano, L.M., et al. "Major Transcriptome Reprogramming Underlies Floral Mimicry Induced by the Rust Fungus Puccinia monoica in Boechera stricta." Plos ONE 8(9) (2013): 1 - 16.

  1. ^ Pfunder, Monika, and Bitty A. Roy. "Pollinator-mediated interactions between a pathogenic fungus, Uromyces pisi (Pucciniaceae), and its host plant, Euphorbia cyparissias (Euphorbiaceae)." American Journal of Botany 87 (2000): 48 - 55.