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Chapter 1. Nomenclature of Penicillium and Aspergillus and their teleomorphs Databanking of names ........................................ .............................. 3 W. Gams and GJ. Stegehuis List of accepted species and their synonyms in the family Trichocomaceae ..................... 9 J.. Pitt, R.A. Samson andJ.C. Frisvad Types of Aspergillus and Penicillium and their teleomorphs in current use....................... 51 J. Pitt and R.A. Samson List of names of Trichocomaceae published between 1992 and 1999 ............................... 73 R.A. Samson Chapter 2. Methods for identification of Penicillium and Aspergillus Media and incubation effects on morphological characteristics of Penicillium and A spergillus.............................................................................................................. 83 T. Okuda, M.A. Klich, K.A. Seifert andK. Ando The use of primary metabolism for identification of Penicillium species .......................... 101 I. Ahmad and D. Malloch Collaborative study on stipe roughness and conidium form in some terverticillate Penicillia ................................................................................................. 113 J.C. Frisvad, O. Filtenborg, U. Thrane, R.A. Samson and K.A. Seifert Chapter 3. Taxonomic and digital information on Penicillium and Aspergillus Taxonomic initiatives, taxonomic tools and the information age....................................... 129 K.A. Seifert and L. Speers ASP45, a synoptic key to common species of Aspergillus ................................................. 139 K.A. Seifert Chapter 4. Phylogeny and molecular taxonomy of Penicillium Evolutionary relationships of the cleistothecial genera with Penicillium, Geosmithia, Merimbla and Sarophorum anamorphs as inferred from 18S rDNA sequence divergence ............................................................. ...................... 149 H. Ogawa and J. Sugiyama Phylogenetic analysis of Penicillium species based on ITS and Isu-rDNA nucleotide sequences .......................................................................................................... 163 S. W. Peterson Molecular methods for differentiation of closely related Penicillium species.................... 179 P. Skouboe, J. W. Taylor, J.C. Frisvad, D. Lauritsen, L. Larsen, C. Alboek, M. Boysen and L. Rossen Phylogeny and species concepts in the Penicillium aurantiogriseum complex as inferred from partial P-tubulin gene DNA sequences ................................................... 189 K.A. Seifert and G. Louis-Seize Development of genetic markers for population studies of Penicillium spp ...................... 199 S. Banke and S. Rosendahl A review of current methods in DNA fingerprinting ........................................................ 209 J. Scott and N. Straus DNA heteroduplex fingerprinting in Penicillium ............................................................. 225 J. Scott, D. Malloch, B. Wong, T. Sawa and N. Straus Chapter 5. Classification and identification of Penicillium Substrate utilization patterns as identification aids in Penicillium ..................................... 239 K. A. Seifert, J. Bissett, S. Giuseppin and G. Louis-Seize Characterization of Penicillium by the use of Biolog ........................................................ 251 H. Kiil and M. Sasa Cycloheximide tolerance as a taxonomic character in Penicillium .................................... 259 K.A Seifert and S. Giuseppin The homogeneous species and series in subgenus Penicillium are related to mammal nutrition and excretion ........................................ ................ 265 J.C. Frisvad, O. Filtenborg, F. Lund and R.A. Samson Penicillium on solid wood products ........................................ ................ 285 K. A. Seifert andJ. C. Frisvad Neglected Penicillium spp. associated with declining trees................................................ 299 A. Kubdtovd Penicillium species diversity in soil and some taxonomic and ecological notes ................ 309 M. Christensen, J.C. Frisvad and D.E. Tuthill Chapter 6. Molecular taxonomy of Aspergillus Phylogenetic relationships in Aspergillus based on rDNA sequence analysis.................... 323 S. W. Peterson Molecular phylogeny of Aspergillus and associated teleomorphs in the Trichocomaceae (Eurotiales) ........................................................... 357 M. Tamura, K. Kawahara andJ. Sugiyama Factors affecting the use of sequence diversity of the ribosomal RNA gene complex in the taxonom y of Aspergillus ..................................................................................... 373 B. W. Bainbridge Molecular and analytical tools for characterizing Aspergillus and Penicillium species at the intra- and interspecific levels ........................................ .................... 381 D.M. Geiser, F.M. Harbinski and J.W. Taylor Chapter 7. Taxonomy of Aspergillus section Nigri and section Flavi Genotypic and phenotypic variability among black Aspergilli .......................................... 397 J. Varga, F. Kevei, Z. Hamari, B. Tdth, J. Teren, J.H. Croft and Z. Kozakiewicz Molecular tools for the classification of black Aspergilli................................................... 413 L. Parenicova, P. Skouboe, R.A. Samson, L. Rossen andJ. Visser Aspergillus systematics and the molecular genetics of mycotoxin biosynthesis ................ 425 M.A. Klich and T.E. Cleveland Analysis of the molecular and evolutionary basis of toxigenicity and nontoxigenicity in Aspergillusflavus and A. parasiticus.............................................. 435 N. Tran-Dinh, S. Kumar, J.l. Pitt and D.A. Carter Genetic variation and aflatoxin production in Aspergillus tamarii and A. caelatus........... 447 S. W. Peterson, B. W. Horn, Y. Ito and T. Goto Tolerance and stability of major chromosomal rearrangements in an industrial A spergillus oryzae strain............................................................................................... 459 W.T. Yoder and D.C. Lin Chapter 8. Pathogenic Aspergilli and Penicillia Molecular typing of Aspergillus fumigatus ........................................................... 471 J.P. Latge, P.E. Verweij and S. Bretagne Phenotypic and genotypic variability within Aspergillus section Fumigati ....................... 483 E. Rinyu, J. Varga, L. Ferenczy and Z. Kozakiewicz Chapter 9. The potential of Penicillium and Aspergillus in drug lead discovery The potential of Penicillium and Aspergillus in drug lead discovery ................................. 495 B. Romer-Rassing and H. Giirtler Index ................................................................................................................................. 501