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David M. Geiser
Associate Professor of Plant Pathology
121 Buckhout Laboratory
University Park, Pa 16802-4506
Phone: 814-865-9773
E-mail: dgeiser@psu.edu
Areas of Interest
Director, Fusarium Research Center; molecular evolutionary genetics of pathogenic and toxigenic fungi.

Education | Program Interests | Publications

Education
B.A., Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Northwestern University
Ph.D., Genetics, University of Georgia
Program Interests

Research in my lab focuses on the molecular evolutionary genetics of fungi, mostly in the realm of molecular phylogenetics and systematics at the species level. We apply these tools mostly to identify and better understand the fungal culprits in plant and animal diseases and toxicoses. Unfortunately, identifying fungi using traditional micromorphological tools is very difficult, and tends to lead to species concepts that are too broad. We use the tools of multilocus molecular phylogenetics to recognize and identify species, which provides a much more objective and reliable framework for understanding the biology of these fungi.

As Director of the Fusarium Research Center at Penn State, I also curate the world's largest collection of cultures of Fusarium, one of the most important genera of toxigenic and pathogenic fungi. We are nearing 20,000 accessions and provide isolates to certified researchers, and also provide identification and other services. Most of the research in my lab naturally involves this important genus, but I am also involved in projects in a variety of other fungi.

Recent Publications

Hibbett, D.S. and 67 co-authors. A higher-level phylogenetic classification of the Fungi. Mycological Research, in press.

Starkey, D.E., Ward, T.J., Aoki, T., Gale, L.R., Kistler, H.C., Geiser, D.M., Suga, H., Toth, B., Varga, J. and O’Donnell, K. Global molecular surveillance reveals novel Fusarium Head Blight species and trichothecene toxin diversity. Fungal Genetics and Biology, in press.

Covert, S.F., Aoki, T., O’Donnell, K., Starkey, D.E., Holliday, A., Geiser, D.M., Cheung, F., Town, C., Strom, A., Juba, J., Scandiani, M. and Yang, X.B. Sexual reproduction in the soybean sudden death syndrome pathogen Fusarium tucumaniae. Fungal Genetics and Biology, in press.

Overton, B.E., Stewart, E.L. and Geiser, D.M. 2006. Taxonomy and phylogenetic relationships of nine species of Hypocrea with anamorphs assignable to Trichoderma. Stud. Mycol. 56: 39-65.

Overton, B.E., Stewart, E.L., Geiser, D.M., and Jaklitsch, W.M. 2006. Systematics of Hypocrea citrina and related taxa. Stud. Mycol. 56; 1-38.

James, T.Y., and 69 co-authors. 2006. Reconstructing the early evolution of Fungi using a six-gene phylogeny. Nature 443: 818-822.

Kang, S., Blair, J.E., Geiser, D.M., Khang, C-H, Park, S-Y, Gahegan, M., O’Donnell, K., Luster, D.G., Kim, S-H, Ivors, K.L., Lee, Y-H, Lee, Y-W, Grunwald, N.J., Martin, F.M., Coffey, M.D., Veeraraghavan, N., and Makalowska, I. 2006. Plant pathogen culture collections: It takes a village to preserve these resources vital to the advancement of agricultural security and plant pathology. Phytopathology 96: 920-925.

Geiser, D.M., Gueidan, C., Miadlikowska, J., Lutzoni, F., Kauff, F., Hofstetter, V., Fraker, E., Schoch, C.L., Tibell, L., Untereiner, W.A., and Aptroot, A. 2006. Eurotiomycetes: Eurotiomycetidae and Chaetothyriomycetidae. Mycologia 98: 1053-1064.

Spatafora, J.W., and 32 co-authors. 2006. A five-gene phylogeny of the Pezizomycotina. Mycologia 98: 1018-1028.

Zhang, N., O’Donnell, K., Sutton, D.A., Nalim, F.A., Summerbell, R.C., Padhye, A.A., and Geiser, D.M. 2006. Members of the Fusarium solani species complex causing infections in both humans and plants are common in the environment. J. Clin. Microbiol., 44: 2186-2190.

Garzon, C.D., Geiser, D.M., and Moorman, G.W. 2005. Amplified length polymorphism analysis and internal transcribed spacer and cox II sequences reveal a species boundary within Pythium irregulare. Phytopathology 95: 1489-1498.

Geml, J., Davis, D.D., and Geiser, D.M. 2005. Phylogenetic analyses reveal deeply divergent species lineages in the genus Sphaerobolus. Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 35: 313-322.

Geml, J., Davis, D.D., and Geiser, D.M. 2005. Systematics of the genus Sphaerobolus based on molecular and morphological data, with the description of Sphaerobolus ingoldii sp. nov. Mycologia. 97: 680-694.

Geml, J., Davis, D.D., and Geiser, D.M. 2005. Influence of selected fungicides on in vitro growth of artillery fungi (Sphaerobolus spp.). J. Environ. Hort. 23: 63-66.

Geiser, D.M., Lewis Ivey, M.L., Hakiza, G., Juba, J.H. and Miller, S.A. 2005. Gibberella xylarioides (anamorph: Fusarium xylarioides), a causative agent of coffee wilt disease in Africa, is a previously unrecognized member of the G. fujikuroi species complex. Mycologia 97: 191-205

Jurjevic, Z., Wilson, D.M., Wilson, J.P., Geiser, D.M., Juba, J.H., Mubatenhema, W., Rains, G.C. and Widstrom, N. 2005. Fusarium species and fumonisin production on pearl millet and corn from Georgia, USA. Mycopathologia. 159: 401-406.

Tantardini, A., Calvi, M. Cavagna, B., Zhang, N. and Geiser, D.M. 2004.
First discovery in Italy of anthracnose caused by Discula destructive on Cornus florida var. nuttalli. Informatore Fitopatologico (in Italian) 12:44-47.

O’Donnell, K., Sutton, D.A., Rinaldi, M.G., Magnon, K.C., Cox, P.A., Revankar, S.G., Sanche, S., Geiser, D.M., Juba, J.H., van Burik, J.H., Padhye, A. and Robinson, J.S. 2004. Genetic Diversity of Human Pathogenic Members of the Fusarium oxysporum Complex Inferred from Gene Genealogies and AFLP Analyses: Evidence for the Recent Dispersion of a Geographically Widespread Clonal Lineage and Nosocomial Origin. J. Clin. Microbiol. 42: 5109-5120.

Garzón, C.D., Geiser, D.M., and Moorman, G.W. 2004. Diagnosis and population analysis of Pythium species using AFLP fingerprinting. Plant Disease. 89: 81-89.

Geiser, D.M., Jiménez-Gasco, M., Kang, S., Makalowska, I., Veerarahavan, N., Ward, T.J. Zhang, N., Kuldau, G.A., and O’Donnell, K. 2004. FUSARIUM-ID v.1.0: A DNA sequence database for identifying Fusarium. European Journal of Plant Pathology 110: 473-479.

O’Donnell, K., Ward, T.J., Geiser, D.M., Kistler, H.C., and Aoki, T. 2004. Genealogical concordance between the mating type locus and seven other nuclear genes supports formal recognition of nine phylogenetically distinct species within the Fusarium graminearum clade. Fungal Genetics and Biology 41:600-623.

Geml, J. Geiser, D.M., and Royse, D.J. 2004. Phylogenetic relationships of the genus Agaricus. Mycological Progress 3: 157-176.

Dr. David Geiser

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