Delimitation, new species and teleomorph-anamorph relationships in Codinaea, Dendrophoma, Paragaeumannomyces and Striatosphaeria (Chaetosphaeriaceae)
Author
Reblova, Martina
The Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Botany, Department of Taxonomy, Pruhonice 252 43, Czech Republic
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5229-1709
martina.reblova@ibot.cas.cz
Author
Nekvindova, Jana
Department of Clinical Biochemistry and Diagnostics, University Hospital Hradec Kralove, Hradec Kralove 500 05, Czech Republic
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2861-5483
Author
Fournier, Jacques
Las Muros, Rimont 09420, France
Author
Miller, Andrew N.
Illinois Natural History Survey, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Champaign, Illinois 61820, USA
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7300-0069
text
MycoKeys
2020
74
17
74
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.74.57824
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.74.57824
1314-4049-74-17
ABBEDA6BFAD45DC6BC542EFF61A9C78F
Paragaeumannomyces Matsush., Matsush. Mycol. Mem. 10: 156. (2003) [2001]. Emend.
Reblova
& A. N. Miller.
Type species.
Paragaeumannomyces sphaerocellularis
Matsush., Mycol. Mem. 10: 156. (2003) [2001].
Description.
Teleomorph: Ascomata perithecial, non-stromatic, superficial, subglobose to conical, solitary, in small groups or aggregated, sometimes collapsing laterally upon drying, ranging from white, yellow-white, light fawn-grey, ginger-brown, reddish-brown, russet to dark brown, papillate, glabrous or setose, setae dark brown, acute, opaque, scattered over entire ascoma and/or clustered around the ostiole, centrum sometimes pink to pale red. Ostiole periphysate. Ascomatal wall three-layered; outer layer composed of thin-walled, globose, subglobose to polyhedral cells, sometimes containing pale purple pigment when fresh; middle layer composed of brick-like, dark brown cells with opaque walls; inner layer of flattened, thin-walled, subhyaline cells. Paraphyses persistent, branching, tapering. Asci unitunicate, 8-spored, cylindrical-fusiform, stipitate, apex with a non-amyloid apical annulus. Ascospores asymmetrical, cylindrical-filiform, slightly tapering towards the basal end, multiseptate, hyaline, occasionally light pink, with negative or positive dextrinoid reaction in
Melzer's
reagent. Synanamorphs:
Craspedodidymum
-like. Conidiophores mononematous, semi-macronematous to micronematous, brown, septate, unbranched or reduced to single conidiogenous cells. Conidiogenous cells phialidic, obclavate or broadly lageniform, brown, with an apical opening; collarettes flared or cup-shaped. Conidia globose, subglobose, subangular to triangular, unicellular, hyaline, with setulae.
Chloridium
-like. Conidiophores mononematous, macronematous, brown, septate, unbranched. Conidiogenous cells phialidic, cylindrical, subhyaline, elongating percurrently, with an apical opening; collarette indistinct or flared. Conidia globose, ovoid to clavate, unicellular, hyaline, non-setulate, accumulating in slimy droplets. [Characteristics of the synanamorphs adopted from
Huhndorf and
Fernandez
(2005)
].
Notes.
The holotype of
P. sphaerocellularis
(Japan, Schimizu-cho, Wakayama Pref., on decaying twig of unknown broadleaf tree, Apr. 2000, MFC-21077), the type species of
Paragaeumannomyces
(
Matsushima 2003
), was not available to us. A comparison of its protologue with our specimens and descriptions of other scolecosporous species of
Chaetosphaeria
(
Carroll and Munk 1964
;
Huhndorf and
Fernandez
2005
;
Atkinson et al. 2007
;
Perera et al. 2016
), combined with phylogenetic analysis of the ITS-28S sequences of 35 isolates, provided sufficient evidence to consider them congeneric.
Paragaeumannomyces
is proposed as the correct name for this morphologically and phylogenetically well-delimited group of chaetosphaeriaceous fungi. The width of the ascus is sometimes variable even within a single collection depending on the arrangement of ascospores in the sporiferous part, whether they are 2-3-seriate, 4-seriate end-to-end or in a fascicle.
Members of
Paragaeumannomyces
display a wide geographical distribution pattern; they have a predominantly pantropical distribution in Central America and Asia but were also encountered in the subtropical and temperate climate zones of Europe, Japan, New Zealand and North America.