Botryosphaeriaceae on palms-a new species of Neodeightonia, N. chamaeropicola, and new records from diseased foliage of ornamental palms in Portugal
Author
Pereira, Diana S.
Author
Phillips, Alan J. L.
text
Phytotaxa
2023
2023-11-29
627
1
1921
1935
https://phytotaxa.mapress.com/pt/article/download/phytotaxa.627.1.1/51323
journal article
280019
10.11646/phytotaxa.627.1.1
2aa5fc45-0415-4a9b-82ed-908e64c1182f
1179-3163
10216659
Diplodia mutila
(Fr.: Fr.) Fr.,
Summa Vegetabilium Scandinaviae
2: 417 (1849)
, MycoBank MB201741
(
Figure 8
)
Type
:
FRANCE
, Ardenne, Sedan, on bark of
Populus nigra
(
Salicaceae
), date unknown, Montagne (
isotype
K 99664).
PORTUGAL
, Beira Litoral,
Aveiro
,
Populus alba
(
Salicaceae
), 2012, A. Alves (
epitype
designated by
Alves
et al
. (2014)
, LISE 96136, culture ex-epitype CBS 136014).
ENGLAND
, Saltash, on bark of
Malus
sp.
,
22 Aug 1935
, N.E. Stevens (
lectotype
designated by
Alves
et al
. (2014)
, BPI 599153).
Sexual morph and asexual morph reported. See
Phillips
et al
. (2013)
and
Alves
et al
. (2014)
for illustrations and descriptions.
Isolate CDP 0088.
Sexual morph
: Undetermined.
Asexual morph
:
Conidiomata
on palm leaf pieces in culture pycnidial, globose, non-stromatic, uniloculate, dark brown to black, solitary or aggregated, immersed in the host becoming partially erumpent when mature, occasionally semi-immersed or superficial, densely covered by greyish mycelial hairs, exuding a creamy, whitish mucoid mass or cirrus of conidia.
Conidiogenous cells
lining the pycnidial cavity, hyaline, smooth- and thin-walled, simple, indeterminate, cylindrical, occasionally swollen at the base, rarely ampulliform, straight or flexuous, aseptate, occasionally 1-septate, enteroblastic, proliferating at the same level giving rise to periclinal thickenings, occasionally proliferating percurrently giving rise to 1–2 annelations, rarely more, 8.9– 16.55 × 2.67–5.79 μm, 95 % confidence limits = 11.02–12.27 × 3.64–4.18 μm (mean ±
SD
= 11.65 ± 1.75 × 3.91 ± 0.76 μm, n = 30).
Conidia
oblong to obovoid, broadly rounded ends, smooth- and thick-walled, hyaline and aseptate, with granular contents, eguttulate, few becoming pale brown to brown and 1–2-septate with age, 21.21–26.85(–32.79) × 9.85–13.96(–16.17) μm, 95 % confidence limits = 23.44–24.98 × 11.92–12.78 μm (mean ±
SD
= 24.21 ± 2.15 × 12.35 ± 1.20 μm), mean ±
SD
conidium length/width ratio = 1.97 ± 0.18 (n = 30).
Culture characteristics
: Colonies on 1/2 PDA, reaching
85 mm
diam. after 7 d at 20 ℃ in darkness. Surface flat, raised towards the centre, with dense effuse aerial mycelium, with filamentous, entire margin, circular shape, olivaceous, becoming greyish to brownish towards the centre, opaque. Reverse greyish, becoming dark-brown to blackish towards the centre. Turning entirely black (surface) and dark bluish to black (reverse) after about
2 w.
No diffusible pigment.
Material examined
:
PORTUGAL
,
Lisbon
, Alvalade, Campo Grande, on foliar lesions of leaflets of
Phoenix dactylifera
(
Arecaceae
),
17 October 2018
, Telma P.N.G. da Costa (specimen HDP 048), living culture CDP 0088 (ITS sequence OQ996219,
tef1
sequence OR233679).
Hosts
: Although up to 60 hosts are listed for
Diplodia mutila
by
Farr & Rossman (2023)
, since the clarification of the genus concept it became clear that many of the earlier reports of this fungus could be misidentifications (
Alves
et al
. 2004
,
Phillips
et al
. 2013
). Most recent reports confirm at least 29 genera in 20 families, including
Anacardiaceae
(
Pistacia vera
),
Aquifoliaceae
(
Ilex
sp.
),
Araucariaceae
(
Araucaria araucana
),
Arecaceae
(
Phoenix dactylifera
),
Cupressaceae
(
Chamaecyparis lawsoniana
,
Cha.
obtuse
,
Cupressus arizonica
,
Cu. sempervirens
,
Sequoia sempervirens
,
Thuja plicata
),
Ebenaceae
(
Diospyros kaki
),
Fagaceae
(
Quercus rubra
,
Q. suber
),
Hippocastanaceae
(
Aesculus hippocastanum
),
Juglandaceae
(
Juglans regia
),
Lauraceae
(
Persea americana
),
Lythraceae
(
Punica granatum
),
Oleaceae
(
Fraxinus excelsior
,
F. ornus
,
Olea europaea
),
Pinaceae
(
Abies
bracteate
,
Cedrus atlantica
,
Pinus halepensis
),
Pittosporaceae
(
Pittosporum tobira
),
Rhamnaceae
(
Ziziphus jujuba
),
Rosaceae
(
Amelanchier alnifolia
,
Malus domestica
,
M. pumila
,
Prunus armeniaca
,
Pru. cerasus
,
Pru. dulcis
,
Pru. laurocerasus
,
Pru. persica
,
Pru. salicina
,
Pyrus communis
),
Rutaceae
(
Citrus limon
,
Ci. sinensis
),
Salicaceae
(
Populus alba
,
Po. nigra
,
Po. tremula
),
Taxaceae
(
Taxus baccata
) and
Vitaceae
(
Vitis vinifera
) (
Farr & Rossman 2023
).
Distribution
:
Algeria
,
Argentina
,
Australia
,
Canada
(
British Columbia
),
Chile
,
France
,
Germany
,
Hungary
,
Iran
,
Italy
,
Montenegro
,
Netherlands
,
New Zealand
,
Poland
,
Portugal
,
Serbia
,
South Africa
,
Spain
,
United Kingdom
(
England
),
Uruguay
and
USA
(
California
,
Wisconsin
) (
Farr & Rossman 2023
).
Notes
: Based on phylogenetic analyses of the combined ITS-
tef1
dataset, strain CDP 0088 clustered with the ex-epitype strain and other strains of
Diplodia mutila
with high PP value (
Figure 2
). Sequence comparisons with the ex-epitype of
D. mutila
(CBS 136014) for ITS and
tef1
showed 100 % sequence similarity for both loci. Morphologically, CDP 0088 isolated in this study is similar to the
epitype
of
D. mutila
from
Populus alba
in
Portugal
(
Alves
et al
. 2014
). Both produce pycnidial conidiomata with oblong, thick-walled, hyaline, aseptate conidia, that may become brown and 1-septate with age. Conidial dimensions of CDP 0088 are very similar to those of the ex-epitype of
D. mutila
(CBS 136014) (mean = 24.21 × 12.35 μm
versus
25.4 × 13.4 μm, respectively) (
Alves
et al
. 2014
) (
Figure 8
). Thus, based on these morpho-molecular analyses, strain CDP 0088 is here reported as
D. mutila
.
Diplodia mutila
have been previously reported on
Arecaceae
, namely on
Phoenix dactylifera
in
Iran
(
Mohammadi 2014
) and
USA
(
California
) (
Alves
et al
. 2006
, as
Botryosphaeria stevensii
). In the present study,
D. mutila
is reported on
P. dactylifera
in
Portugal
(
Table 5
).
Alvarez-Loayza
et al
. (2008)
reported this species on
Iriatea deltoidei
in
Peru
, but no molecular data was associated with the report, which was identified as
D. mutila
based on “growth characteristics and morphology of pycnidia and conidia”. Since morphology is inadequate to define genera or identify species in
Botryosphaeriaceae
(
Phillips
et al
. 2013
,
Slippers
et al
. 2013
, 2014, 2017), the validity of this report is yet to be determined.
Taylor & Hyde (2003)
also recorded
D. mutila
on
Arecaceae
hosts, including
Archontophoenix alexandrae
in
Malaysia
and
Trachycarpus fortunei
in
China
and
Switzerland
, but again, identifications were based solely on morphology and thus the validity of these reports is yet to be determined. The isolate of
D. mutila
studied was recorded from foliar lesions of
P. dactylifera
, but pathogenicity has not been tested.