A revision of Fusarium-like species associated with the plant genus Buxus led to a reconsideration of generic concepts in the Fusarium clade of the Nectriaceae. Phylogenetic analyses of the partial second largest subunit of the RNA polymerase II (rpb2) and the larger subunit of the ATP citrate lyase (acl1) gene exons confirm the existence of a clade, here called the terminal Fusarium clade, that includes genera such as Fusariumsensu stricto (including its Gibberella teleomorphs), Albonectria, Cyanonectria, "Haematonectria", the newly described genus Geejayessia, and "Nectria" albida. Geejayessia accommodates five species. Four were previously classified in Nectria sensu lato, namely the black perithecial, KOH-species G. atrofusca and the orange or reddish, KOH+ G. cicatricum, G. desmazieri and G. zealandica.Geejayessia celtidicola is newly described. Following our phylogenetic analyses showing its close relationship with Cyanonectria cyanostoma, the former Gibbera buxi is recombined as the second species of Cyanonectria. A three gene phylogenetic analysis of multiple strains of each morphological species using translation elongation factor 1 α (tef-1), rpb2 and acl1 gene exons and introns confirms their status as distinct phylogenetic species. Internal transcribed spacer of the ribosomal RNA gene cluster and nuclear large ribosomal subunit sequences were generated as additional DNA barcodes for selected strains. The connection of Fusarium buxicola, often erroneously reported as the anamorph of G. desmazieri, with the bluish black and KOH+ perithecial species C. buxi is reinstated. Most Cyanonectria and Geejayessia species exhibit restricted host ranges on branches or twigs of Buxus species, Celtisoccidentalis, or Staphyleatrifolia. Their perithecia form caespitose clusters on well-developed, mostly erumpent stromata on the bark or outer cortex of the host and are relatively thin-walled, mostly smooth, and therefore reminiscent of the more or less astromatous, singly occurring perithecia of Cosmospora, Dialonectria, and Microcera. The cell walls in outer- and inner layers of the perithecial walls of Cyanonectria and Geejayessia have inconspicuous pore-like structures, as do representative species of Albonectria, Fusarium sensu stricto, "Haematonectria", and "Nectria" albida. The taxonomic significance of these structures, which we call Samuels' pores, is discussed.
A revision of Fusarium-like species associated with the plant genus Buxus led to a reconsideration of generic concepts in the Fusarium clade of the Nectriaceae. Phylogenetic analyses of the partial second largest subunit of the RNA polymerase II (rpb2) and the larger subunit of the ATP citrate lyase (acl1) gene exons confirm the existence of a clade, here called the terminal Fusarium clade, that includes genera such as Fusariumsensu stricto (including its Gibberella teleomorphs), Albonectria, Cyanonectria, "Haematonectria", the newly described genus Geejayessia, and "Nectria" albida. Geejayessia accommodates five species. Four were previously classified in Nectria sensu lato, namely the black perithecial, KOH-species G. atrofusca and the orange or reddish, KOH+ G. cicatricum, G. desmazieri and G. zealandica.Geejayessia celtidicola is newly described. Following our phylogenetic analyses showing its close relationship with Cyanonectria cyanostoma, the former Gibbera buxi is recombined as the second species of Cyanonectria. A three gene phylogenetic analysis of multiple strains of each morphological species using translation elongation factor 1 α (tef-1), rpb2 and acl1 gene exons and introns confirms their status as distinct phylogenetic species. Internal transcribed spacer of the ribosomal RNA gene cluster and nuclear large ribosomal subunit sequences were generated as additional DNA barcodes for selected strains. The connection of Fusarium buxicola, often erroneously reported as the anamorph of G. desmazieri, with the bluish black and KOH+ perithecial species C. buxi is reinstated. Most Cyanonectria and Geejayessia species exhibit restricted host ranges on branches or twigs of Buxus species, Celtisoccidentalis, or Staphyleatrifolia. Their perithecia form caespitose clusters on well-developed, mostly erumpent stromata on the bark or outer cortex of the host and are relatively thin-walled, mostly smooth, and therefore reminiscent of the more or less astromatous, singly occurring perithecia of Cosmospora, Dialonectria, and Microcera. The cell walls in outer- and inner layers of the perithecial walls of Cyanonectria and Geejayessia have inconspicuous pore-like structures, as do representative species of Albonectria, Fusarium sensu stricto, "Haematonectria", and "Nectria" albida. The taxonomic significance of these structures, which we call Samuels' pores, is discussed.
Species of Fusarium are of major agricultural, economic, and
health importance because of their mycotoxin production and roles as crop and
opportunistic human pathogens (Marasas
,
Summerbell 2003) or saprobes
isolated from soil or decaying plant substrates
(Domsch ).
Some Fusarium-like species inhabit lichens, other fungi, and insects,
but many of these species are phylogenetically distantly related to F.
sambucinum, the type species of Fusarium. Some of these were
classified in Cosmospora by Rossman et al.
(1999), and now placed in
re-circumscribed genera such as Dialonectria, Fusicolla, Macroconia,
Microcera, and Stylonectria in this volume, Gräfenhan
et al. (2011).Fusarium species typically sporulate readily and grow moderately
fast in culture. Perithecia are formed in vitro by a few species,
often only after crossing of compatible mating types using special media and
incubation conditions (Leslie
1991). Accordingly, the main Fusarium monographers of the
20th and 21st centuries were predominantly
teleomorphically challenged and anamorph names are widely used
(Wollenweber & Reinking
1935, Gerlach & Nirenberg
1982, Nelson , Gams , Leslie & Summerell
2006, Domsch ). However, a parallel holomorphic system was initiated by
other taxonomists, sometimes with less exposure to plant pathology and the
Fusarium literature, and numerous Fusarium holomorphs were
integrated taxonomically into the Nectriaceae, Hypocreales, under a
variety of teleomorphic names, most notably Gibberella
(Booth 1959,
Samuels 1976, Samuels et
al. 1990,
1991,
Samuels & Brayford 1994,
Rossman ).
The taxonomic segregation of species included in the broad concept of
Nectria sensu Booth
(1959) into distinct genera
(Rossman ), crystallised with the recognition or resurrection of
holomorphic genera such as Albonectria, Cosmospora, Cyanonectria,
Gibberella, Haematonectria, and Neocosmospora
(Rossman ,
Samuels ),
all with the exception of the latter at least with some Fusarium-like
anamorphs. This holomorphic system implied that the generic concept of
Fusarium might not be monophyletic or that additional genera might be
necessary to delimit monophyletic, morphologically homogenous, or natural
species groups. Samuels et al.
(2009) and the accompanying
paper by Gräfenhan et al.
(2011) provide evidence for a
monophyletic Fusarium clade, once the species related to the revised
concepts of Cosmospora, Dialonectria, Fusicolla, Macroconia,
Microcera, and Stylonectria are removed; for convenience, we
refer to this as the terminal Fusarium clade based on its position in
the Nectriaceae in the phylogenetic analysis of Gräfenhan et
al. (2011). In that
study, this terminal Fusarium clade received low support in
phylogenetic analyses and included several strongly supported phylogenetic
lineages within it. Typically, the statistically supported phylogenetic clades
corresponded in a nearly 1:1 fashion with taxonomic groupings earlier
established on the basis of teleomorph
(Samuels 1976,
Samuels )
and/or anamorph characters (Gerlach &
Nirenberg 1982).The taxonomic placements of some species formerly included in Nectria
sensu Booth, including the black perithecial N. atrofusca, the
orange N. desmazieri, and the red N. zealandica (the latter
also included in Cosmospora sensu
Rossman )
are particularly puzzling. “Nectria” atrofusca,
which has a macroconidial, Fusarium-like anamorph, cannot
convincingly be placed phylogenetically among other species with darkly
pigmented perithecia, in particular the large and well-known genus
Gibberella (Samuels &
Rogerson 1984, O'Donnell
1993, Samuels ). Therefore, it remained classified in Booth's broadly
delimited concept of “Nectria”, although its perithecia
and macroconidial Fusarium anamorph are morphologically dissimilar to
species of Nectria sensu stricto
(Hirooka ). The second species, “N.”
desmazieri, was placed in the N. episphaeria species group
by Booth (1959), but was not
accepted as a species of Nectria subgenus Dialonectria by
Samuels et al.
(1991), nor was it transferred
to Cosmospora by Rossman et al.
(1999). Nirenberg &
Samuels (2000) compared the
third species, the plant-associated “N.”
zealandica, with the scale insect pathogens now classified by
Gräfenhan et al.
(2011) as Microcera
diploa and M. flammea. This might have suggested
reclassification in Cosmospora sensu Rossman et al.
(1999), but it has perithecia
in caespitose clusters on well-developed stromata, atypical for
Cosmospora.The anamorphs of these three species are Fusarium-like and some
anamorphic names have been proposed for them. Deviating descriptions and
concepts exist for Fusarium buxicola, considered the anamorph of
“N.” desmazieri by Wollenweber & Reinking
(1935), Booth
(1959,
1971), and Gerlach &
Nirenberg (1982). Saccardo
(1883) had proposed F.
buxicola as the anamorph of an additional bluish-black perithecial
species, `Gibbera' buxi, and the subsequent association with
the orange or brownish orange perithecial species “N.”.
desmazieri is mysterious. Wollenweber & Reinking
(1935) classified F.
buxicola and “N.” desmazieri in
Nectria section Macroconia, which Wollenweber
(1926) erected for
“Nectria” stilbosporae, “N.”
leptosphaeriae and “N.” aurantiicola, currently
classified as “Fusarium” expansum, Macroconia
leptosphaeriae and Microcera larvarum by Gräfenhan et
al. (2011).Our study began with newly obtained collections of nectrioid fungi on
species of Buxus and Celtis in Europe and North America.
This led us to revise the taxonomy of the “N.”
desmazieri species group, a monophyletic clade within the terminal
Fusarium clade according to phylogenetic analyses
(Samuels ,
Gräfenhan ). We describe this clade as a new genus Geejayessia,
with the former N. cicatricum as its type species, and including the
former “N.” atrofusca, “N.”
desmazieri, “N.” zealandica, and a new
species collected on Celtis occidentalis, G. celtidicola; henceforth
in this paper the Geejayessia names are used. The morphological and
anatomical characters of the teleomorphs are compared with those of other
teleomorphs in the terminal Fusarium clade. Specifically, perithecial
wall layers and surface roughening are analysed, characters that were used,
for example, when Booth (1959)
placed G. desmazieri in the N. episphaeria species
group.Following the arguments of Gräfenhan et al.
(2011) and similar opinions of
others (Seifert & Samuels
2000, Cannon & Kirk
2000, Rossman & Samuels
2005), we have adopted a single name nomenclatural system in this
paper. None of the species recognised here are solely anamorphic, and the
oldest available species epithets are all teleomorphic. Therefore, all of the
binomials adopted for species in this paper are valid, legitimate, and
nomenclaturally correct according to the present International Code of
Botanical Nomenclature (McNeill ). We consider the available Fusarium
binominals as synonyms of the names in Cyanonectria and the newly
described genus Geejayessia and its anamorphs as
Fusarium-like, and not part of our taxonomic concept of Fusarium
sensu stricto.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Specimens and strains
Dried reference specimens were obtained from the herbaria BPI, DAOM, G, K,
M, and W. Herbarium abbreviations are from Holmgren et al.
(1990). Cultures were obtained
from the culure collections at the CBS Fungal Biodiversity Centre (CBS,
Utrecht, the Netherlands), Eastern Cereal and Oilseed Research Centre (DAOM,
Ottawa, Canada), and the Julius Kühn-Institute, Institute for
Epidemiology and Pathogen Diagnostics (BBA, Berlin & Braunschweig,
Germany).Dead or decaying twigs attached to healthy Celtis occidentalis
trees, Buxus sempervirens bushes, or detached twigs found below these
trees, were examined for nectriaceous teleomorphs. Perithecia and supporting
substrate were removed from specimens, rehydrated in water, embedded in Tissue
Tek 4583 O.C.T.™, sectioned at –20 °C and 6–16 μm
thickness using a Leica Cryotome CM 1850, and mounted in Shear's fluid
(Gams ).
Microscopic structures such as conidia, phialides, asci, ascospores, details
of stromata and walls of perithecia, etc. were studied with a Zeiss Imager
microscope using differential interference contrast and luminance coded with
0.45 or, rarely, 1.0 gamma correction in the Zeiss AxioVision software v. 4.6,
or an Olympus BX50 compound microscope. Anamorphic structures were studied in
water, and teleomorphic structures in water, Shear's, 2 % KOH or 85–90 %
lactic acid. Other methods for the study of micro- or macroscopical characters
of strains including morphometrical analyses are described elsewhere
(Schroers ).For ascospore isolates, single perithecia were squashed in a drop of
sterile water. The resulting ascospore suspension was collected either with a
1 mL propipettor or a glass pasteur pipette with its tip sterilised and
extended using an alcohol flame; the suspension was spread by moving the
pipette over the surface of synthetic nutrient-poor agar (SNA;
Nirenberg 1976) with
penicillin and streptomycin (Gams ). The next day isolated germinating ascospores were
located under a compound microscope at low magnification or a dissecting
microscope at high magnification and transferred to fresh media. For mycelial
or conidial specimens, cultures were isolated by plating a piece of
Buxus root surface sterilised with 70 % ethanol onto potato dextrose
agar (PDA, Biolife, Italy) with penicillin and streptomycin or by streaking
out macroconidia obtained from sporodochia on decaying Buxus
branches.For taxonomic studies, cultures were studied on agar media in 9 cm vented,
plastic Petri dishes. Strains were grown on SNA with small pieces of sterile
carnation leaves (CL) or Buxus leaves or twigs on the surface (SNA/CL
or SNA/B). Growth rates were determined after 7 d on PDA (Difco, USA)
incubated at 15, 20, 25, 30, and 35 °C. Colony colours were scored on the
same medium after 14 d or later using Kornerup & Wanscher
(1978). For the preparation of
voucher material, cultures were first dried in a Christ LMC-2 lyophiliser and
then killed with formalin as described by Gams et al.
(1998).Phylogrammes showing generic relationships in the terminal
Fusarium clade inferred from partial sequences of the second largest
subunit of the RNA polymerase II and the larger subunit of ATP citrate lyase
gene exons using Nectria cf. cinnabarina as outgroup. A.
Majority rule consensus tree of a Bayesian Markov chain Monte Carlo sampling.
B. One of 145 equally parsimonious trees. Numbers above branches are Bayesian
posterior probabilities multiplied by 100 (p.p. > 90 are shown); those
below lines are parsimony bootstrap proportions (> 70 % are shown).
Fusarium sensu stricto is demarcated by a red frame,
Geejayessia by green, Cyanonectria by blue, and the terminal
Fusarium clade by yellow. Scale bars: A 0.05 substitutions per site,
B 50 steps.The species included in the genus-level phylogenetic evaluation of the
terminal Fusarium clade (Fig.
1) were Nectria cf. cinnabarina, USA,
Pennsylvania, Salt Springs State Park, on Fagus grandifolia, T.
Gräfenhan, May 2007, TG 2007-62, DAOM [HQ728160 (rpb2), HQ728179
(acl1)] (outgroup); Nalanthamala diospyri, USA,
Tennessee, Readyville, wood of Diospyros virginiana, M.J. Wingfield,
CBS 560.89
[HQ728156 (rpb2), HQ728175 (acl1)]; Fusarium
avenaceum, Germany, north Germany, Solanum tuberosum,
tuber, E. Langerfeld, August 1980, BBA 64151 [DNA barcodes: HQ728167
(rpb2), HQ728186 (acl1)]; Fusarium babinda,
Spain, Morga, Pinus radiata/Hylurgops palliates, P.
Romòn, CBS
122156 [HQ728168 (rpb2), HQ728187 (acl1)];
Fusarium compactum, Sudan, seed of Gossypium
barbadense, G. Ibrahim, June 1989, BBA 65671 [HQ728165 (rpb2),
HQ728184 (acl1)]; Fusarium graminum, Iran, Prov.
Mazandaran, near Babol, Claviceps, on ear of Paspalum
dilatatum, W. Gerlach & D. Ershad, October 1968, BBA 62226 [HQ728166
(rpb2), HQ728185 (acl1)]; Microcera larvarum,
Iran, Prov. Guilan, near Rasht, Quadraspidiotus perniciosus,
on living on branch of Prunus, W. Gerlach & D. Ershad, October
1968, BBA 62239 [HQ728163 (rpb2), HQ728182 (acl1)];
Microcera coccophila, New Zealand, Croesus Track, tree bark,
H.I. Nirenberg, June 1991, BBA 65849 [HQ728158 (rpb2), HQ728177
(acl1)]; Macroconia leptosphaeriae, Netherlands,
Tilburg, on Leptosphaeria sp./dead stem of Urtica dioica, L.
Rommelaars, as “Fusarium sphaeriae`,
CBS 100001
[HQ728164 (rpb2), HQ728183 (acl1)];
“Fusarium” melanochlorum, Austria, on
branch canker of Fagus sylvatica, W. Gerlach,
CBS 202.65 (= ATCC
16069, BBA 9831, DSM 62248) [HQ728162 (rpb2), HQ728181
(acl1)]; Cosmospora coccinea, Germany,
Neubrandenburg, Kleppelshager Forst near Friedland, on Inonotus
radiatus, P. Hübsch, 22 Oct 1978,
CBS 704.79
[HQ728161 (rpb2), HQ728180 (acl1)]; Neonectria
coccinea, Germany, Brandenburg, Stolpe, Fagus sylvatica,
T. Gräfenhan, March 2007, TG 2007-24, DAOM [HQ728159 (rpb2),
HQ728178 (acl1)]; Neonectria fuckeliana, Switzerland,
KT. Graubunden, vic. Zuoz, along Ova d`Arpiglia, on branches of Picea
sp., 6 Sep 1990, CBS
112466 (= IMI 342667) [HQ728157 (rpb2), HQ728176
(acl1)]; Volutella consors, India, Karnataka, Agumbe,
on Agave americana, V. Rao, Oct 1985,
CBS 130.86
[HQ728155 (rpb2), HQ728174 (acl1)]; Volutella
consors, Brazil; Pará, 200 km SE from Belém, Capitão
Poço, soil, L. Pfenning,
CBS 549.89
[HQ728154 (rpb2), HQ728173 (acl1)]. Gräfenhan et
al. (2011) list strain
data and GenBank accession numbers for “Haematonectria”
illudens (BBA 67606), Albonectria albosuccinea (BBA 64502),
A. rigidiuscula (CBS
122570), Fusarium sambucinum (BBA 70569), F.
sublunatum (BBA 62431), “Nectria” albida
(BBA 67603), “Fusarium” ventricosum
(CBS 748.79),
Thelonectria discophora
(CBS 125487), and
Atractium crassum (CBS
180.31)].
Fig. 1.
Phylogrammes showing generic relationships in the terminal
Fusarium clade inferred from partial sequences of the second largest
subunit of the RNA polymerase II and the larger subunit of ATP citrate lyase
gene exons using Nectria cf. cinnabarina as outgroup. A.
Majority rule consensus tree of a Bayesian Markov chain Monte Carlo sampling.
B. One of 145 equally parsimonious trees. Numbers above branches are Bayesian
posterior probabilities multiplied by 100 (p.p. > 90 are shown); those
below lines are parsimony bootstrap proportions (> 70 % are shown).
Fusarium sensu stricto is demarcated by a red frame,
Geejayessia by green, Cyanonectria by blue, and the terminal
Fusarium clade by yellow. Scale bars: A 0.05 substitutions per site,
B 50 steps.
Phylogrammes showing individual gene phylogenies and combined phylogeny of
species of Geejayessia and Cyanonectria. Majority rule
consensus trees of Bayesian Markov chain Monte Carlo sampling inferred from
introns and exons of the ATP citrate lyase (acl1, A), translation
elongation factor 1 alpha (tef-1α, B), and the second largest
subunit of the RNA polymerase II (rpb2, C). D. Phylogramme based on
the combined data sets of the three genes. Numbers above branches are Bayesian
posterior probabilities multiplied by 100 (p.p. > 90 are shown). Numbers
below the branches are parsimony bootstrap proportions (> 70 % are shown).
Scale bars: 0.04 substitutions per site.The sequences HM068357 (rpb2, NRRL 36148, O'Donnell et
al., unpubl. data, as “Nectria desmazieri”),
EU329502 (rpb2, NRRL 22316,
O`Donnell ), and AF178361 (tef-1α, NRRL 22316, O'Donnell
et al., unpubl. data) were included in the three gene analysis for
testing phylogenetic species boundaries
(Fig. 2B, C).
Fig. 2.
Phylogrammes showing individual gene phylogenies and combined phylogeny of
species of Geejayessia and Cyanonectria. Majority rule
consensus trees of Bayesian Markov chain Monte Carlo sampling inferred from
introns and exons of the ATP citrate lyase (acl1, A), translation
elongation factor 1 alpha (tef-1α, B), and the second largest
subunit of the RNA polymerase II (rpb2, C). D. Phylogramme based on
the combined data sets of the three genes. Numbers above branches are Bayesian
posterior probabilities multiplied by 100 (p.p. > 90 are shown). Numbers
below the branches are parsimony bootstrap proportions (> 70 % are shown).
Scale bars: 0.04 substitutions per site.
DNA sequencing
Following the methods of Gräfenhan et al.
(2011), partial sequences of
the second largest subunit of the RNA polymerase II (rpb2) flanked by
the primers 5F2/7cR (O'Donnell ) and the larger subunit of ATP citrate lyase
(acl1) were generated for strains not included in that study. In
addition, sequences of the internal transcribed spacer regions 1 and 2 and the
5.8S nuclear ribosomal DNA (ITS rDNA), partial nuclear ribosomal large subunit
DNA (LSU rDNA), and the partial nuclear translation elongation factor 1-alpha
(tef-1α), were sequenced following published protocols
(Schroers et al.
2005,
2009). For
tef-1α, we used an initial denaturation step at 94 °C for 3
min, 35 cycles of 94 °C for 60 s, 54 °C for 60 s, 72 °C for 90 s
and a final extension at 72 °C for 6 min. Sequencing reactions were
performed at the Macrogen sequencing facility (Seoul, Korea). Newly generated
sequences were deposited at GenBank under accession numbers
HM626622–HM626690 and HQ728144–HQ728187.
Phylogenetic analyses
Two data sets were assembled. The first data set combined sequences of
rpb2 (948 bp alignment) and the exon regions of the acl1
(477 bp alignment) to address the generic relationships of the terminal
Fusarium clade (Fig. 1A,
B). The second analysis included rpb2, acl1, and
tef-1α gene exons and introns of multiple strains of each
species to evalute species boundaries by geneological concordance.Bayesian phylogeny (BP) inferences with MrBayes v. 3.1.2
(Ronquist & Huelsenbeck
2003) implemented substitution models selected according to the
akaike information criterion calculated with the software jmodeltest based on
24 models (Guindon & Gascuel
2003, Posada
2008). The software MrBayes v. 3.1.2 was run for 10 M generations
with four Markov chains sampled every 100 generations starting from a randomly
selected tree. A 50 % majority rule consensus tree and posterior probabilities
for each split was calculated after excluding the first 25000 sampled trees.
In analyses of combined data (Figs
1A,
2D), stationary nucleotide
frequencies, relative rates of substitution, alpha shape parameter of the
gamma distribution, and the proportion of invariable sites was estimated in
MrBayes independently for each of the partitions, and the site specific rates
were set variable. Trees illustrating the relationships of the species
(Fig. 2A–D) were rooted
at the longest split using the tools provided in the software MEGA
(Tamura )
after they were inspected unrooted using the software TreeView
(Page 1996).Heuristic searches for shortest trees in parsimony analyses (PA) generated
with PAUP v. 4.0b10 (Swofford
2003) were based on parsimony informative, unordered, and equally
weighted characters; gaps were treated as missing data. Starting trees were
obtained with 1 000 (Fig. 1B
analyses) or 1 0000 (Fig. 2
analyses) stepwise, random addition sequences. Other settings included the
treebisection-reconnection branch-swapping algorithm and the MULTREES option.
Branch robustness was assessed by 1000 heuristic bootstrap replicates using
the same settings, but with 10 stepwise, random addition sequences. A MAXTREE
setting of 1 000 was effective for bootstrap analyses of the combined data
sets summarised in Fig. 1B and
Fig. 2D and the analyses of the
rpb2 gene (Fig. 2C).
Either fewer than 1000 trees were collected or an automatically increased
MAXTREE setting was adopted for the other parsimony analyses.For the second set of analyses, the phylogenetic relationships of strains
identified as Cyanonectria cyanostoma, `Fusarium buxicola',
F. staphyleae, G. atrofusca, G. desmazieri, G. zealandica, and others
isolated from Buxus sempervirens or Celtis occidentalis were
estimated from the aligned DNA sequences of the individual genes
(Fig. 2A–C). The combined
data sets (Fig. 2D) comprised
the acl1 (915 bp alignment) and tef-1α (751 bp) gene
exons and introns and the rpb2 gene fragment (1033 bp alignment).
Strain data and sequence accession numbers are listed in the Taxonomy section
below. Sequences of the ITS and LSU rDNA were generated only for
representatives of the ingroup taxa and are cited in the taxonomic part below
as DNA barcodes. Phylogenetic analyses based on these sequences (not shown)
were consistent with the inferences summarised in
Fig. 2. They also included
AF178423 and AF178392 (ITS and LSU, NRRL 22316; O'Donnell et al.,
unpublished), U88116 (LSU, NRRL 20428;
O'Donnell 1993) and U88125
(LSU, NRRL 20474; O'Donnell
1993).
RESULTS
A General Time Reversible plus Gamma model and gamma distribution of rate
variation with a proportion of invariable sites (GTR+G+I) was selected for
each of the individual data sets of the 48 taxon analyses
(Fig. 1A). The proportion of
invariable sites was 0.4170 in the rpb2 gene (acl1: 0.5510).
The shape parameter of the gamma distribution was 0.9300 (rpb2) and
1.4020 (acl1) across sites. In modeltest analyses, basefrequencies
were calculated as 0.2456, 0.2658, 0.2599, 0.2288 for A, C, G, T, respectively
(rpb2) and 0.2098, 0.3162, 0.2601, 0.2139 (acl1);
substitution rates were AC = 1.3301, AG = 3.6324, AT = 1.2458, CG = 0.6151, CT
= 7.6227, GT = 1.000 (rpb2) and 1.1272, 2.6353, 0.4595, 1.1210,
10.9535, 1.0000 (acl1). The most negative likelihood (–lnL)
score was –15.758.620 for the combined analysis. The overall topologies
of the 48 equally most parsimonious trees did not differ significantly from
each other. Based on 590 parsimony-informative characters (PIC), they were 3
330 steps in length and had a consistency index (CI) of 0.305 and a retention
index (RI) of 0.620.Based on the partial rpb2 and acl1 loci, phylogenetic
analyses identified a statistically moderately or strongly supported clade
[Bayesian posterior probability (B-PP), 1.00; maximum parsimony bootstrap
proportion (P-BP), 76 %], here called the terminal Fusarium clade.
This included various subclades, most corresponding with previously identified
holomorph genera or other taxonomic groups with Fusarium-like
anamorphs (Fig. 1A, B). The
parallel analyses by Gräfenhan et al.
(2011) obtained no significant
statistical support for the terminal Fusarium clade, but showed that
taxa with Fusarium-like macroconidia cannot be regarded monophyletic.
In all analyses, the terminal Fusarium clade excludes
phylogenetically distantly related Fusarium-like species, most of
which are currently classified in Dialonectria, Fusicolla, Macroconia,
Microcera, or Stylonectria
(Gräfenhan ) or as “Nectria” diminuta
(Hirooka ). Equivocally strong statistical support B-PP, 1.00 and P-BP,
100 % (Fig. 1A, B) or maximum
likelihood bootstrap proportions ≥ 75 %, B-PP ≥ 0.95, and P-BP ≥ 75 %
(Gräfenhan : fig. 1), was obtained for the subclades nested within the
terminal Fusarium clade. These include (i) Fusarium sensu
stricto including but not restricted to species with teleomorphs often
classified in Gibberella and various species groups
(Summerbell & Schroers
2002, O'Donnell , Schroers , O'Donnell
), (ii) “Haematonectria”
mostly with Fusarium solani like anamorphs
(Rossman ,
O'Donnell 2000,
O'Donnell ), (iii) Albonectria
(Rossman ), (vi) the “Fusarium” dimerum
species group (Schroers ) and “Fusarium” domesticum
(anamorphic Rodentomyces Doveri
), (vii) Cyanonectria
(Samuels ,
this paper), and (viii) Geejayessia, described below for
“N.” desmazieri and its allies.The genus-level analysis confirmed that several holomorphs in the terminal
Fusarium clade previously classified in Nectria
(“N.” atrofusca, “N.”
cicatricum, “N.” desmazieri and
“N.” ventricosa) are distantly related to
Nectria sensu stricto. The species of the Fusarium section
Macroconia sensu Wollenweber & Reinking
(1935) or Gerlach &
Nirenberg (1982) belong either
to Cyanonectria (as “Fusarium buxicola”) and
Geejayessia or to the distantly related genera Microcera
(M. coccophila) or Macroconia (M. leptosphaeriae
and M. gigas).The species-level phylogenetic analyses based on introns and exons of the
individual (Fig. 2A–C)
and combined (Fig. 2D)
acl1, tef1 and rpb2 genes were based on a
Hasegawa-Kishino-Yano plus Gamma (HKY+G) (acl1) or a General Time
Reversible plus Gamma substitution model (GTR+G) (tef1, rpb2) with a
proportion of invariable sides set to 0 for all. The shape parameter of the
gamma distribution was 0.6150 (acl1), 0.4030 (tef1) and
0.2390 (rpb2) across sites. In modeltest analyses, basefrequencies
were calculated as 0.2054, 0.2795, 0.2527, 0.2624 for A, C, G, T,
respectively, (acl1), 0.2251, 0.3004, 0.2293, 0.2452 (tef1)
and 0.2521, 0.2637, 0.2630, 0.2213 (rpb2); for acl1 a kappa
= 5.0494 (ti/tv = 2.5475) was calculated; substitution rates were AC = 0.9777,
AG = 1.8456, AT = 1.0869, CG = 0.5516, CT = 3.6992, GT = 1.0000
(tef1) and 0.9601, 3.2151, 0.8718, 0.4166, 7.8738, 1.0000
(rpb2). The most negative likelihood (–lnL) score was
–9239.02 for the combined analysis and –3138.52, –2.957.743
and –3.140.872 for the individual data sets of the acl1, tef1
and rpb2, respectively. Parsimony analyses yielded 18240 equally most
parsimonious trees 1 083 steps long with a CI of 0.814 and a RI of 0.943 and
were based on 711 PIC (Fig.
2D). The following tree scores were retrieved when acl1
(256 PIC), tef1 (223 PIC) and rpb2 (232 PIC) sequences were
analysed individually: CI, 0.861, 0.773, 0.822; (RI) 0.965, 0.911, 0.959;
number of steps, 353, 388, 338; number of equally parsimonious trees, 156, 28,
28 098. The inferences provided evidence for close relationships among
Geejayessia desmazieri, G. cicatricum, G. celtidicola, and G.
atrofusca with G. zealandica forming the root of the genus
Geejayessia. The strain NRRL 36148 was re-identified as
Cyanonectria buxi (Fig.
2C, based on rpb2 sequences).Analyses of aligned LSU- and ITS rDNA sequences obtained in our study
(results not shown) confirmed the equally rDNA based conclusions of Samuels
et al. (2009), which
showed Geejayessia and Cyanonectria as distinct phylogenetic
lineages within the terminal Fusarium clade. The phylogenetic
analyses by Samuels et al.
(2009) placed Cyanonectria
cyanostoma in a moderately supported sister group relationship with
Fusarium sensu stricto. According to rDNA based comparisons, we
confirm the identity of NRRL 20474 (GenBank U88125) as G. desmazieri,
and NRRL 22316 (AF178392), used in phylogenetic analyses by O'Donnell
(1993) and Samuels et
al. (2009), as G.
atrofusca.Ten to 15 nucleotide substitutions or indels in the ITS rDNA distinguish
the new species G. celtidicola from G. zealandica, and the
species pair G. desmazieri and G. cicatricum from each
other. Geejayessia desmazieri differs from G. cicatricum by
2 substitutions in the ITS rDNA. The ITS rDNA of G. atrofusa differs
from that of the other species by 29–33 substitutions or indels.
TAXONOMY
Samuels & Chaverri, Mycol. Progress 8: 56.
2009.Anamorph: Fusarium-likeType species: Cyanonectria cyanostoma (Sacc. &
Flageolet) Samuels & Chaverri, Mycol Progress 8: 56.
2009.
Basionym: Nectria cyanostoma Sacc. & Flageolet,
Rendi Congr. Bot. Palermo 1902: 53. 1902.Stromata reduced, minute or more or less well developed,
prosenchymatous, typically consisting of hypha-like cells. Perithecia
gregarious or caespitose, smooth, thin-walled, unevenly coloured, apex darkly
pigmented, dark bluish purple or bluish black, main body less intensely dark
bluish or red to reddish brown; colours in KOH becoming darker, in lactic acid
changing from bluish black to red or from red or reddish brown to yellow.
Ascospores 1-septate, ellipsoidal with gently tapering ends, more or
less hyaline or pale yellow brown, smooth. Macroconidia
(1–)5–7(–8)-septate, gently curved throughout or with a
subcylindrical central middle part, pedicellate, with a hooked apical cell;
formed in off-white, cream slimy masses, sometimes on sporodochia on branched
conidiophores, terminating in whorls of monophialides. Microconidia
not observed. Chlamydospores absent or rarely formed in cells of
aging macroconidia. Cultures on PDA in C. cyanostoma pale coloured,
cream, or somewhat yellowish but at 30 °C with somewhat greyish blue
surface or, in C. buxi, dark brown, reddish brown, greenish grey,
with a greyish blue, pastel violet or light blue surface.Notes: When describing the monotypic genus, Samuels et
al. (2009) restricted
Cyanonectria for a species with spectacularly bicoloured perithecia
characterised by a bluish purple papilla and a red perithecial body. The
anamorphic characters were narrowly defined in their genus concept. For
example, unpigmented, white colonies on SNA and PDA were described. With
Gibbera buxi and its Fusarium buxicola anamorph a
unicoloured, bluish black or bluish purple perithecial species forming
surprisingly dark colonies on PDA is added to the genus necessitating an
emended generic concept for Cyanonectria.(Fuckel) Schroers, Gräfenhan &
Seifert, comb. nov. MycoBank
MB519485. Figs
3,
4.
Basionym:
Gibbera buxi Fuckel, Jahrb. Nassauischen Vereins Naturk. 27–28:
32. 1873.
Fig. 3.
Cyanonectria buxi, perithecia on the natural substrate. A–C.
Habit on Buxus twigs. D–F. Colour change in perithecium in
water (D), replaced with 2 % KOH (E) and then lactic acid (F), showing the
reduced reaction towards the base of perithecium (E, F). G, H, J, K. Median
longitudinal section through perithecia (G, H), ostiolar (J) and lateral
perithecial walls (K). I. Longitudinal section through hyphal stroma
supporting perithecia. L–O. Face view of perithecial wall. L. Hyphae
covering perithecia reacting to lactic acid in a similar manner as the
perithecium. M. Hypha-like cells on the surface of perithecia. N. Outermost
cells of the main perithecial wall region with Samuels pores. O. Innermost
cells of the perithecial wall. G–K in Shears; L in 2 % KOH; M–O in
water. A, D–F, L–O
CBS H-20380; B, C,
G–K CBS
H-20379. Scale bars: A–C = 500 μm; D (also applies to E,
F), G = 100 μm; H = 50 μm; I–L 20 = μm; O (M, N) 10 =
μm.
Fig. 4.
Cyanonectria buxi, spores and spore forming cells. A–D. Asci
with a somewhat flattened apex, with or without a visible refractive ring. E,
G, I–P. Ascospores. F, H. Ascospore surface. Q–S. Monophialides
formed by immersed mycelium. T. Sporodochium. U–Y. Macroconidia. Z.
Chlamydospores derived from macroconidium. AA–AC. Surface of PDA
colonies after 14 d at 20, 25 and 30 °C. AD. Reverse of colony illustrated
in AB. A–P CBS
H-20379; Q–S.
CBS 130.97; T, Y
CBS 109638; U
CBS 125554; V
CBS 125551; W
CBS 30.97; X,
AA–AD BBA 64985; Z CBS
125547. A–P, from natural substrate. Q–Z, from SNA/B.
Scale bars: B (also applies to A), X (W, Y) 50 = μm; C (D), Q (R, S), T 20
= μm; G (E, F, H), I (J–P), Z 10 = μm; U (V) = 50 and 10 μm;
AA–AD = 10 mm.
≡ Gibberella buxi (Fuckel) G. Winter, Rabenh. Krypt.-Fl. 2:
103. 1887.≡ Lisea buxi (Fuckel) Sacc., Syll. Fung. 2: 518. 1883.= Fusarium buxicola Sacc., Syll. Fung. 2: 518. 1883.Stromata prosenchymatous, cells 3–5 μm wide, with at
least some hypha-like cells, arranged in an irregular textura porrecta.
Perithecia solitary or in groups of 20 or more seated on a stroma formed
on bark of small twigs, leaf or terminal twig axils; smooth; broadly
ampulliform to obpyriform, with a short neck or broadly ellipsoidal; dark
bluish purple or bluish black, main body less intensely dark, not red,
somewhat darker blue in 2 % KOH, purplish red in lactic acid; in longitudinal
section 200–250 μm high, 130–150 μm wide. Hyphae continuous
with cells of stroma continous with wall of lower part of perithecia,
4–6(–8) μm wide, with walls to 2 μm thick. Perithecial
wall of a single region, 15–20 μm wide or subapically
20–35 μm, consisting of ca. 3 layers of cells; in face view,
cell walls of outer and inner layers with pores, 1–1.5 μm wide in
outer layers, 0.5 μm thick or less in inner layers; cells in outer layers
angular, (8–)11(–14) × (6.5–)8(–9.5) μm,
arranged in a textura angularis, in inner layers subglobose to
angular, (10–) 14(–22) × (5.5–)10.5(–14.5)
μm, arranged in a textura angularis; cells in longitudinal
sections subglobose to angular, flatter towards centrum. Asci
cylindrical or narrowly clavate, with rounded or flattened apex, with or
without visible refractive ring, eight-spored, with mostly overlapping
uniseriate or somewhat biseriate above and uniseriate ascospores below,
80–100 × 9–12 μm. Ascospores equally 2-celled,
rarely 2-septate, ellipsoidal with somewhat tapering ends, smooth,
unpigmented, (12–)13–14–14.5(–17) ×
(4–)5–5–5.5(–6.5) μm.Cyanonectria buxi, perithecia on the natural substrate. A–C.
Habit on Buxus twigs. D–F. Colour change in perithecium in
water (D), replaced with 2 % KOH (E) and then lactic acid (F), showing the
reduced reaction towards the base of perithecium (E, F). G, H, J, K. Median
longitudinal section through perithecia (G, H), ostiolar (J) and lateral
perithecial walls (K). I. Longitudinal section through hyphal stroma
supporting perithecia. L–O. Face view of perithecial wall. L. Hyphae
covering perithecia reacting to lactic acid in a similar manner as the
perithecium. M. Hypha-like cells on the surface of perithecia. N. Outermost
cells of the main perithecial wall region with Samuels pores. O. Innermost
cells of the perithecial wall. G–K in Shears; L in 2 % KOH; M–O in
water. A, D–F, L–O
CBS H-20380; B, C,
G–K CBS
H-20379. Scale bars: A–C = 500 μm; D (also applies to E,
F), G = 100 μm; H = 50 μm; I–L 20 = μm; O (M, N) 10 =
μm.Cyanonectria buxi, spores and spore forming cells. A–D. Asci
with a somewhat flattened apex, with or without a visible refractive ring. E,
G, I–P. Ascospores. F, H. Ascospore surface. Q–S. Monophialides
formed by immersed mycelium. T. Sporodochium. U–Y. Macroconidia. Z.
Chlamydospores derived from macroconidium. AA–AC. Surface of PDA
colonies after 14 d at 20, 25 and 30 °C. AD. Reverse of colony illustrated
in AB. A–P CBS
H-20379; Q–S.
CBS 130.97; T, Y
CBS 109638; U
CBS 125554; V
CBS 125551; W
CBS 30.97; X,
AA–AD BBA 64985; Z CBS
125547. A–P, from natural substrate. Q–Z, from SNA/B.
Scale bars: B (also applies to A), X (W, Y) 50 = μm; C (D), Q (R, S), T 20
= μm; G (E, F, H), I (J–P), Z 10 = μm; U (V) = 50 and 10 μm;
AA–AD = 10 mm.Colonies on PDA after 7 d around 12–16 mm diam (20 °C)
or 15–20 mm (25 °C); optimum 20–25 °C, maximum between 30
and 34 °C, no growth observed at 35 °C. Colony reverse at 15 °C,
14–21 d on PDA reddish brown to somewhat dark brown (8E7–8F7) or
brownish to greenish grey (8F2, 30F2) with or without a reddish brown (8E7)
pigment visible outside margin, at 20–25 °C dark green or greyish
green (25F4) to brownish black (8F6) or brownish to greenish grey (8F2, 30F2),
typically without pigment visible outside margin. Colony surface on PDA with
felt-like to cottony mycelium, greyish green to greyish blue or pastel violet
(19A4) to light blue (20A5), with or without small or large watery droplets of
exudates, with or without off-white sporodochial masses of conidia; on SNA
unpigmented or, in older colonies, greenish grey (25B2–25C2), surface
smooth or with fine cottony mycelium, greyish blue in centre of colony, with
concentrically arranged pale yellow, off-white or somewhat greyish blue, to 5
mm diam conidial masses. Aerial and submersed mycelium and hyphae of
sporodochia becoming purplish red in lactic acid. Conidiation on SNA along
submersed hyphae or from sporodochia forming within 14 d or later on surface
of SNA or on pieces of carnation leaves or Buxus twigs placed on SNA;
submersed sporulation by solitary monophialides or on sparsely branched
conidiophores. Monophialides cylindrical, 14–21 μm long,
2.5–3.5 μm wide at base, ca. 2.5 μm near aperture;
sporodochia of branched conidiophores with solitary or whorls of
2–3 terminal monophialides; base of older sporodochia bluish; phialides
of sporodochia cylindrical or bottle-shaped,
(9–)15.5–17.5–19.5(–23) μm long,
(2.5–)3–3–3.5(–4) μm wide at base,
(3–)3.5–4–4(–4.5) μm in middle,
(2–)2–2.5–2.5(–3) μm wide near conidiogenous
aperture. Microconidia not observed. Macroconidia formed in
off-white or pale yellow or somewhat greyish blue slimy masses, typically with
central and basal part nearly straight, rarely gently curved throughout, with
a more or less pronounced pedicellate foot cell and an inequilateral fusoid or
hooked apical cell, (1–4)5–7(–8) septate: 5-septate
(46–) 77.5–82–87(–99.5) ×
(5.5–)6.5–7–7(–8) μm, 6-septate
(77.5–)83–87–90.5(–100) ×
(6–)7–7–7.5(–8) μm, 7-septate 86.5–101
× 6.5–8 μm. Chlamydospores formed from cells of
macroconidia, subglobose, 6–11 × 6–8 μm; mycelial
chlamydospores not observed.Characters of holotype, G 00111019, and isotype, G 00111020, of G.
buxi, identical to details reported above except as follows:
Perithecia turning brownish in KOH, only weakly reddish brown or
reddish in lactic acid. Immature ascal ascospores 1-septate.
Macroconidia associated with perithecial clusters, 5-septate
70–76.6 × 6.5 μm, 6-septate 75 × 6.5 μm.Habitat: On decaying or dead terminal twigs still attached to
living Buxus sempervirens trees; perithecia sometimes co-occurring
with those of G. cicatricum (Figs
3A,
5B).
Fig. 5.
Geejayessia cicatricum, perithecia on the natural substrate.
A–C. Habit on decaying buds of Buxus sempervirens. D–F.
Colour change in perithecium in water (D), replaced with 2 % KOH (E) and then
lactic acid (F). G, H. Longitudinal section through decaying bud. I.
Longitudinal section through stroma supporting the perithecia, with hypha-like
cells. J–L. Median longitudinal sections through perithecia (J),
ostiolar region (K) and lateral perithecial wall (L). M–O. Face views of
perithecial wall. M. Cells on the surface of perithecia having hyphal or
setose characteristics. N. Outermost cells of the main perithecial wall region
with Samuels pores. O. Innermost cells of perithecial wall. C rehydrated in
water, G–L in Shears, M, O in water, N in 2 % KOH. A, C, G–L,
CBS H-20375; B,
D–F, CBS
H-20376; M–O,
CBS H-20377. Scale
bars: A–C, G = 500 μm; E (D, F) = 100 μm; H = 200 μm; I–L
= 20 μm; M–O = 10 μm.
Distribution: Europe (Belgium, France, Germany, Slovenia).Typification: Lectotype of Gibbera buxi and Fusarium
buxicola designated here: Germany, Nassau (today, Hesse),
Oestrich, K.W.G.L. Fuckel, Herbier Fuckel 1894, G 00111019. Isotypes
of Gibbera buxi: DAOM 126623, G 00111020, G00111021, all Herbier
Fuckel 1894, Herbier Barbey-Boissier 886. Specimens have sporodochia and
clustered, solitary perithecia on a minutely developed stroma; asci of the
sampled material are immature and free ascospores were not seen.
Epitype for Gibbera buxi designated here: Slovenia,
between Domžale and Kamnik, Arboretum Volčji Potok, prealpine
zone, on decaying terminal twig still attached to a living Buxus
sempervirens var. elegantissima tree, July 2009, H.-J. Schroers
1398 & M. Žerjav,
CBS H-20379, filed
with dried SNA/B culture of CBS
125551, ex-epitype strain, isolated from ascospore of
CBS H-20379.Additional specimen and strains examined: Belgium, C.
Crepel, CBS 109638.
France, Dépt. Jura, Bois de la Rochette near Nogna, on leaf
litter, 24 Sep 1996, H.-J. Schroers,
CBS 130.97.
Netherlands, on Buxus sempervirens, 1987, M.E. Noordeloos, BBA
64985. Slovenia, between Domžale and Kamnik, Arboretum
Volčji Potok, prealpine zone, on decaying terminal twig with bluish
black perithecia still attached to ca. 80 year-old, living Buxus
sempervirens tree, July 2009, H.-J. Schroers 1400 & M. Žerjav,
CBS H-20380,
derived ascospore culture CBS
125554; Ljubljana, nursery, isolated from roots of potted, small
bush of Buxus sempervirens, April/March 2009, M. Žerjav 15574,
CBS 125548;
decaying branch still attached to wilting, small bush of Buxus
sempervirens, 2007, H.-J. Schroers,
CBS 125547.DNA sequences generated: ITS rDNA
(CBS 125554:
HM626660, 125551: HM626661, 125548: HQ728144). LSU rDNA
(CBS 125554:
HM626672, 125551: HM626673). acl1
(CBS 130.97:
HM626622, 125548: HM626623, 125554: HM626629, 125551: HM626630, 125547:
HQ728172). tef-1α
(CBS 125554:
HM626649, 125551: HM626648, 125547: HQ728152, 130.97: HQ728150, BBA 64985:
HQ728151). rpb2 (CBS
130.97: HM626690, 125548: HM626687, 125554: HM626688, 125551:
HM626689, 125547: HQ728169). See Gräfenhan et al.
(2011) for others included in
Fig. 1.Notes: Cyanonectria buxi is characterised by bluish black
perithecia that turn somewhat brown in KOH and reddish in lactic acid,
1-septate ascospores, and relatively long, wide macroconidia. Ex-ascospore
isolates and several conidial isolates form dark, greyish-blue cultures on
PDA. Measurements of macroconidia of C. buxi overlap with those of
Geejayessia cicatricum, the latter of which forms pale colonies. The
macroconidia are longer than those of G. desmazieri and members of
the F. lateritium complex.Fuckel (1873) described
Gibbera buxi as a bluish or violaceous black perithecial fungus with
1-septate ascospores. He considered its anamorph similar and related to that
of Nectria gibbera but did not propose anamorph names for either
species. Saccardo (1883)
accepted G. buxi as distinct and suggested its combination in
Lisea in which he placed Gibberella-like species with
1-septate ascospores (see also Rossman
). He also described the anamorph of Lisea
buxi as Fusarium buxicola, for which he literally copied
Fuckel's description of the anamorph of N. gibbera, an act he
repeated later for F. fuckelii
(Saccardo 1886). Saccardo
(1883) clearly attributed the
name F. buxicola to Fuckel's bluish black perithecial fungus and
referred to the location where Fuckel collected G. buxi. Apparently
in error, F. buxicola was later used instead for the anamorph of the
orange perithecial G. desmazieri and its synonym Nectria
gibbera (Wollenweber & Reinking
1935, Booth 1959,
1971,
Gerlach & Nirenberg 1982).
Booth (1971) listed
Fusarium lateritium var. buxi as the anamorph of the
incorrectly cited “Gibberella buxi Fuckel, Symb. Mycol., Nacht.
2: 32, 1873” (apparently confusing Gibberella and
Gibbera) but the ascospores of F. lateritium var.
buxi reportedly have three septa
(Booth 1971).The genetic and nomenclatural connection between Fusarium buxicola
and Gibbera buxi is re-established here, based on recent collections
of bluish black, smooth perithecia forming mature asci and 1-septate
ascospores (Figs 3A–D,
4A–P). These new
specimens exhibit similar characters to those observed on the lectotype and
isotypes of G. buxi. The few macroconidia observed associated with
the perithecia or stromata in the authentic material are identical to
macroconidia formed in cultures of the epitype. Perithecia of G. buxi
have an intensely pigmented ostiolar region but their lower parts appear less
intensely pigmented (Fig. 3C,
D) probably because of relatively thin lateral perithecia walls
(Fig. 3G, H, K). Its original
material, however, turns somewhat brownish in KOH and only weakly reddish or
brownish reddish in lactic acid while our recent gatherings become more
intensely bluish black in KOH (Fig.
3E) and bright red in lactic acid
(Fig. 3F, L). Perhaps this
reflects immaturity of the perithecia on the type specimens of G.
buxi, a thought further supported by the fact that no discharged
ascospores were visible.Cyanonectria buxi is well characterised by its greyish blue
colonies on PDA, which we observed in all strains. Gerlach & Nirenberg
(1982) observed only cream,
amber, or fawn to brown and noted blue or verdigris, spotted pigmentation as
seldom occurring. It is therefore possible that their concept of F.
buxicola was based on a heterogeneous selection of strains, probably
including G. cicatricum and G. desmazieri, or that some
degeneration had occurred. Cyanonectria buxi forms longer and wider
and partly more-septate macroconidia than G. celtidicola and G.
desmazieri. Macroconidia of C. buxi and G. cicatricum
are similar in size and number of septa.Cyanonectria buxi has been reported rarely. We collected its
teleomorph in July; Fuckel
(1873) reported it as very
rare and also found perithecia in the summer. Several isolations from conidia
or mycelium and one from surface sterilised roots indicate that it is commonly
associated with Buxus sempervirens. A surprising observation in our
study is that perithecia of C. buxi can apparently co-occur with
those of G. cicatricum on what appears to be the same perithecial
stroma (Figs 3A,
5B).(Sacc. & Flageolet) Samuels
& Chaverri, Mycol. Progr. 8: 56. 2009.
Basionym: Nectria
cyanostoma Sacc. & Flageolet, Atti del Congr. bot. di Palermo: 53.
1902.Description and illustrations: Samuels et al.
(2009).Material studied:
CBS 101734 = BBA
70964, GJS 98-127, ex epitype strain, see Samuels et al.
(2009).DNA sequences generated: LSU rDNA
(CBS 101734:
HM626671). tef-1α
(CBS 101734:
HM626647). See Gräfenhan et al.
(2011) for others included in
Fig. 1.Schroers, Gräfenhan & Seifert, gen.
nov. MycoBank
MB519479.Anamorph: Fusarium-likeEtymology: In honour of Gary J. Samuels, in recognition of his
contributions to our knowledge of hypocrealean holomorphs, acknowledging the
thousands of specimens and strains he collected and isolated, known
universally by their G.J.S. collecting numbers, which he made freely available
to his many colleagues.Perithecia e stromate in substratis erumpente exorientia, superficialia
dense coarctata, subglobosa, ovoidea vel obpyriformia, superficie levia vel
minute verrucosa, coccinea, aurantiaca vel atra, KOH–vel KOH+. Tunica
perithecii ex uno strato composite. Asci 8 spori, cylindrici vel clavate.
Ascosporae ellipsoideae, uniseptatae, verruculosae ali leviae, hyalinae vel
pallide brunneae. Coloniae fere celeriter crescentes, incoloratae, pallide
luteae, pallide aurantiacae veil pallide ochraceae; reversum pigmento rubro
carens. Mycelium aerium in agaro parcum, albidum. Sporodochia ad superficiem
agari SNA, in foliis Dianthi caryophylli vel foliis et ramis Buxi
sempervirentis formata. Monophialides sporodochiales plus minusve cylindricae.
Microconidia absentia vel praesentia, 0–1 septata, ovoidea vel
ellipsoidea, allantoidea vel fusiformia. Macroconidia sporodochialia
3–multi septata, modice curvata vel quasi recta et apicales rostrata et
curvata. Chlamydosporae absentes.Stromata erumpent, byssoid or densely prosenchymatous, typically
of densely packed hyphae, bearing either perithecia or well-developed
sporodochia. Perithecia caespitose on bark of decaying twigs or dead
buds of woody hosts, often on dead twigs still attached to living host, mostly
smooth, smooth to warted in one species, thin-walled, uniformly coloured or
with a darker ostiolar region when dry, pale orange, brownish to reddish
orange, bright red or black, reacting to KOH and lactic acid, unless black,
then hardly reacting. Ascospores 1-septate, ellipsoidal, with gently
tapering or broadly rounded ends, pale brown or yellowish brown, smooth or
verruculose at maturity. Macroconidia observed in all species, 3- to
multi-septate, relatively long when 3-septate, either gently curved throughout
with dorsal wall somewhat more curved or with a subcylindrical middle part,
always conspicuously pedicellate, with an inequilaterally fusoid and more or
less hooked apical cell; formed in slimy yellowish or orange masses on
branched, frequently sporodochial conidiophores, terminating in whorls of
monophialides. Microconidia usually absent; when present, then oblong
ellipsoidal, gently curved, rounded at both ends or with an asymmetrical
hilum. Chlamydospores not seen. Cultures on nutritionally rich media
such as PDA about 15–20 mm diam after 7 d at 20–25 °C, pale
coloured, cream, yellowish, orange, brownish orange or with some greyish
hues.Type species: Geejayessia cicatricum (Berk.) Schroers,
Stud Mycol. 68: 124. 2011.(Berk.) Schroers, comb. nov.
MycoBank MB519481.
Figs 5,
6.
Basionym:
Sphaeria sanguinea var. cicatricum Berk., Mag. Zool. Bot. 1:
48. 1837.
Fig. 6.
Geejayessia cicatricum, spores and spore forming cells. A–C.
Asci with broadly rounded or slightly flattened apex, with visible refractive
ring. D–J. Ascospores, with E, G showing surface roughening. K, L.
Branched conidiophores and monophialides from sporodochia with anastomosing
cells. M–Q. Macroconidia. A–J, M from natural substrate. K,
N–Q from SNA, SNA/CL or SNA/B. L from PDA. A–J, L,
CBS H-20374; K, N,
P, Q, CBS 125549;
M, CBS 125552; O,
CBS 125550. Scale
bars: A, O 50 = μm, B, C, K, L = 20 μm, G (applies also to D–F), I
(H, J) = 10 μm, P (M, N, Q) = 50 and 10 μm.
≡ Nectria cicatricum (Berk.) Tul. & C. Tul., Selecta
Fungorum Carpologia: Nectriei- Phacidiei- Pezizei 3: 77. 1865.Stromata formed within bud leaves or erumpent through substrate,
prosenchymatous, cells 3–5 μm wide, with at least some hypha-like
cells, arranged in an irregular textura porrecta; hyphae connecting
cells of stroma and wall of lower part of perithecia, 2.5–7 μm wide,
with walls less than 1 μm thick. Perithecia crowded in groups of 5
to > 50, smooth, broadly ampulliform with a short neck or broadly
ellipsoidal, bright red with concolourous ostiolar region, deep violet in 2 %
KOH, yellowish orange in lactic acid; in longitudinal section 160–260
μm high, 125–250 μm wide. Perithecial wall with a single
region, (12–)13.5–18(–21) μm wide or, subapically
20–30 μm wide, consisting of 3–5 layers of cells; in face view,
cell walls 1–1.5 μm thick in outer layers, 0.5 μm thick or less in
inner layers, with pores in all layers; cells in outer layers angular to
lobed, (9–) 12.5(–18) × (6–)9(–13.5) μm,
arranged in a textura epidermoidea or t. angularis,
subglobose to angular in inner layers, (10–)16.5(–23.5) ×
(7.5–)10–11.5(–16) μm, arranged in a textura
angularis; in longitudinal section, cells subglobose to angular, narrow
towards centrum. Asci cylindrical or clavate, with a broadly rounded
or flattened apex, with a minute refractive ring, eight-spored, mostly
overlapping uniseriate or biseriate above and uniseriate below,
(65.5–)73–92.5(–103) ×
(8–)10–11(–13.5) μm. Ascospores equally
2-celled, broadly ellipsoidal to ellipsoidal, slightly constricted at septum,
verruculose, hyaline or pale brown,
(9.5–)11.5–12–13(–14.5) ×
(4.5–)5.0–5.5–6(–6.5) μm.Colonies on PDA after 7 d at 20 and 25 °C 15–20 mm diam;
optimum for growth 25 °C, maximum 30–34 °C, no growth at 35
°C. Colony reverse lacking red pigments, after 14–21 d on PDA at
15–25 °C with weak pigment production, pale to light yellow
(4A3-4A5), at 30 °C somewhat pale orange. Colony surface on PDA with
pustules or cushions of white aerial mycelium to 15 mm diam, with scattered
sporodochia covered with pale yellow conidial masses, smooth at margin,
wax-like, pale yellow (4A2–4A3); on SNA hyaline, typically smooth or
occasionally with pustules of white mycelium. Conidiation on SNA
inconspicuous, first along submersed hyphae, within 14 d or later from
sporodochia formed on the agar surface or on CL or B. Sporodochia
with a hymenium of branched conidiophores with solitary phialides or whorls of
2–3 terminal monophialides; metulae anastomosing; cells of stroma
densely packed, arranged in an irregular textura porrecta. Phialides
more or less cylindrical, tapering towards apex, on SNA
(18.5)–22–26.5(–31) μm long, 3–4 μm wide at base
and in middle, 2–2.5 μm wide near the conidiogenous aperture; on PDA
to 45 μm long, 3–4.5 μm wide at base and 2.5–3.5 μm wide
near conidiogenous aperture. Microconidia not observed.
Macroconidia formed in pale yellow slimy masses, typically gently
curved throughout, less commonly almost straight, with pronounced pedicellate
foot cell, and a more or less inequilaterally fusoid, hooked apical cell,
(2–)5–7(–8) septate: 5-septate
(55–)73–81–92(–107) ×
(6–)6.5–7–7.5(–8.5) μm; 6-septate
(88–)98.5–103–107(–124) ×
(7–)7.5–7.5–8(–8.5) μm; 7-septate 88–125
× 6.5–9 μm. Chlamydospores not observed.Geejayessia cicatricum, perithecia on the natural substrate.
A–C. Habit on decaying buds of Buxus sempervirens. D–F.
Colour change in perithecium in water (D), replaced with 2 % KOH (E) and then
lactic acid (F). G, H. Longitudinal section through decaying bud. I.
Longitudinal section through stroma supporting the perithecia, with hypha-like
cells. J–L. Median longitudinal sections through perithecia (J),
ostiolar region (K) and lateral perithecial wall (L). M–O. Face views of
perithecial wall. M. Cells on the surface of perithecia having hyphal or
setose characteristics. N. Outermost cells of the main perithecial wall region
with Samuels pores. O. Innermost cells of perithecial wall. C rehydrated in
water, G–L in Shears, M, O in water, N in 2 % KOH. A, C, G–L,
CBS H-20375; B,
D–F, CBS
H-20376; M–O,
CBS H-20377. Scale
bars: A–C, G = 500 μm; E (D, F) = 100 μm; H = 200 μm; I–L
= 20 μm; M–O = 10 μm.Habitat: On decaying or dead buds, axils of dead leaves or twigs
or sometimes on decaying, subterminal twigs still attached to living Buxus
sempervirens trees; perithecia sometimes co-occurring with those of
C. buxi (Figs 3A,
5B).Distribution: Europe (Slovenia, England).Typification: Isotype of Sphaeria sanguinea var.
cicatricum: Sine loco but presumably England based on the name
of the publication, on stems of?B. sempervirens, ex herb. M.J.
Berkeley, K(M) 160064. Epitype of Sphaeria sanguinea var.
cicatricum designated here: Slovenia, between Domžale
and Kamnik, Arboretum Volčji Potok, prealpine zone, on dead buds or
bark of decaying, terminal twig still attached to ca. 80 year-old,
living B. sempervirens tree, July 2009, H.-J. Schroers & M.
Žerjav, CBS
H-20374, twig with perithecial stromata filed together with dried
SNA culture of ex-epitype ascospore isolate
CBS 125549.Additional specimen and strains examined: Same location as the
epitype. On dead buds or decaying terminal twig still attached to living
B. sempervirens tree,
CBS H-20376,
ascospore culture CBS
125552; CBS
H-20377, ascospore culture
CBS 125553;
CBS H-203801,
ascospore culture CBS
125740; on B. sempervirens var. elegantissima,
July 2009, H.-J. Schroers & M. Žerjav,
CBS H-20375,
ascospore culture CBS
125550.Geejayessia cicatricum, spores and spore forming cells. A–C.
Asci with broadly rounded or slightly flattened apex, with visible refractive
ring. D–J. Ascospores, with E, G showing surface roughening. K, L.
Branched conidiophores and monophialides from sporodochia with anastomosing
cells. M–Q. Macroconidia. A–J, M from natural substrate. K,
N–Q from SNA, SNA/CL or SNA/B. L from PDA. A–J, L,
CBS H-20374; K, N,
P, Q, CBS 125549;
M, CBS 125552; O,
CBS 125550. Scale
bars: A, O 50 = μm, B, C, K, L = 20 μm, G (applies also to D–F), I
(H, J) = 10 μm, P (M, N, Q) = 50 and 10 μm.DNA sequences generated: ITS rDNA
(CBS 125553:
HM626653, 125550: HM626654, 125740: HM626655, 125552: HQ728145). LSU rDNA
(CBS 125553:
HM626665, 125550: HM626666, 125740: HM626667). acl1
(CBS 125740:
HM626635, 125549: HM626636, 125552: HQ728171, 125553: HQ728170).
tef-1α (CBS
125553: HM626645, 125550: HM626642, 125549: HM626643, 125552:
HM626644, 125740: HM626646). rpb2
(CBS 125740:
HM626680, 125549: HM626679, 125552: HQ728153). See Gräfenhan et
al. (2011) for other
strains included in Fig. 1.Notes: The morphological distinctions between G.
cicatricum and G. desmazieri are discussed in the notes for
G. desmazieri. Based on the collections available including the
isotype, G. cicatricum occurs on dead buds specifically on decaying
or dead terminal branches of Buxus sempervirens, whereas the majority
of G. desmazieri specimens suggest a habitat on thicker, subterminal
branches, with perithecia forming on bark. Although the niche of these species
may overlap, there are no indications that they co-occur. The width of
macroconidia from the type specimen of Sphaeria sanguinea var.
cicraticum (K 160064) were wider than macroconidia of G.
desmazieri, confirming the usefulness of this character for
distinguishing the species.(Schw.) Schroers &
Gräfenhan, comb. nov. MycoBank
MB519483.
Fig. 7.
Basionym:
Sphaeria atrofusca Schw., Trans. Amer. Philos. Soc. ser. 2. 4: 206.
1832.
Fig. 7.
Geejayessia atrofusca. A, B. Habit of perithecia on twigs of
Staphylea trifolia. C, G, H. Longitudinal section through perithecial
stroma (C), lateral perithecial wall (G), stroma composed of hypha-like cells
(H). D–F. Colour change in perithecium in water (D), replaced with 2 %
KOH (E) and then lactic acid (F). I. Hypha-like cells continuous with cells of
the stroma covering base of perithecium. J, K. Face view of outermost cells of
perithecial wall with Samuels pores (arrows). L. Ascus. M. Ascospores, the
bottom one showing surface. N. Sporodochium. O, P. Mononematious, simple
conidiophores, phialides. Q, R. Macroconidia. S, T. Aseptate or 1-septate
microconidia. A–M, CBS
H-20381, from natural substrate; N–T,
CBS 125505 ex
ascospores of CBS
H-20381 on SNA/CL. Scale bars: A = 1 mm; B, C = 500 μm;
D–F = 100 μm; G, J, K, M, O, P, S, T = 10 μm; H, I, L, N = 20
μm; Q, R = 50 and 5 μm.
≡ Nectria atrofusca (Schw.) Ellis & Everhart, N. Amer.
Pyrenomyc.: 99. 1892.= Fusarium staphyleae Samuels & Rogerson, Brittonia 36: 84.
1984.Habitat: On bark of twigs of Staphylea trifolia,
associated with twig blight (Samuels &
Rogerson 1984).Description and illustrations: Samuels & Rogerson
(1984).Material studied: Canada, Ontario, Ottawa, Petrie Island,
riverine forest, on twig of Staphylea trifolia, Oct. 2006, T.
Gräfenhan T.G. 2006-01, DAOM 238118, ascospore isolate
CBS 125482; same as
above: T.G. 2006-01A, conidial isolate
CBS 125503; Nov.
2008, T.G. 2008-34, ascospore isolate
CBS 125505.
USA, New Jersey, Palisade Interstate Parkway, Staphylea
trifolia, C.T. Rogerson 81-53, BBA 66968.Geejayessia atrofusca. A, B. Habit of perithecia on twigs of
Staphylea trifolia. C, G, H. Longitudinal section through perithecial
stroma (C), lateral perithecial wall (G), stroma composed of hypha-like cells
(H). D–F. Colour change in perithecium in water (D), replaced with 2 %
KOH (E) and then lactic acid (F). I. Hypha-like cells continuous with cells of
the stroma covering base of perithecium. J, K. Face view of outermost cells of
perithecial wall with Samuels pores (arrows). L. Ascus. M. Ascospores, the
bottom one showing surface. N. Sporodochium. O, P. Mononematious, simple
conidiophores, phialides. Q, R. Macroconidia. S, T. Aseptate or 1-septate
microconidia. A–M, CBS
H-20381, from natural substrate; N–T,
CBS 125505 ex
ascospores of CBS
H-20381 on SNA/CL. Scale bars: A = 1 mm; B, C = 500 μm;
D–F = 100 μm; G, J, K, M, O, P, S, T = 10 μm; H, I, L, N = 20
μm; Q, R = 50 and 5 μm.DNA sequences generated: ITS rDNA
(CBS 125505:
HM626659). LSU rDNA (CBS
125505: HM626674). acl1
(CBS 125503:
HM626627, 125505: HM626628, BBA 66968: HM626637). rpb2
(CBS 125503:
HM626683, 125505: HM626682, BBA 66968: HM626681). See Gräfenhan et
al. (2011) for other
strains included in Fig. 1.Notes: The almost black perithecia and weak reaction of their
pigments to KOH are distinctive features of Geejayessia atrofusca. As
noted in the discussion of phylogeny, this species does not belong to
Gibberella, despite the similar colouration of perithecia on the
natural substratum. Geejayessia atrofusca is clearly a member of this
new genus based on combined LSU- and ITS analysis
(Samuels )
and the combined rpb2 and acl1 analysis
(Fig. 1). Geejayessia
atrofusca forms non-septate or sparsely septate microconidia on SNA. In
the other species of Geejayessia, no such microconidia were observed.
Samuels & Rogerson (1984)
described F. staphyleae from cultures grown from ascospores isolated
from G. atrofusca; thus the genetic connection between the teleomorph
and anamorph covered by these two names is clear.Gräfenhan & Schroers,
sp. nov. MycoBank
MB519482. Figs
8,
9.
Fig. 8.
Geejayessia celtidicola, perithecia on the natural substrate,
holotype. A, B. Habit on bark of Celtis occidentalis. C, D. Colour change in
perithecium in 2 % KOH (C) then replaced by lactic acid (D). E. Longitudinal
section of erumpent stroma and perithecia. F–I. Face view of perithecial
wall. F. Cells on the surface of perithecia showing hyphal or setose
characteristics. G, H. Outermost cells of the main perithecial wall with
Samuels pores. I. Intermediate cells of the perithecial wall. J–L.
Median longitudinal sections of perithecia or perithecial walls. M.
Longitudinal section through stroma supporting the perithecia showing
hypha-like cells. B. after rehydration in water; E, H, J–M in Shears; F,
G, I in water. Scale bars: A = 500 μm; B, E = 200 μm; C, D = 100 μm;
F–I = 10 μm; J–M = 20 μm.
Fig. 9.
Geejayessia celtidicola, spores and spore forming cells.
A–C. Asci with rounded apex, lacking refractive ring. D. Ascospore
surface. E, F. Ascospores. G. Longitudinal section of sporodochium. H.
Hymenial tissue of base of sporodochial stroma. I–K. Monophialides on
branched conidiophores from sporodochial hymenium, I, J. With anastomoses.
L–P. Macroconidia. A–F. Holotype
CBS H-20378;
G–K, P CBS
125502; L, M, O,
CBS 125504; N,
CBS 125481. Scale
bars: A, B (applies also to C), N (L, M, O, P) = 50 μm; D (E, F) = 10
μm; G =100 μm; H, J (I, K) = 20 μm.
Etymology: In reference to the substrate of this species,
Celtis occidentalis.Perithecia e stromate in substratis lignosis erumpente exorientia,
superficialia vel interdum partim semi-immersa, dense coarctata, ovoidea vel
obpyriformia, breviter papillata, levia, intense rubida, ca.
200–250 μm alta, 120–210 μm lata in 2 % KOH purpurascentia,
luteo-aurantia in acido lactico. Stromata prosenchymatica cellulae partim
hyphales. Tunica perithecii ex uno strato composita, 15–25 μm crassa
ad latus, cellulae exteriores angulares vel lobatae,
(6.5–)9.5(–14) × (5–)6.5(–11) μm, interiores
subglobosae vel angulares, (9.5–)14(–18.5) ×
(6.5–)10(–13.5) μm; cellulae contiguae pseudoporis connexae.
Asci cylindrici vel clavati, apice anulo refringente carentes,
70–87.5–94 × 6–10–13.5 μm. Ascosporae
ellipsoidea, uniseptatae, leves vel eximie verruculosae, hyalinae vel pallide
brunneae, (10.5–)12.5–13.5–14(–16.5) ×
(4.5–) 5–5.5–6(–6.5) μm. Coloniae fere celeriter
crescentes, in agaro PDA incoloratae vel pallide luteae 15–25 °C,
pallide brunneoaurantiacae 30 °C, reversum pigmento rubro carens. Mycelium
aerium in agaro PDA et SNA parcum vel in parte media pulvinos albos formans.
Sporodochia post 14 dies vel postea in foliis Dianthi caryophylli vel ad
superficiem agari SNA formata, hemisphaerica. Monophialides sporodochiales
plus minusve cylindricae, (12–)20–22–25(–34) μm
longae, 2–3 μm latae ad basim, 1.5–2 μm latae ad
apicem. Microconidia absentia. Massae conidiorum sporodochialium in agaro SNA
hemisphaericae, albidae vel pallide aurantiacae. Macroconidia sporodochialia
(1–)3–5(–8)-septata, cellulae basilares pediformes,
latissimae in medio, cellulae centrales et basilares quasi rectae, apicales
rostratae et curvatae vel utrinque modice curvata; conidia 3-septata
(34.5–)54–58–62(–70) ×
(3.5–)4–4.5–4.5(–5) μm; 4-septata
(56–)60.5–64–67.5(–75) ×
(4–)4.5–4.5–4.5(–5) μm; 5-septata
(55–)63–67.5–74(–78.5) ×
(4–)4.5–5–5(–5.5); 6-septata 66–82.5 ×
4.5–5.5; 7-septata 71–84 × 5–5.5; 8-septata
74.5–93 × 5–5.5 μm. Chlamydosporae absentes.Geejayessia celtidicola, perithecia on the natural substrate,
holotype. A, B. Habit on bark of Celtis occidentalis. C, D. Colour change in
perithecium in 2 % KOH (C) then replaced by lactic acid (D). E. Longitudinal
section of erumpent stroma and perithecia. F–I. Face view of perithecial
wall. F. Cells on the surface of perithecia showing hyphal or setose
characteristics. G, H. Outermost cells of the main perithecial wall with
Samuels pores. I. Intermediate cells of the perithecial wall. J–L.
Median longitudinal sections of perithecia or perithecial walls. M.
Longitudinal section through stroma supporting the perithecia showing
hypha-like cells. B. after rehydration in water; E, H, J–M in Shears; F,
G, I in water. Scale bars: A = 500 μm; B, E = 200 μm; C, D = 100 μm;
F–I = 10 μm; J–M = 20 μm.Stromata erumpent through bark, prosenchymatous, cells 3–5
μm wide, with at least some hypha-like cells, arranged in an irregular
textura porrecta; hyphae connecting cells of stroma to wall of lower
part of perithecia, either arranged in a network or as terminal hyphae,
18.5–45 long, 6–7.5 μm wide near base, with walls to 2 μm
wide. Perithecia crowded in groups of up to 15, seated on surface of
or with base partly immersed in stroma, smooth, broadly ampulliform with a
short neck or broadly ellipsoidal, dark red with a darker red ostiolar region,
dark purple red in 2 % KOH, yellowish orange in lactic acid; in longitudinal
sections 200–250 μm high, 120–210 μm wide. Perithecial
wall consisting of a single region, 15–25 μm thick or,
subapically, 30–35 μm, of 3–5 layers of cells; in face view,
cell walls 1–1.5 μm thick in outer layers, 0.5 μm thick or less in
inner layers, with pores in all layers; cells in outer layers lobed to
angular, (6.5–)9.5(–14) × (5–)6.5(–11) μm,
arranged in a textura angularis to t. epidermoidea, in inner
layers subglobose to angular, (9.5–) 14(–18.5) ×
(6.5–)10(–13.5) μm, arranged in a textura angularis;
in longitudinal section, cells subglobose to angular, flatter towards centrum.
Asci cylindrical or clavate, with rounded apex, without a visible
refractive ring, eight-spored, overlapping uniseriate or biseriate above and
uniseriate below, 70–87.5–94 × 6–10–13.5 μm.
Ascospores equally 2-celled, ellipsoidal, slightly constricted at
septum, smooth or finely verruculose, hyaline or pale brown,
(10.5–)12.5–13.5–14(–16.5) ×
(4.5–)5–5.5–6(–6.5) μm.Geejayessia celtidicola, spores and spore forming cells.
A–C. Asci with rounded apex, lacking refractive ring. D. Ascospore
surface. E, F. Ascospores. G. Longitudinal section of sporodochium. H.
Hymenial tissue of base of sporodochial stroma. I–K. Monophialides on
branched conidiophores from sporodochial hymenium, I, J. With anastomoses.
L–P. Macroconidia. A–F. Holotype
CBS H-20378;
G–K, P CBS
125502; L, M, O,
CBS 125504; N,
CBS 125481. Scale
bars: A, B (applies also to C), N (L, M, O, P) = 50 μm; D (E, F) = 10
μm; G =100 μm; H, J (I, K) = 20 μm.Colonies on PDA after 7 d at 20 and 25 °C 25 mm diam; optimum
for growth 20–25 °C, maximum 30–34 °C, no growth at 35
°C. Colony reverse lacking red pigments, after 14–21 d on PDA at
15–25 °C without obvious pigment production, yellowish white to pale
yellow (3–4A2–3), at 30 °C weakly greyish to brownish orange
(5B4, 6C7). Colony surface on PDA smooth, wax-like because of dense spreading
mycelium; aerial mycelium sparse, felt-like, produced in central half of
colony or restricted to pustules; aerial mycelium on SNA present in central
half of colony, white, loosely branched or felt-like, absent towards margin.
Conidiation on SNA beginning within 14 d or later, inconspicuous, along
submersed hyphae or from sporodochia on CL, later on surface of SNA and from
aerial mycelium. Sporodochia on CL consisting of a well-developed stroma
covered with dense, ca. 100 μm high hymenium of phialides and
anastomosing cells of conidiophores; cells of subhymenium densely packed,
prosenchymatous. Conidiogenous cells monophialidic, 2-level or twice
monochasial, more or less cylindrical but tapering towards apex,
(12–)20–22–25(–34) μm long, 2–3 μm wide at
base, 1.5–2 μm wide near conidiogenous aperture.
Microconidia not observed. Macroconidia formed in off-white
or pale yellow slimy masses, with pronounced pedicellate foot cell and almost
equilateral fusoid, hooked apical cell, gently and equally curved towards both
ends or with central and basal part nearly straight,
(1–)3–5(–8) septate: 3-septate
(34.5–)54–58–62(–70) ×
(3.5–)4–4.5–4.5(–5) μm; 4-septate
(56–)60.5–64–67.5(–75) ×
(4–)4.5–4.5–4.5(–5) μm; 5-septate
(55–)63–67.5–74(–78.5) ×
(4–)4.5–5–5(–5.5) μm; 6-septate 66–82.5
× 4.5–5.5; 7-septate 71–84 × 5–5.5 μm;
8-septate, 74.5–93 × 5–5.5 μm. Chlamydospores
not observed.Habitat: On bark of dead twigs and branches in the canopy of
living Celtis occidentalis.Distribution: North America (Canada: Ontario).Typification: Holotype of Geejayessia celtidicola:
Canada, Ontario, Ottawa, Petrie Island, riverine forest, on dead
branches in the canopy of a living Celtis occidentalis tree,
Nov. 2008, T. Gräfenhan 2008-32,
CBS H-20378, twig
with perithecial stromata; ex-type culture
CBS 125502.Additional specimens and strains examined: Canada, Ontario,
same general location and habit as the holotype, Nov. 2006., T. Gräfenhan
2006-29, DAOM 238129, ascospore isolate
CBS 125481;
Ontario, Carleton Place, riverine forest, Nov. 2006, T. Gräfenhan
2006-35, DAOM 238130, ascospore isolate
CBS 125504.DNA sequences generated: ITS rDNA
(CBS 125504:
HM626656, 125502: HM626657). LSU rDNA
(CBS 125504:
HM626668, 125502: HM626669). acl1
(CBS 125504:
HM626624, 125502: HM626625). tef-1α
(CBS 125504:
HM626639, 125502: HM626638, 125481: HQ728149). rpb2
(CBS 125504:
HM626686, 125502: HM626685). See Gräfenhan et al.
(2011) for other strains
included in Fig. 1.Notes: In addition to host differences, the dark red perithecia of
Geejayessia celtidicola distinguish this species from its
phylogenetic relatives G. cicatricum and G. desmazieri. The
shape and size of its macroconidia are reminiscent of G. desmazieri,
but they are longer and more frequently septate. PDA cultures of G.
celtidicola are relatively darkly pigmented at 30 °C, compared with
those of G. cicatricum and G. desmazieri. On PDA, cultures
form comparatively little aerial mycelium. The shapes and sizes of the
macroconidia in G. celtidicola and G. zealandica are
similar. The 3-septate macroconidia in G. zealandica are mostly less
than 4 μm and its 5-septate macroconidia can be up to 5 μm wide
(Nirenberg & Samuels
2000), whereas the 3-septate macroconidia of G.
celtidicola are mostly 4–5 μm wide and have a similar width to
the 5-septate macroconidia formed on SNA.Fusarium celtidis produces almost straight macroconidia on fruits
of C. occidentalis in North America
(Ellis & Tracy 1890),
whereas those of G. celtidicola are frequently gently curved
throughout. The shape and substratum of F. celtidis suggest the
F. lateritium complex as noted by Booth
(1971) following Wollenweber
& Reinking (1935).
Fusarium sphaeriaeforme, described from bark of Celtis
australis in Italy, differs from G. celtidicola by its shorter
macroconidia (Saccardo
1892).(Becc. & De Not.)
Schroers, Gräfenhan & Seifert, comb. nov. MycoBank
MB519480. Figs
10,
11.
Basionym:
Nectria desmazieri Becc. & De Not., Schem. di Classif. Sferiacei:
10. 1863.
Fig. 10.
Geejayessia desmazieri, perithecia on the natural substrate.
A–D. Habit on twigs of Buxus sempervirens. E–G. Colour
change in perithecium in water (E), replaced with 2 % KOH (F) and then lactic
acid (G). H–L. Longitudinal section through perithecial stroma (H),
single perithecium (I), lateral perithecial wall (J), stroma with hypha-like
cells (K), perithecial wall near ostiole (L). M, N. Hyphal or setose cells on
the surface of perithecial wall. O–Q. Face view of outermost (O),
intermediate (P) and innermost (Q) cell layers of perithecial wall. Arrows in
O, P indicate Samuels pores in cell walls. H–L in Shears; M–Q in
water. A, BPI 798402, isotype of N. desmazieri; B, M–O
CBS H-20373; C, Q
W-10342, isotype of N. gibbera; D–L, P,
CBS H-20372,
epitype; Q, “Funghi. rh. 2357, Fuckel 852”. Scale bars: A–D
= 500 μm; E–G = 100 μm; H = 200 μm; I = 50 μm; J–L =
20 μm; M–Q = 10 μm.
Fig. 11.
Geejayessia desmazieri, spores and spore forming cells. A–C.
Asci with broadly rounded or slightly flattened apex, lacking or with
inconspicuous refractive rings. D. Ascospore surface. E. Ascospores. F.
Branched conidiophores from sporodochia. G, N. Hymenium of monophialides from
sporodochia. H–M, O–V. Macroconidia from sporodochia. A–E,
N, O–V, from natural substrate. F–M, from SNA/B or SNA/CL.
A–C, CBS
H-20372, epitype of G. desmazieri; D, E,
CBS H-20373; F, G,
L, M, CBS 840.85;
H–J, BBA 67515; K, CBS
125507, ex-epitype strain; N–V, G00110886, lectotype of
N. gibbera. N, S–V, mounted in lactic acid, all others in
water. Scale bars: B (also applies to A, C), H (I–M, O–V) = 50
μm; D, E = 10 μm; F, G (N) = 20 μm; O (H–M, P–V) = 5
μm.
≡ Dialonectria desmazieri (Becc. & De Not.) Petch,
Naturalist (London): 281. 1937.= Nectria coccinea var. cicatricum Desm., Ann. Sci. Nat.,
Bot. 10: 351. 1848 fide
Wollenweber & Reinking
1935, Booth 1971.
Type not seen.= Nectria gibbera Fuckel, Jahrb. Nassauischen Vereins Naturk.
23-24: 177. 1870.= Fusarium fuckelii Sacc., Syll. Fung. 4: 695. 1886.Stromata erumpent, prosenchymatous, cells
3.5–5.5(–6.5) μm wide, with at least some hypha-like cells,
arranged in an irregular textura porrecta; hyphae continuous with
cells of stroma clinging to wall of the perithecial base, either arranged like
a network or as terminal hyphae 25–55 μm long, 5–8 μm wide,
with walls 2–3 μm wide. Perithecia typically crowded in
groups of 3 to > 50, sometimes solitary or gregarious, either formed
superficially or with base somewhat immersed in stroma, smooth, broadly
ampulliform with a short neck or broadly ellipsoidal, pale to brownish orange,
reddish brown or brownish to greyish red, less often bright to dark red,
frequently with a slightly darker ostiolar region when dry, brownish to deep
violet in 2 % KOH, yellowish orange in lactic acid; in longitudinal section
200–300 μm high, 150–220 μm wide. Perithecial wall
of a single region, 20–30 μm thick or, subapically 30–40 μm,
consisting of 3–5 layers of cells; in face view, cell walls to 1.5 μm
in outer layers thick, 0.5 μm thick or less in inner layers, in all layers
with pores; cells in outer layers angular to somewhat lobed,
(9.5–)13(–18.5) × (5.5–)9(–13.5) μm, arranged
in a textura epidermoidea or t. angularis; cells of inner
layers subglobose to angular, (10–)15(–23) ×
(8.5–)11.5(–16) μm, arranged in a textura angularis;
in longitudinal sections, cells subglobose to angular, flatter towards
centrum. Asci cylindrical or clavate, with a rounded or flattened
apex, lacking or with an inconspicuous refractive ring, eight-spored, mostly
overlapping uniseriate or biseriate above and uniseriate below,
(75.5–)85(–100) × (8–)9(–11) μm.
Ascospores equally 2-celled, broadly ellipsoidal with broadly
rounded, rarely somewhat tapering ends, verruculose, hyaline or pale brown,
(9.5–)11–12–12.5(–15) ×
(4.5–)5.5–5.5–6(–7) μm.Colonies on PDA after 7 d at 20 °C 15 mm diam, 20 mm at 25
°C; optimum for growth 20–25 °C, maximum 30–34 °C, no
growth at 35 °C. Colony reverse lacking red pigments, after 14–21 d
on PDA at 15 °C without obvious pigment production, at 20–25 °C
pale yellow, light yellow to greyish yellow (4A5–4B5), at 30 °C with
a pale yellow soluble pigment. Colony surface on PDA with felt-like, white or
somewhat greyish green aerial mycelium, smooth towards margin, wax-like or
with sparse aerial mycelium; on SNA unpigmented or pale yellow, typically
smooth or with scant cottony, white aerial mycelium near inoculum or CL or B
plant material. Conidiation on SNA within 14 d or later inconspicuously
submersed along hyphae or from sporodochia on surface or on CL or B; on PDA
also sporulating in aerial mycelium. Sporodochia with a hymenium of
branched conidiophores with single phialides, or whorls of 2–3 terminal
monophialides; cells of stroma densely packed, arranged in an irregular
textura porrecta. Phialides more or less cylindrical but tapering
towards apex, on SNA (11–)18–21.5–24(–34) μm long,
(2.5–)3–3–3.5(–4) μm wide at base,
(2.5–)3–3.5–4(–4.5) μm in middle,
(1.5–)2–2.5–2.5(–2.5) μm wide near the
conidiogenous aperture. Microconidia not observed.
Macroconidia formed in pale yellow to pale orange, slimy masses to 3
mm diam, gently curved throughout or with central part almost straight and
cylindrical, with a pronounced pedicellate foot cell and an inequilaterally
fusoid, hooked apical cell, (1–)3–5(–7) septate: 3-septate
(41.5–)50–52.5–55.5(–63.5) ×
(4.5–)5–5–5(–5.5) μm; 4-septate
(51–)57(–64.5) × (4.5–)5(–5.5) μm; 5-septate
(55–)62(–72.5) × (4.5–)5(–5.5) μm; 6-septate
63–74 × 5.5–6 μm. Chlamydospores not
observed.Sporodochia on G 00110886, lectotype of N. gibbera,
erumpent through bark, with pale yellow to off-white conidial masses.
Macroconidia (1–)3–5 septate, when measured in water:
1-septate macroconidia 59–61 × 5–6 μm (n = 3); 3-septate
58–68.5 × 5–6.5 μm (n = 14); 4-septate 60.5 × 6
μm (n = 1); 5-septate 58–68 × 5.5–6.5 μm (n = 10); in
lactic acid: 1-septate 61 × 5.5 μm (n = 1); 3-septate 53–61
× 5–6 μm (n = 3); 5-septate 59–66 × 5.5–6
μm (n = 5). Macroconidia on BPI 798402, isotype of N.
desmazieri, measured in lactic acid/cotton blue, 3-septate
36.5–43.5 × 4.0–4.5 μm (n = 5).Habitat: On decaying or small, dead branches or twigs of Buxus
balearica and B. sempervirens, often on bark near or on scars of
subterminal twigs or in axils of leaves and twigs, less frequently on dead
buds.Distribution: Europe (Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Spain).Typification: Lectotype of Nectria desmazieri designated
here: Italy, Pisa, Botanical Gardens, on twig of Buxus
balearica, 1862, O. Beccari, Erbar. Crittogam. Ital. Cent. X. n. 983, BPI
798402; ex herb. Bot. Gard. Pisa, a specimen from Shear Study Collection Types
& Rarities where it was noted as an isotype, consisting of a single twig,
ca. 4.5 cm long and 3–5 mm wide comprising several clustered
perithecia and sporodochia with macroconidia. Syntype: K, a small
fragment unsuitable for slide preparation. Epitype of
Nectria desmazieri designated here: Italy, Latio,
Bagnaia, Villa Lante, in park, on twig of Buxus sempervirens, Nov.
2007, W. Gams TG2007-87, CBS
H-20372, ex-epitype strain, isolated from ascospores,
CBS 125507; the
specimen comprises several clustered perithecia but macroconidia and
sporodochia were not seen. Lectotype of Fusarium fuckelii
and Nectria gibbera designated here: Germany, Nassau (now
Hesse), Oestrich, K.W.G.L. Fuckel Fungi rh. 2357, originally labelled
“Nectria desmazieri + F. integr.; I. & II.”,
G 00110886, Herbier Fuckel 1894, Herbier Boissier. This is the specimen to
which Fuckel added drawings showing (i) a Fusarium macroconidium 68
× 8 μm, (ii) an ascus 72 × 8 μm, (iii) an ascospore 11
× 5 μm, (iv) the habitat of a Fusariumsporodochium, and (v)
the habitat of a “roth durchscheinend” perithecium. The lectotype
consists of a twig ca. 5.5 cm long and ca. 4 mm thick with a
few perithecia and sporodochia. Isolectotypes for Nectria
gibbera: all labelled “Fungi rh. 2357” (see also lectotype of
Nectria gibbera): Fuckel 852, as Nectria gibbera, G
00110885, Herbier Fuckel 1894, Herbier Barbey-Boissier; W 10342, Herbier
Fuckel 1894, Herbier Barbey-Boissier. As Nectria gibbera II, G
00110888, G 00110887. As Nectria desmazieri det. Fuckel and N.
gibbera (non N. desmazieri) det. J. Weese, 16 March 1910, W
2009-01115. As “Nectria desmazieri + F. integr.; I.
& II.”, M-0155489.Additional specimens and strains examined: All from twigs of
Buxus sempervirens. Belgium, as Fusarium buxicola,
CBS 840.85 = BBA
64557. France, Jardin Public 64 Eaux Chaudes, 14 June 1992, F.
Candoussau 4856-4, as Nectria desmazieri, BPI 747855; culture BBA
67515 = GJS 92-65; Cappenberg, G 00110881. Italy, Treviso, Selva,
Saccardo Mycotheca Veneta 116, Sept. 1874, BPI 551667, annotated by G.J.
Samuels, Nov. 1989: “This exsiccata was cited by Booth
(1971: Fusarium) as
Nectria desmazier(es)i. The perithecia here are
immature and do not contain asci. Perithecia are orange-yellow, cells at the
surface of the perithecial wall are angular. This is definitely not a member
of the Nectria episphaeria group. Fusarium present”.
Spain, Montserrat, near Barcelona, Sept. 2007, W. Gams TG2007-69,
CBS H-20373,
culture CBS 125506.
UK, England, Norfolk, Overstrand Woods near Norwich, as Nectria
desmazieri, CBS
313.34.Geejayessia desmazieri, perithecia on the natural substrate.
A–D. Habit on twigs of Buxus sempervirens. E–G. Colour
change in perithecium in water (E), replaced with 2 % KOH (F) and then lactic
acid (G). H–L. Longitudinal section through perithecial stroma (H),
single perithecium (I), lateral perithecial wall (J), stroma with hypha-like
cells (K), perithecial wall near ostiole (L). M, N. Hyphal or setose cells on
the surface of perithecial wall. O–Q. Face view of outermost (O),
intermediate (P) and innermost (Q) cell layers of perithecial wall. Arrows in
O, P indicate Samuels pores in cell walls. H–L in Shears; M–Q in
water. A, BPI 798402, isotype of N. desmazieri; B, M–O
CBS H-20373; C, Q
W-10342, isotype of N. gibbera; D–L, P,
CBS H-20372,
epitype; Q, “Funghi. rh. 2357, Fuckel 852”. Scale bars: A–D
= 500 μm; E–G = 100 μm; H = 200 μm; I = 50 μm; J–L =
20 μm; M–Q = 10 μm.DNA sequences generated: ITS rDNA
(CBS 125507:
HM626651, 840.85: HM626650, BBA 67515: HM626652). LSU rDNA
(CBS 125507:
HM626663, 840.85: HM626662, BBA 67515: HM626664). acl1
(CBS 125506:
HM626632, 125507: HM626633, 840.85: HM626634, BBA 67515: HM626631).
rpb2 (CBS
125506: HM626676, 125507: HM626675, 840.85: HM626678, BBA 67515:
HM626677). tef-1α
(CBS 125507:
HQ728146, 840.85: HQ728147, BBA 67515: HM626641). See Gräfenhan et
al. (2011) for other
strains included in Fig. 1.Notes: The syntype of N. desmazieri (K), possibly studied
by Booth (1959,
1971), is in poor condition (B.
Aguirre-Hudson, pers. comm.) and was unavailable. Booth
(1959,
1971) reported perithecia and
sporodochia on this specimen but it is unclear whether the microscopic details
in his descriptions were based on original or secondary material. The label
information on BPI 798402, “Erb. Critt. Ital. n. 983, ex Herb. Bot.
Gard. Pisa” identifies this specimen as an isotype of N.
desmazieri (De Notaris
1863).Geejayessia desmazieri, spores and spore forming cells. A–C.
Asci with broadly rounded or slightly flattened apex, lacking or with
inconspicuous refractive rings. D. Ascospore surface. E. Ascospores. F.
Branched conidiophores from sporodochia. G, N. Hymenium of monophialides from
sporodochia. H–M, O–V. Macroconidia from sporodochia. A–E,
N, O–V, from natural substrate. F–M, from SNA/B or SNA/CL.
A–C, CBS
H-20372, epitype of G. desmazieri; D, E,
CBS H-20373; F, G,
L, M, CBS 840.85;
H–J, BBA 67515; K, CBS
125507, ex-epitype strain; N–V, G00110886, lectotype of
N. gibbera. N, S–V, mounted in lactic acid, all others in
water. Scale bars: B (also applies to A, C), H (I–M, O–V) = 50
μm; D, E = 10 μm; F, G (N) = 20 μm; O (H–M, P–V) = 5
μm.Geejayessia desmazieri is characterised by pale orange to reddish
brown, less typically reddish perithecia that turn brownish to deep violet in
2 % KOH. Perithecia on the isotype exhibit these colours, and are clustered in
small or large groups, similar to what we observed on authentic material of
N. gibbera. The perithecia of G. desmazieri are typically
associated with scars on the bark of twigs or formed on the bark. By means of
contrast, the perithecia of G. cicraticum, redescribed above, are
bright red and associated with decaying buds.The morphological characters of the anamorph support the distinction of
G. desmazieri and G. cicatricum. These include sizes and
shapes of macroconidia produced in culture and as observed on the lectotype
and additional specimens. Macroconidia or fragments of macroconidia
encountered on reference specimens were compared with macroconidia from pure
cultures of recently collected material. Measurements of the length and width
of these macroconidia confirmed the identity of the recently collected
specimens and the authentic material of N. gibbera as G.
desmazieri. Sporodochial macroconidia on the lectotype of N.
gibbera were used to recharacterise and lectotypify Fusarium
fuckelii, which we consider a synonym of G. desmazieri. The
macroconidia from these exsiccatae are typically less than 6.5 μm wide; on
the isotype of G. desmazieri, they are 3-septate, while on the
lectotype of N. gibbera, they are 3–5 septate
(Fig. 11O–V) similar to
macroconidia in recently isolated cultures
(Fig. 11H–M). The few
macroconidia encountered on the isotype of G. cicatricum were wider
than those of G. desmazieri, 6.5–7.5 μm and at least one had
8 septa; similarly broad and septate macroconidia were produced by freshly
collected strains of G. cicraticum.De Notaris (1863) originally
described G. desmazieri from Buxus balearica. The
identification of the herbarium specimens noted above as G.
desmazieri, all originating from B. sempervirens, is based on
their morphological similarities to the lectotype of N. desmazieri
designated above, and the concept is formalised by the designation of an
ex-epitype strain tied to DNA sequences.There has been confusion between Fusarium fuckelii (applicable to
the anamorph of G. desmazieri) and F. buxicola (applicable
to the anamorph of Cyanonectria buxi, see above), but the differences
in macroconidial dimensions allow the relevant specimen to be reidentified and
the names to be clarified. Saccardo
(1886) copied Fuckel's
description of the anamorph of N. gibbera for his diagnosis of F.
fuckelii and explicitly referred to Fuckel
(1870: 177) where the anamorph
of N. gibbera is described. Therefore, F. fuckelii was
unequivocally established as the anamorph of N. gibbera, and,
following our concepts, is a synonym of G. desmazieri. Fuckel
(1870) described the
macroconidia of Nectria gibbera, which he later accepted as a synonym
of N. desmazieri (Fuckel
1872), as “5–6-septatis, hyalinis, 68 × 8”
μm. Our observations of Fuckel's original material of N. gibbera
(G 00110886 and isotypes listed above) correct the width to 5–6.5 μm,
measurements that correspond to macroconidia of G. desmazieri. As
discussed above, Wollenweber & Reinking
(1935) and Booth
(1959,
1971) followed Fuckel's
synonymy of N. gibbera with G. desmazieri, but wrongly
adopted Saccardo's F. buxicola for the anamorph. Booth
(1959) reported 5–6
septate macroconidia measuring 30–55 × 4–5 μm, but later
(Booth, 1971) reported
3–5 septate macroconidia measuring 56–73 × 6–7 μm.
These macroconidial measurements correlate with our concept of G.
desmazieri; macroconidia of Cyanonectria buxi and G.
cicatricum are mostly longer, wider, and typically have more than 5
septa. His observation of “yellow to orange” perithecia suggests
that Booth (1959,
1971) saw only specimens and
strains of G. desmazieri, and did not see the species redescribed
above as C. buxi.(Cooke) Schroers, comb. nov.
MycoBank
MB519484.
Basionym:
Nectria zealandica Cooke, Grevillea 8: 65. 1879.≡ Cosmospora zealandica (Cooke) Samuels & Nirenberg,
Canad. J. Bot. 78: 1483. 2000.= Fusarium zealandicumNirenberg & Samuels, Canad. J. Bot. 78:
1483. 2000.Description and illustrations: Nirenberg & Samuels
(2000).Material studied: New Zealand, North Island, Auckland,
Waitemata City, Waitakere Ranges, Cascades, on bark of Hoheria
populnea, 3 June 1983, J.M. Dingley & A.Y. Rossman,
CBS 111.93 = BBA
64792, GJS 83-235, ex holotypus anamorphicus; specimen PDD 46436 = BPI 802574;
Canterbury, Christchurch, Riccarton, on bark of Plagianthus sp., J.M.
Dingley, May 1986, BPI 802575, culture
CBS 101913 = BBA
65034, GJS 86-509.DNA sequences generated: ITS rDNA
(CBS 111.93:
HM626658). LSU rDNA (CBS
111.93: HM626670). acl1
(CBS 111.93:
HM626626). tef-1α
(CBS 111.93:
HQ728148, 101913: HM626640). rpb2
(CBS 111.93:
HM626684).Notes: The perithecial wall anatomy, stromata development for
perithecia and sporodochia, and overall morphological characters of the
anamorph and teleomorph (Nirenberg &
Samuels 2000) justify the classification of N. zealandica
in Geejayessia. It differs from other members of the genus by
relatively thick perithecial walls.
DISCUSSION
Supraspecific classification
Fusarium typified by F. sambucinum is firmly linked
taxonomically to the teleomorphic genus Gibberella typified by G.
pulicaris. Both names refer to the same genetic and phylogenetic species.
Fusarium sambucinum is closely related to the Fusarium fujikuroi,
F. graminearum, F. incarnatum-equiseti, F. oxysporum species groups and
some others. Their close relationships are confirmed by studies using
ribosomal DNA sequences or protein-encoding genes for phylogenetic analyses
suggesting that these taxa form a monophyletic group
(Summerbell & Schroers
2002, O'Donnell , Schroers , O'Donnell
). The known teleomorphs of these species
groups almost always correspond to the modern concept of Gibberella;
they form homogeneously bluish black pigmented, KOH+, warted perithecia and
mostly multiseptate ascospores (Rossman
, Samuels
). Therefore, the strongly supported
phylogenetic clade accommodating Fusarium sambucinum and its closely
related sister clades has been referred to as the “Gibberella
clade” (O'Donnell ). Applying the philosophy of Article 59 of the International
Code of Botanical Nomenclature (McNeill
2006), Gibberella is the appropriate name for the
holomorphs in this clade. However, following the logic argued in this volume
by Gräfenhan et al.
(2011) and earlier by Seifert
& Samuels (2000), Cannon
& Kirk (2000), Rossman
& Samuels (2005),
Fusarium Link (1809)
has priority over Gibberella Sacc.
(1877) and we prefer to use
the earlier name for this clade.Samuels et al.
(2009) assigned the term
“Fusarium group” to the moderately supported phylogenetic
clade encompassing several statistically strongly supported subclades, whose
relationships among each other remained unresolved. They accepted the
subclades of the Fusarium group as genera, for example,
Albonectria, Cyanonectria, Gibberella,
Neocosmospora/Haematonectria (the latter to be replaced with an
earlier, legitimate genus name), following the underlying principles applied
to the generic concepts of nectriaceaous fungi presented by Rossman et
al. (1999). Our
phylogenetic studies based on protein-encoding genes
(Fig. 1,
Gräfenhan ) extend the results shown by Samuels et al.
(2009). They identify up to
eight strongly supported clades with Fusarium-like anamorphs apart
from Dialonectria, Fusicolla, Macroconia Microcera, and
Stylonectria that comprise the distantly related, basal
Fusarium clade.Our recognition of the distinctiveness of Cyanonectria,
Geejayessia, and other genera of the terminal Fusarium clade
aims to encapsulate a similar degree of divergence at the generic rank across
the Nectriaceae (cf.
Chaverri ,
Hirooka )
and in other ascomycetous families or orders (cf.
Crous ,
Tanaka ).
These conclusions also affirm the importance of applying monophyletic concepts
to fungi at the generic level. As discussed by Gräfenhan et al.
(2011), the falcate
macroconidia of Fusarium and morphologically similar genera cannot be
interpreted as a genus delineating structure, but are probably a plesiomorphic
character present in unrelated taxa of the Nectriaceae. At the
generic level, the recent name Cyanonectria is accepted here and the
new genus Geejayessia is proposed because they have apparently
evolved within the terminal Fusarium clade independently, and no
other generic name is available.Comparison of teleomorph characters of
“Haematonectria” illudens,
“Haematonectria” sp. and “Nectria”
albida. A–I. “Haematonectria”
illudens on the natural substrate. A. Habit of perithecia. B–D.
Longitudinal sections of perithecia, erumpent stroma and lateral perithecial
wall. E–G. Front view of cell layers of the perithecial wall, E, F
showing cells of perithecial warts. H, I. Ascospore, H showing surface
striations. J–P. “Haematonectria” sp. J–L.
Colour changes in perithecium mounted in water (J), replaced with 2 % KOH (K)
and then lactic acid (L). M. Habit of perithecia. N. Cells of perithecial
warts. O, P. Intermediate cells of the perithecial wall. Q–X.
“Nectria” albida. Q. Habit of perithecia. R–T.
Colour changes in perithecium mounted in water (R), replaced with 2 % KOH (S)
and then lactic acid (T). U. Ascospore. V. Short seta like cells emerging from
perithecial wall. W. Hypha-like cells probably continuous with cells of the
stroma covering base of perithecium. X. Outermost cell layer of perithecial
wall. Arrows in E–G, N–P, X indicate Samuels pores in cell-walls.
A–I BPI 802461; J–P BPI 745186; Q–X BPI 1108875. Scale bars:
A, Q = 500 μm; B, J–L, R–T = 100 μm; C, D = 50 μm;
E–I, N–P, U–X = 10 μm; M = 200 μm.Clarification of the concepts and nomenclature of the species of two of
these genera, Cyanonectria and Geejayessia, is the main
focus of this paper. Often misidentified as Fusarium buxicola,
representatives of both genera were previously classified in Fusarium
section Macroconia (Wollenweber
& Reinking 1935, Gerlach
& Nirenberg 1982).
Analysis of morphological characters
Delimitation of the genera Cyanonectria and Geejayessia
using morphological characters requires reinterpretation of the shape,
disposition, colour, and anatomical features of perithecia, ascal apex,
stroma, and anamorphic characters.Species of Geejayessia and Cyanonectria buxi form
perithecia on a hyphal or byssoid tissue (Figs
3I;
5G–I;
7C, H;
8E, M;
10H, K) as observed in
previous studies (Booth 1959,
Samuels & Rogerson 1984,
Nirenberg & Samuels 1990, Samuels
). We interpret these cushions as stromata
because they consist of densely aggregated, hypha-like cells that emerge
through cracks of woody parts or plant hosts or through leaflets of decaying
buds. Similar erumpent stromata were also seen in representatives of
“Haematonectria”
(Fig. 12C) and Fusarium
sensu stricto, while well-developed stromatal structures are typically
absent in genera such as Cosmospora, Dialonectria, Macroconia, and
Microcera (Samuels , Gräfenhan
). Booth
(1971: 59) concluded that the
presence or absence of stromata is “hardly worthy of generic
rank”, which explains why he placed G. desmazieri in the
otherwise astromatic “N.” episphaeria group
(Dialonectria sensu
Gräfenhan ). Phylogenetic analyses across the Nectriaceae and
the phylogenetic distinction of stromata forming and astromatous taxa does not
support Booth's view (Fig. 1,
Samuels ,
Gräfenhan ). Stromata erumpent through plant tissue and supporting
sporodochia and perithecia occur in diverse groups of the Hypocreales
(Samuels 1976,
Rossman ).
However, they frequently occur in taxa of the terminal Fusarium
clade, which is rich in plant parasitic species. In contrast, the nearly
astromatous genera Cosmospora, Dialonectria, Macroconia, and Microcera, distantly related to the terminal Fusarium clade
(Fig. 1,
Gräfenhan ), seem to be mostly associated with insects, lichens, and
other fungi. In Geejayessia species with their frequent occurrence on
dead branches of living trees, the stroma may be the interface between an
endophytic or endoparasitc lifestyle and the exposed fruiting phase (Figs
7C,
8E,
10H for perithecia;
Nirenberg & Samuels 2000,
fig. 3 and Samuels & Rogerson
1984, fig. 5 for sporodochia). Even in species of the
Fusarium clade associated with more ephemeral gramineous hosts,
perithecia are typically firmly connected to the substrate by weakly developed
stromata embedded in the plant tissue.
Fig. 12.
Comparison of teleomorph characters of
“Haematonectria” illudens,
“Haematonectria” sp. and “Nectria”
albida. A–I. “Haematonectria”
illudens on the natural substrate. A. Habit of perithecia. B–D.
Longitudinal sections of perithecia, erumpent stroma and lateral perithecial
wall. E–G. Front view of cell layers of the perithecial wall, E, F
showing cells of perithecial warts. H, I. Ascospore, H showing surface
striations. J–P. “Haematonectria” sp. J–L.
Colour changes in perithecium mounted in water (J), replaced with 2 % KOH (K)
and then lactic acid (L). M. Habit of perithecia. N. Cells of perithecial
warts. O, P. Intermediate cells of the perithecial wall. Q–X.
“Nectria” albida. Q. Habit of perithecia. R–T.
Colour changes in perithecium mounted in water (R), replaced with 2 % KOH (S)
and then lactic acid (T). U. Ascospore. V. Short seta like cells emerging from
perithecial wall. W. Hypha-like cells probably continuous with cells of the
stroma covering base of perithecium. X. Outermost cell layer of perithecial
wall. Arrows in E–G, N–P, X indicate Samuels pores in cell-walls.
A–I BPI 802461; J–P BPI 745186; Q–X BPI 1108875. Scale bars:
A, Q = 500 μm; B, J–L, R–T = 100 μm; C, D = 50 μm;
E–I, N–P, U–X = 10 μm; M = 200 μm.
Perithecia of C. buxi and Geejayessia spp. can be at
least partly covered by a network of hyphae that emerges from the byssoid
stroma (Figs 3L, M;
5M;
7I) and terminal hyphae,
apparently originating from this network, may appear as short setae (Figs
8F;
10M, N). A similar situation
occurs in “Nectria” albida, where bases of the smooth
perithecia seem to be covered by a hyphal network
(Fig. 12W) from which some
terminal hyphae emerge (Fig.
12V).Perithecia of Cyanonectria and Geejayessia are obpyriform
but those of the former have a somewhat widened, broadly rounded ostiolar
neck, described by Samuels et al.
(2009) as “knobby”
for C. cyanostoma (Fig.
3B–D). On drying, the perithecia collapse laterally. In
contrast, perithecia of G. atrofusca and G. zealandica are
rather globose (Fig.
7B–D, Rogerson & Samuels 1984, fig. 1;
Nirenberg & Samuels 2000,
fig. 4).Perithecial colour characters are often used to delineate teleomorphically
typified genera with Fusarium-like anamorphs
(Rossman ). Although the Nectriaceae are reasonably well
characterised by red or bluish black perithecia with positive colour changes
in KOH and lactic acid, our phylogenetic results suggest independent,
apomorphic losses or modifications of pigments. Red pigments have probably
been lost independently in “N.” albida
(Fig. 12Q–T), and
Albonectria (Fig.
13K–O), and bluish black in
“Albonectria” verrucosa, which has pale
KOH–perithecia but is phylogenetically within Fusarium sensu
stricto (Rossman , Gräfenhan ). Colour changes of perithecia in
Cyanonectria and Geejayessia correlate with the basic
phenology of the Nectriaceae. However, C. cyanostoma has
remarkable bicoloured perithecia (Samuels
) having a bluish black apex that reacts in
KOH in identical manner to the teleomorph of F. sambucinum
(Fig. 13A–F) and other
species of Fusarium sensu stricto, while the main part of the red
perithecial body reacts identically to the red perithecia of other genera of
the Nectriaceae. Although the perithecia of C. buxi lack red
colours and thus do not obviously correspond to the generic concept of
Cyanonectria, they are heterogeneously pigmented, intensely in their
upper part and faintly in their lower part
(Fig. 3C–G). The
heterogeneous aspect of perithecial pigmentation supports segregation of
Cyanonectria from other genera of the terminal Fusarium
clade.
Fig. 13.
Comparison of teleomorph characters of Fusarium sambucinum and
Albonectria rigidiuscula. A–J. Fusarium
sambucinum on the natural substrate. A–C. Habit of perithecia.
D–F. Colour changes in perithecium mounted in water (D), replaced with 2
% KOH (E) and then with lactic acid (F). G–I. Face view of cell layers
of the perithecial wall. G. Cells of perithecial warts. I. Innermost cells of
the perithecial wall. K–U. Albonectria rigidiuscula. K–M.
Colour changes in perithecium mounted in water (K), replaced with 2 % KOH (L)
and then with lactic acid (M). N, O. Habit of perithecia. P, Q. Cells of
perithecial warts. R. Cells of the main perithecial wall. S–U.
Ascospores, U showing wall surface. Arrows in H, I, P–R indicate Samuels
pores in cell walls. A, B, D–F HJS 1459; C, G–J BPI 1109327;
K–U HJS 0109. Scale bars: A = 1 mm; B, C, N, O = 500 μm; D–F,
K–M = 100 μm; G = 20 μm; H–J, P–U = 10 μm.
The spectrum of perithecial colours exhibited by G. celtidicola
and G. cicatricum is also quite characteristic; their perithecia are
bright or dark red on the natural substrate and become darker red or purple in
KOH and pale yellowish in lactic acid (Figs
5A–F,
8A–D). In contrast,
perithecia of G. desmazieri are mostly orange or brownish orange on
the natural substrate (Fig.
10A–C, Samuels , Booth
1959). The perithecia of G. atrofusca are somewhat
Gibberella-like because they appear black on the natural substrate.
They seem not to change colour in KOH and only inconspicuously so in lactic
acid (Fig. 7D–F;
Samuels & Rogerson 1984).
This behaviour differs not only from species of Fusarium, but also
from its closely related, KOH+ sister species in Geejayessia.Species of Geejayessia have outer perithecial wall layers
differing from those of species of Albonectria, Fusarium, and
“Haematonectria”. Perithecial walls of these species are
rather narrow, which led Booth
(1959) to classify N.
desmazieri in the N. episphaeria group. The wall consists of a
single region, comprising several layers of morphologically similar cells that
gradually change shape and size across the wall, but cannot be recognised as
forming distinct regions. This pattern is also shared by species of
Cyanonectria (Fig. 3H, K,
N), “N.” albida
(Fig. 12X), and the distantly
related species of Dialonectria, Cosmospora, Microcera, and
Macroconia. In contrast, Albonectria, Fusarium, and most
species of “Haematonectria” have rather strongly warted
perithecia and thicker perithecial walls.In species of Cyanonectria and Geejayessia, the cell
walls in all layers have locally and abruptly thinned areas ca. 1
μm diam or less, but which do not become complete pores (Figs
3N;
5N;
7J, K;
8G, H;
10O–P). We propose the
name “Samuels pores” for these structures.They appear to differ
from the so-called “Munk pores” in the Nitschkiaceae and
other related Sordariomycetes
(Carroll & Munk 1964),
which are typically surrounded by a distinctly thickened and morphologically
conspicuous rim (Samuels , figs 6,
12;
Vasilyeva , fig. 7 j, k). In contrast, the cell wall surrounding Samuels
pores in the Hypocreales is typically strongly and abruptly
attenuated and is probably never completely perforated; no rim surrounds these
pores. Samuels pores were seen in species of Microcera and, for
example, Cosmospora joca (Samuels
, fig. 23), C. lasiodiplodiae
(ibid., fig. 25), C. pseudepisphaeria
(Rossman ,
plate 28 i), Chaetopsinectria chaetopsinae
(Samuels 1985, fig. 1B),
Ch. chaetopsinae-penicillatae (ibid., fig. 4D), and Ch.
chaetopsinae-catenulatae (ibid., fig. 5B). At least rarely, they
occur in the outermost layers of perithecial cells or in the cells of
perithecial warts of representatives also of
“Haematonectria”
(Fig. 12E–G, N–P),
“Nectria” albida
(Fig. 12X), Fusarium
sambucinum (Fig. 13H, I),
and Albonectria rigidiuscula
(Fig. 13P–R).Perithecial walls of species of Cyanonectria and
Geejayessia are also similar to the innermost of the two or three
regions observed in species of the distantly related genus Bionectria
(Bionectriaceae). Samuels pores in Bionectria were only seen
in the innermost anatomical region of perithecial walls
(Schroers 2001, figs 31i, 42k,
44h, 46k). Samuels pores may occur only in the inner region of perithecial
walls that consist of multiple regions or throughout the entire perithecial
wall when there is only a single wall region. Accordingly, the presence or
absence of Samuels pores could be used as an additional criterion to identify
homologous perithecial wall regions among hypocrealean taxa. Their observed
presence in the innermost and also in the more or less outermost cell layers
in “Haematonectria”
(Fig. 12E–G, N–P),
“N.” albida (Fig.
12X) and Albonectria
(Fig. 13P–R) suggests
the perithecial walls may have been originally derived from, or consist of,
only one wall region. This wall region may be homologous to the entire wall of
Geejayessia species, but to the inner wall region only of
Bionectria species. This interpretation is discordant with the
prevailing view. For example, Rossman et al.
(1999) distinguished three
distinct perithecial wall regions in Albonectria and two in
“Haematonectria”, emphasising characters seen in
longitudinal sections such as shape of cells and thickness and pigmentation of
cell-walls.Comparison of teleomorph characters of Fusarium sambucinum and
Albonectria rigidiuscula. A–J. Fusarium
sambucinum on the natural substrate. A–C. Habit of perithecia.
D–F. Colour changes in perithecium mounted in water (D), replaced with 2
% KOH (E) and then with lactic acid (F). G–I. Face view of cell layers
of the perithecial wall. G. Cells of perithecial warts. I. Innermost cells of
the perithecial wall. K–U. Albonectria rigidiuscula. K–M.
Colour changes in perithecium mounted in water (K), replaced with 2 % KOH (L)
and then with lactic acid (M). N, O. Habit of perithecia. P, Q. Cells of
perithecial warts. R. Cells of the main perithecial wall. S–U.
Ascospores, U showing wall surface. Arrows in H, I, P–R indicate Samuels
pores in cell walls. A, B, D–F HJS 1459; C, G–J BPI 1109327;
K–U HJS 0109. Scale bars: A = 1 mm; B, C, N, O = 500 μm; D–F,
K–M = 100 μm; G = 20 μm; H–J, P–U = 10 μm.The asci of Geejayessia species are clavate and either lack or
have an inconspicuous refractive ring (Figs
6A–C,
7L,
9A–C,
11A–C). In
Cyanonectria buxi refractive rings were observed
(Fig. 11A–D) comparable
to those reported for C. cyanostoma
(Samuels ). The ascospores of all known Cyanonectria and
Geejayessia species are 1-septate. They are initially more or less
smooth, but, perhaps as a function of maturity, are sometimes finely warted in
Cyanonectria, G. atrofusca, and G. celtidicola (Figs
4E–H,
7M,
9D,
Samuels ,
fig. 2j), and clearly warted in G. cicatricum and G.
desmazieri (Figs
6D–G;
11D, E). At maturity and when
clearly warted, the ascospores were somewhat yellowish brown in
Geejayessia but hyaline in Cyanonectria. Our generic concept
emphasises the meaning of ascospore septation as a delimiting character. By
means of contrast, “N.” albida, Fusarium sensu
stricto, and Albonectria have multi-septate ascospores (Figs
12U;
13J, S, T).The macroconidia in Cyanonectria and Geejayessia species
correspond to Nectria section Macroconia, characterised by
an almost cylindrical main body and relatively conspicuous or thick walls and
septa (Wollenweber & Reinking
1935, Gerlach & Nirenberg
1982). They have moderately or well-developed, pedicellate basal
cells and gently curved or clearly hooked and tapering apical cells. Most
macroconidia are only gently curved (Figs
4U–Y;
7Q, R;
9L–P;
11H–M, O–V;
Nirenberg & Samuels 2000,
figs 8–10) but more arced macroconidia were seen in G.
cicatricum (Fig.
6M–Q). Distal and proximal cells of macroconidia are usually
longer than intercalary cells. A few macroconidia can be observed in squash
mounts of perithecial stromata from herbarium specimens. Erumpent sporodochia
sometimes occur, emerging through the outer cortex of the bark. Sporodochia of
C. buxi were seen on specimens lacking perithecial stromata,
e.g. CBS
125547. In culture, macroconidia are formed first on
verticillately branched conidiophores that correspond to structures called
macroconidial “sporodochia” by Wollenweber & Reinking
(1935) and Gerlach &
Nirenberg (1982) (Figs
6K, L;
9I, J;
11F). Conidiophore cells
beneath the phialides in sporodochia of Geejayessia frequently have
anastomosing bridges between neighbouring cells (Figs
6L;
9I, J). On SNA/CL or SNA/B,
sporodochia with a well-developed subhymenium occur in Cyanonectria
and Geejayessia (Figs
4T;
7N;
9G, H;
11G) similar to those observed
in nature for G. zealandica
(Nirenberg & Samuels 2000,
fig. 3). In culture, species of Cyanonectria and Geejayessia
are faster growing than the species originally included in Nectria
section Macroconia (Wollenweber
1926), transferred to Macroconia or Microcera
(Gräfenhan ). The anamorph of G. cicatricum may have been
confused with C. buxi or G. desmazieri in the past. It has
similarly wide and long macroconidia as C. buxi and forms similarly
pale colonies on SNA or PDA as G. desmazieri. Geejayessia celtidicola
forms comparably little aerial mycelium on PDA and, at 30 °C, produces
greyish colonies dissimilar to those of G. atrofusca, G. desmazieri,
and G. zealandica. On PDA, Cyanonectria buxi forms a dark
colony reverse and surface showing bluish hues
(Fig. 4AA–AD). This
combination of characters is not seen in other fusaria. A dark reverse is not
produced in cultures of its closest relative, C. cyanostoma; Samuels
et al. (2009)
described its PDA cultures as white to cream. When describing F.
buxicola, Gerlach & Nirenberg
(1982) mentioned fawn to brown
colours, rarely blue or verdigris spotted colonies. We encountered no such
spotted colouration in G. cicatricum or G. desmazieri, which
suggests that Gerlach & Nirenberg
(1982) may have included
C. buxi and G. desmazieri in their description of F.
buxicola. No red pigments were observed in Geejayessia, while in
Albonectria, Fusarium sensu stricto, and to some extent also
“Haematonectria”, red, violet, or purple pigments are
commonly seen.We did not see microconidia in our study of cultures of C. buxi
and G. desmazieri, but Gerlach & Nirenberg
(1982) reported
“ellipsoid, spindle- or comma-shaped (according to
Wollenweber & Reinking
1935 and J. Ehrlich, cited by
Booth 1959)” macroconidia
for C. buxi. Nirenberg & Samuels
(2000) did not mention
microconidia when describing G. zealandica. The microconidia we
observed in G. atrofusca (Fig. 7S,
T) largely confirm the observations made by Samuels & Rogerson
(1984).
Life style and ecology
Cyanonectria and Geejayessia are associated only with
woody hosts. Remarkably, we are not aware of any Geejayessia isolated
from bulk soil, while representatives of several other taxa in the terminal
Fusarium clade are well known as soil inhabitants or soil-borne plant
pathogens. With the exception of G. zealandica, the species of
Geejayessia and Cyanonectria have never been isolated from
substrates other than Buxus sempervirens, B. balearica (Buxales,
Buxaceae), Celtis occidentalis (Rosales, Ulmaceae), or
Staphylea trifolia (Crossosomatales, Staphyleaceae).
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