Asterina dysoxyli P.D. Natekar, A.P. Patil, C.R. Patil, M.R. Bhise & S.V. Kambhar

Natekar, Pratik D., Patil, Anjali P., Patil, Chandrahas R., Bhise, Mahendra R. & Kambhar, Sidanand V., 2024, New teleomorphic and anamorphic taxa of Asterinaceous black mildew from Western coast of India, Phytotaxa 642 (1), pp. 73-83 : 74

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.642.1.6

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13693168

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03904408-8E2E-E056-FF64-FB443813F842

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Asterina dysoxyli P.D. Natekar, A.P. Patil, C.R. Patil, M.R. Bhise & S.V. Kambhar
status

sp. nov.

Asterina dysoxyli P.D. Natekar, A.P. Patil, C.R. Patil, M.R. Bhise & S.V. Kambhar sp. nov. ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 )

MycoBank number: MB 849598

Etymology:—Based on the host genus.

Holotype:—AMH-10591

Colonies epiphyllous, thin to sub-dense, up to 3 mm in diameter, rarely confluent. Hyphae straight to flexuous, branching mostly opposite at acute angles, loosely to closely reticulate, cells 15–24 × 4–7 µm. Appressoria opposite, sub-opposite, alternate and solitary, conoid, ovate, ampulliform, unicellular, entire, angular to rarely lobate, 7.5–11 × 4–7.5 µm. Thyriothecia loosely grouped, orbicular, up to 180 µm in diameter, margin dentate to fringed, fringed hyphae tortuous, elongated and devoid of appressoria, thyriothecia dehiscing stellately at the center; asci many, globose, eight spored, 37–41 µm in diameter; ascospores conglobate, brown, uniseptate, deeply constricted at septum, cells unequal, 26.5–29 × 13–15 µm, wall smooth. Pycnothyria few, similar to thyriothecia, smaller; conidia brown, ovoid to pyriform, 15–22 × 10–13 µm, wall smooth.

Distribution:— India (Maharashtra).

Material examined:— INDIA. Maharashtra: Waravade, Ratnagiri , on leaves of Dysoxylum gotadhora (Buch.- Ham.) Mabb. ( Meliaceae ), 16°56’67” N, 73°83’48” E, 80 m, 23 December 2021, Pratik Dilip Natekar- 5304, AMH-10591 (holotype) .

Notes:—Four species of Asterina have been reported on four hosts of Meliaceae viz. Asterina aglaiae Hosag. on Aglaia sp. ; A. chukrasiae Hosag. on Chukrasia tabularis A. Juss. ; A. cipadessae Yates on Cipadessa baccifera (Roxb. ex Roth) Miq. ; and A. trichiliae Doidge on Heynea trijuga Roxb. ex Sims , none of which match the present collection ( Table 1 View TABLE 1 ). There is no record of Asterina on the present host. Therefore, based on the host specificity, the present collection is treated as a new species.

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