Stagonosporopsis stuijvenbergii Hern.-Restr., L. W. Hou, L. Cai & Crous, 2020
publication ID |
https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.65.47704 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0C4F7DF1-0BB7-5D4A-8D6B-1CABB52F5CE1 |
treatment provided by |
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scientific name |
Stagonosporopsis stuijvenbergii Hern.-Restr., L. W. Hou, L. Cai & Crous |
status |
sp. nov. |
Stagonosporopsis stuijvenbergii Hern.-Restr., L. W. Hou, L. Cai & Crous sp. nov. Figure 9 View Figure 9
Etymology.
stuijvenbergii refers to Simon van Stuijvenberg, who collected the soil sample from which the ex-type strain was isolated.
Typus.
The Netherlands. Gelderland province, Meteren, from garden soil, Mar. 2017, S. van Stuijvenberg (holotype designated here CBS H-24109; living ex-type culture CBS 144953 = JW 132011).
Conidiomata pycnidial, produced on the agar surface, scattered or aggregated, solitary globose to subglobose, or 4-7(-10) confluent and irregularly-shaped, brownish, glabrous, ostiolate, 200-1000 × 195-930 μm; with 1-2 slightly papillate ostioles, sometimes elongated to a short neck; pycnidial wall pseudoparenchymatous, 4-5 layers, 6.5-35 μm thick, outer layers composed of brown, flattened polygonal cells, 9.5-33 μm diam. Conidiogenous cells phialidic, hyaline, smooth, globose, ampulliform or lageniform, 4.5-9 × 4-8 μm. Conidia ellipsoidal to oblong, smooth- and thin-walled, hyaline, aseptate, 3.5-6.5 × 2-3 μm, 1-2-guttulate. Conidial matrix whitish.
Culture characteristics.
Colonies after 7 d at 25 °C, on OA reaching 75-80 mm diam, floccose aerial mycelium, olivaceous to pale olivaceous, whitish to pink near the edge, margin regular; reverse iron grey. On MEA reaching 65-70 mm diam, margin regular, aerial mycelium floccose, vinaceous buff with olivaceous edge; reverse darker brown with olivaceous black edge, buff near the centre. On PDA reaching 70-75 mm diam, margin regular, covered by floccose aerial mycelium, olivaceous, olivaceous black towards periphery, with pinkish to pale brown edge; reverse iron-grey, buff towards periphery. NaOH spot test negative on OA.
Additional specimens examined.
The Netherlands, Gelderland province, Arnhem, from garden soil, Mar. 2017, D. Peters, JW 14003; Utrecht province, Utrecht, from garden soil, Mar. 2017, N. Francisca, JW 44014; Utrecht, from garden soil, Mar. 2017, P. de Koff, JW 33021.
Notes.
Phylogenetically, S. stuijvenbergii is most closely related to S. weymaniae , another novel species collected from Dutch soil in this study (Figure 1 View Figure 1 ). However, S. stuijvenbergii is distinguishable from S. weymaniae by the colour and the size of its pycnidia, being brown and measuring 200-1000 × 195-930 μm in S. stuijvenbergii , whereas S. weymaniae produces whitish pycnidia, measuring 330-650 × 250-550 μm. Furthermore, S. weymaniae produces microconidia and chlamydospores, which were not observed in S. stuijvenbergii. Although there are several reports that Stagonosporopsis spp. could survive in soil for a short time ( Vaghefi et al. 2016), this is the first record of a Stagonosporopsis species only known from soil ( Domsch et al. 2007). Stagonosporopsis stuijvenbergii is represented by four strains isolated from different samples collected in Utrecht and Gelderland provinces.
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