Cytospora spiraeicola H.Y. Zhu & X.L. Fan, 2020

Zhu, Haiyan, Pan, Meng, Bezerra, Jadson D. P., Tian, Chengming & Fan, Xinlei, 2020, Discovery of Cytospora species associated with canker disease of tree hosts from Mount Dongling of China, MycoKeys 62, pp. 97-121 : 97

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.62.47854

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/37DD8FA7-A93E-510E-BD0B-0C4C2E4998C2

treatment provided by

MycoKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Cytospora spiraeicola H.Y. Zhu & X.L. Fan
status

sp. nov.

Cytospora spiraeicola H.Y. Zhu & X.L. Fan sp. nov. Fig. 7 View Figure 7

Etymology.

Named after the host genus on which it was collected, Spiraea .

Holotype.

China, Beijing City, Mentougou District, Mount Dongling, Xiaolongmen Forestry Centre (115°28'28.52"E, 39°55'49.42"N), from branches of Spiraea salicifolia , 17 Aug 2017, H.Y. Zhu & X.L. Fan, holotype CF 2019803, ex-type living culture CFCC 53138.

Description.

Necrotrophic on branches of Spiraea salicifolia and Tilia nobilis . Sexual morph: Ascostromata immersed in the bark, erumpent through the surface of bark, scattered, with 3-5 perithecia arranged regularly, 660-890 µm in diam. Conceptacle absent. Ectostromatic disc pale grey, usually surrounded by tightly crowded ostiolar necks, quadrangular, 240-350 µm in diam., with 5-8 ostioles arranged regularly per disc. Ostioles numerous, dark grey to black, at the same or above the level as the disc, concentrated, arranged regularly in a disc, 25-40 µm in diam. Perithecia dark grey to black, flask-shaped to spherical, arranged circularly, 210-250 µm in diam. Paraphyses lacking. Asci free, clavate to elongate, obovoid, 26-37 × 7.5-9 (av. = 33 ± 2.5 × 8.3 ± 0.9, n = 10) μm, 8-spored. Ascospores biseriate, elongate-allantoid, thin-walled, hyaline, slightly curved, aseptate, 8.5-12 × 2.5-3.5 (av. = 10 ± 1 × 3 ± 0.3, n = 30) μm. Asexual morph: not observed.

Culture characteristics.

Cultures are white, growing up to 4 cm in diam. with irregular margin after 3 days, covering the 9 cm Petri dish after 6 days, becoming vinaceous buff to hazel after 7-10 days. In reverse, the cultures are the same as the upper colour after 3 days, becoming isabelline to umber after 7-10 days. Colonies are felty with a heterogeneous texture, lacking aerial mycelium.

Habitat and distribution.

Known from Spiraea salicifolia and Tilia nobilis in Mount Dongling, China.

Additional material examined.

China, Beijing City, Mentougou District, Mount Dongling, Xiaolongmen Forestry Centre (115°29'20.49"E, 39°57'47.43"N), from branches of Tilia nobilis , 17 Aug 2017, H.Y. Zhu & X.L. Fan, CF 2019804, living culture CFCC 53139.

Notes.

Cytospora spiraeicola is associated with canker disease of Spiraea salicifolia and Tilia nobilis in China, with characteristics similar to Cytospora elaeagnicola and C. spiraeae in phylogram (Fig. 2 View Figure 2 ). Morphologically, it differs from C. spiraeae by the smaller perithecia (210-250 vs. 270-400 µm in diam.) and longer ascospores (8.5-12 × 2.5-3.5 vs. 7-8 × 2-2.5 µm) ( Zhu et al. 2018a). Phylogenetically, C. spiraeicola (CFCC 53138) differs from C. elaeagnicola (CFCC 52882) by ITS (8/665), rpb2 (44/730), tef1-α (75/771) and tub2 (42/624) and C. spiraeae (CFCC 50049) by ITS (4/665), rpb2 (38/730), tef1-α (63/771) and tub2 (44/624) ( Zhu et al. 2018a, Zhang et al. 2019). Therefore, we describe it as a novel species.