Pteridiospora spinosispora
Pteridiospora spinosispora is a species of fungus in the class Dothideomycetes.
Pteridiospora spinosispora | |
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Species: | P. spinosispora |
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Pteridiospora spinosispora Filer (1969) | |
Taxonomy
The fungus was discovered in 1963, isolated from the mycorrhizae of sweetgum (Liquidambar styraciflua). The type locality was near the Mississippi River in northern Mississippi; it was later reported growing with the roots of green ash (Fraxinus pennsylvanica). The species was first mentioned in a 1966 report, where it was described as an "unidentified sphaeriaceous ascomycete".[1] Filer formally described the fungus in 1969.[2]
Description
The fruitbodies of the fungus are small, dull black, and spherical, measuring 114–251 by 114–251 μm, with thick walls (up to 24 μm); They occur singly or in dense groups. Underlying the fruitbodies is a small, thin-walled mat of mycelium. The club-shaped asci (spore-bearing cells) measure 85 by 25 μm. The ascospores are black and spiny, measuring 21–25 by 12–20 μm (with the spines 2–5 μm); they contain a single septum. The ornamented spores clearly distinguish P. spinosispora from other members of Pteridiospora.[2]
References
- Filer TH Jr, Toorle ER. (1966). "Sweetgum mycorrhizae and some associated fungi". Forest Science. 12 (4): 432–437.
- Filer Jr TH. (1969). "New species of Pteridiospora". Mycologia. 61 (1): 167–169. doi:10.2307/3757354.