Melanospora damnosa (Sacc.) Lindau, Nat. Pflanzenfam., Teil. I (Leipzig), 1897
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.295.2.4 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13688465 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F26165-9641-FFCC-A3B9-FD72FE03B781 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Melanospora damnosa (Sacc.) Lindau, Nat. Pflanzenfam., Teil. I (Leipzig) |
status |
|
5. Melanospora damnosa (Sacc.) Lindau, Nat. Pflanzenfam., Teil. I (Leipzig) View in CoL 1 (1): 353 (1897)
( Plate 1 View PLATE 1 , Figs. 13–14)
Ascomata ostiolate, scattered, immersed to superficial, obpyriform, globose to subglobose, tapering slightly towards the neck, light brown to golden, 220–250 × 160–185 μm. Neck conical, 75–100 × 50–60 μm, usually with a mucilaginous mass at the apex composed of mature ascospores. Terminal hairs setose, straight to slightly flexuous, simple, thick-walled, septate, smooth, hyaline to faintly yellowish, 2.5–5 μm in diameter at the broadest part, 60–130 μm long, forming a crown at the neck apex. Lateral hairs sparse, hyphoid, flexuous, simple, thin-walled, hyaline. Peridium pseudoparenchymatous, membranaceous, translucent, composed mostly of polygonal, (textura angularis), thin-walled, light yellow to yellowish brown cells, 12.5–17.5 μm thick, becoming more elongated towards the neck. Asci 8-spored, clavate, with rounded apex and a short stipe, 35.5–40 × 22.5–28 μm, evanescent, observable only in young perithecia. Ascospores 1-celled, rhomboid-ellipsoid to sublimoniform, non-apiculated, smooth, hyaline when young, then dark brown to black, 15–22 × 10–12.5 μm, with two terminal germ pores, early dispersed to form a dark mass at the neck apex.
Material examined: — BRAZIL. Pernambuco, Instituto Agronômico de Pernambuco ( IPA), Caruaru, on goat dung, 30 Sep 2011, R. F. R. Melo ( URM 86669!).
Habitat: —Herbivore dung, twigs and plant material.
Distribution: —Africa ( Tunisia), Asia ( Bangladesh), Europe (well distributed), North America ( United States), Oceania ( Australia, New Zealand) and South America ( Argentina). Apparently worldwide.
Notes:— Melanospora damnosa resembles M. brevirostris (Fuckel) Höhnel (1914: 94) , but in additions to its longer necks, they differs by ascospore shape and size: shorter, ellipsoid to limoniform in the latter and longer, rhomboid-ellipsoid in the former.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
|
Genus |
Melanospora damnosa (Sacc.) Lindau, Nat. Pflanzenfam., Teil. I (Leipzig)
Melo, Roger Fagner Ribeiro, Maia, Leonor Costa & Miller, Andrew Nicholas 2017 |
Melanospora damnosa (Sacc.)
Sacc. 1897: 353 |