Epicoccum latusicollum Q. Chen et al.

Wang, Yuchun, Tu, Yiyi, Chen, Xueling, Jiang, Hong, Ren, Hengze, Lu, Qinhua, Wei, Chaoling & Lv, Wuyun, 2024, Didymellaceae species associated with tea plant (Camellia sinensis) in China, MycoKeys 105, pp. 217-251 : 217-251

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3897/mycokeys.105.119536

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11391006

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/762FE0EA-0ABC-5FE0-9552-F80E89B5E5E3

treatment provided by

MycoKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Epicoccum latusicollum Q. Chen et al.
status

 

Epicoccum latusicollum Q. Chen et al. View in CoL , Studies in Mycology. 87: 144. 2017

Description.

see Chen et al. (2017).

Materials examined.

China, Yunnan Province, Puer City, Jingdong Yizu Autonomous County, from healthy leaves of C. sinensis , 13 Jun 2020, Y. C. Wang, culture YCW 1921 .

Notes.

Isolates of Epicoccum latusicollum were clustered into a sister clade to E. poaceicola and E. sorghi (Fig. 3 View Figure 3 ). Pycnidia were black-brown and mostly spheroid and conidia were ellipsoidal to oblong, aseptate and hyaline ( Chen et al. 2017; Li et al. 2023). It was first discovered from Acer palmatum ( Aceraceae ), Camellia sinensis ( Theaceae ), Podocarpus macrophyllus ( Podocarpaceae ) and Vitex negundo ( Verbenaceae ) ( Chen et al. 2017). As a phytopathogen, it can cause leaf spot, leaf blight and stalk rot on many plants ( Xu et al. 2022; Li et al. 2023; Wang et al. 2023). In the present study, three strains were isolated from healthy tea plant leaves.