Exobasidium siroboe Nagao, S. Ogawa & S. Kurogi, 2023

Nagao, Hideyuki, Kurogi, Shuichi & Ogawa, Seiji, 2023, Exobasidium siroboe sp. nov. (Exobasidiaceae) causing Exobasidium fruit deformation on Symplocos myrtacea in Japan, Phytotaxa 579 (3), pp. 219-224 : 219-221

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.579.3.7

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7555461

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038087BE-FFBD-6B0D-7BE5-FA64C6E8F837

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Exobasidium siroboe Nagao, S. Ogawa & S. Kurogi
status

sp. nov.

Exobasidium siroboe Nagao, S. Ogawa & S. Kurogi , sp. nov. FIGURE 1 View FIGURE 1

MycoBank no.: 847125

Type: — JAPAN. Kagoshima Prefecture, Kumage-gun, Yakushima-machi, Yodogou-tozanguchi , 20 July 2005, Nagao & S. Kurogi INM-2-17577-055270, acc. nos. LC656026 View Materials / LC656021 View Materials , culture MAFF239964 .

Additional specimens examined: — JAPAN, immature fruits of S. myrtacea : Fukuoka Prefecture, Onga-gun, Okagakimachi, Kuroyama , 20 June 2001, S. Ogawa TSH-B 0088 ; Kagoshima Prefecture, Aira-gun, Makizono-cho, Onamiiketozanguchi , 19 July 2005, Nagao & Kurogi INM-2-17564-052435, acc. nos. LC656022 View Materials / LC655200 View Materials , culture MAFF239959 ; Kagoshima Prefecture, Kirishima-shi, Karakuni-dake , 19 July 2005, Nagao & S. Kurogi INM-2-17566-055265, acc. nos. LC656023 View Materials / LC656018 View Materials , culture MAFF239960 ; Kagoshima Prefecture, Kirishima-shi, Karakuni-dake , 19 July 2005, Nagao & S. Kurogi INM-2-17568-055268, acc. nos. LC656024 View Materials / LC656019 View Materials , culture MAFF239961 ; Kagoshima Prefecture, Kumagegun, Yakushima-machi, Yodogou-tozanguchi , 20 July 2005, Nagao & S. Kurogi INM-2-17571-052437, acc. nos. LC656025 View Materials / LC656020 View Materials , culture MAFF239963 ; Kagoshima Prefecture, Kumage-gun, Yakushima-machi , 20 July 2005, Nagao & S. Kurogi INM-2-17582-052445 .

Different from E. symploci-japonicae var. caprogenum by narrower basidiospores [(14–)15–26 × 3–6(–7) µm] and fewer septal numbers in basidiospores [0–3(–5)].

The hymenium composed of basidia with 2–4 sterigmata and conidia. Basidia were clavate to cylindrical, 35–40 × 6–7 µm ( FIGURES 1A, B View FIGURE 1 ), emerging directly from the host surface or through stomata. Sterigmata were 4–8 × 1.5 µm, developing outwardly and tapering toward the tip ( FIGURES 1A, B View FIGURE 1 , 3A, B View FIGURE 3 ). Basidiospores were ellipsoid, (14–)15–26 × 3–6(–7) µm, hyaline, smooth, one-celled when formed, becoming septate with 3(–5) septa ( FIGURES 1C View FIGURE 1 , 3C, D, E View FIGURE 3 ). Septate basidiospores germinated after placing on culture media for 18–24 h ( FIGURE 3F View FIGURE 3 ). Germ tubes of the basidiospores emerged from several cells and produced conidia at the tip of germ tubes 24 h after release ( FIGURES 2 View FIGURE 2 , 3G View FIGURE 3 ). Germ tubes grew into pseudohyphae and branch. Conidia were lacrimiform, subfusiform, and clavulate, 5–13 × 1 µm. Colonies on potato dextrose agar (PDA) composed of partially elongated pseudohyphae and conidia. The colony surface corrugate without a farinose appearance and pink to pale pink, the same as the reverse of the colonies. Dark pigment was not produced on PDA. Colonies were glutinous and did not fix on the agar surface.

Etymology: —Referring to the local name of the host plant, S. myrtacea , by the Yakushima dialect.

Symptom: —On infected fruit of S. myrtacea , white powdery hymenia appeared entirely on the swollen part of the fruit ( FIGURE 4A View FIGURE 4 ). Size of the infected fruit was apparently larger than the healthy ones and the color was pale green or whitish green ( FIGURES 4B, C View FIGURE 4 ). Infected fruit showed thickened mesocarp and cavities. The symptom was different from the pocket caused by Taphrina species. All seeds were sterile ( FIGURE 4D View FIGURE 4 ). Hymenium formation was not observed on leaves, twigs and branches.

Phylogenetic analysis: —Bootstrap values on neighbor-joining and support values of Quartet Puzzling on maximum likelihood trees were highly supported (100/100), so that this new species is distinguished from the two previously described varieties of E. symploci-japonicae .

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