Ascochyta benningiorum Hern.-Restr., L. W. Hou, L. Cai & Crous, 2020

Hou, Lingwei, Hernandez-Restrepo, Margarita, Groenewald, Johannes Zacharias, Cai, Lei & Crous, Pedro W., 2020, Citizen science project reveals high diversity in Didymellaceae (Pleosporales, Dothideomycetes), MycoKeys 65, pp. 49-99 : 49

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.65.47704

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/79C53355-2002-5B6C-B44A-5142F644BAA9

treatment provided by

MycoKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Ascochyta benningiorum Hern.-Restr., L. W. Hou, L. Cai & Crous
status

sp. nov.

Ascochyta benningiorum Hern.-Restr., L. W. Hou, L. Cai & Crous sp. nov. Figure 2 View Figure 2

Etymology.

benningiorum refers to Eva, Bas & Anne Benning who collected the soil sample from which the ex-type strain was isolated.

Typus.

The Netherlands. Gelderland province, Wijchen, isolated from garden soil, Mar. 2017, E. Benning, B. Benning & A. Benning (holotype designated here CBS H-24104, living ex-type culture CBS 144957 = JW 196005).

Conidiomata pycnidial, mostly solitary, sometimes confluent, globose or subglobose, irregularly-shaped with age, brown to dark brown, glabrous, mostly produced on the agar surface and some immersed, 140-480(-580) × 100-370(-440) μm; with 1-6(-10) slightly papillate ostioles; pycnidial wall pseudoparenchymatous, 4-8 layers, 14.5-65 μm thick, outer layers composed of brown, flattened polygonal cells of 11-28 μm diam. Conidiogenous cells phialidic, hyaline, smooth, globose, ampulliform to lageniform, 5.5-9 × 4-6.5 μm. Conidia cylindrical, hyaline, smooth- and thin-walled, mostly straight, occasionally curved, aseptate, (3.5-)4.5-7 × 1.5-2.5 μm, 2-guttulate, small. Conidia matrix whitish.

Culture characteristics.

Colonies after 7 d at 25 °C, on OA reaching 50-55 mm diam, aerial mycelium floccose, olivaceous to olivaceous black, buff towards the periphery, abundant production of pycnidia, margin irregular; reverse concolorous with the surface. On MEA reaching 40-45 mm diam, aerial mycelium floccose, concentric circles, centre pink, grey olivaceous, mouse grey, rosy buff toward periphery, moderate production of pycnidia, margin irregular; reverse orange, olivaceous black toward periphery. On PDA reaching 45-50 mm diam, aerial mycelium floccose, dark brick to olivaceous grey, buff towards periphery, abundant production of pycnidia, margin irregular; reverse concolorous with the surface. NaOH spot test negative on OA.

Additional specimens examined.

The Netherlands. Gelderland province, Wijchen, isolated from garden soil, Mar. 2017, E. Benning, B. Benning & A. Benning, JW 196023 = CBS 144958; ibid. JW 196013.

Notes.

Ascochyta benningiorum is represented in the phylogenetic tree by three isolates (CBS 144957, CBS 144958 and JW 196013) from the same soil sample collected in Wijchen (Gelderland province). Ascochyta benningiorum grouped in a distinct clade close to A. phacae (Figure 1 View Figure 1 ). However, it morphologically differs from A. phacae by having smaller (3.5-7 × 1.5-2.5 μm) and aseptate conidia. In A. phacae the conidia are 7-10 × 2-4 μm and 0-1-septate ( Corbaz 1955).

Species in Ascochyta are commonly regarded as plant pathogens, especially of cereal crops and legumes ( Davidson and Kimber 2007; Tivoli and Banniza 2007), and only a few species were reported from soil, namely A. fabae , A. lentis , A. pisi , A. rabiei ( Gossen and Morrall 1986; Tivoli and Banniza 2007) and A. syringae in the current study. Nevertheless, A. benningiorum is phylogenetically and morphologically distinct from these species (Figure 1 View Figure 1 ; Chen et al. 2015).