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Hughes, S.J. 1966: New Zealand fungi. 7. Capnocybe and Capnophialophora, new form genera of sooty moulds. New Zealand Journal of Botany 4(3): 333-353.

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Hughes, S.J. 1966: New Zealand fungi. 7. Capnocybe and Capnophialophora, new form genera of sooty moulds. New Zealand Journal of Botany 4(3): 333-353.
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COLLECTIONS: Here and elsewhere the collections are listed as occurring on particular host plants; but it is important to bear in mind that the true substratum is very probably the honey-dew produced by insects parasitising those plants. One such insect with which a subiculum of Capnocybe fraserae (DAOM 97375) was intimately associated was kindly identified by Mrs B. May of the Entomology Division, D.S.I.R., Auckland, as Coelostomidia sp. (Pseudococcidae). Herbarium numbers in bold face indicate collections bearing perithecia of Limacinia fraserae in addition to the conidial states.
New Zealand: (1, 2, 3) on Ackama rosaefolia, Omahutu Forest North Auckland, 19.VI.1963 DAOM 96745b, 97377, PDD 21339 (DAOM 97378) ; (4) Carpodetus serratus, near Ashley Gorge, North Canterbury, 14.V.1963, DAOM 96616e; Coprosma australis (5, 6) Auckland Prov., Whangapoua Saddle, Coromandel Peninsula, 5.IX.1963, PDD 21502 (DAOM 97383), swamp forest, Harihari, Westland, 7.IV.1963, DAOM 106392b; (7) Coprosma foetidissima, Wellington Prov., Ohakune Mt Road (2,500ft), Tongariro National Park, 7.111.1963, DAOM 96607; (8) Coprosma lucida, Auckland Prov., summit of Whitianga Road, Coromandel Peninsula, 21.VIII.1963, J.M.D., DAOM 96977a(9) Coprosma robusta, Auckland Prov., Kauaeranga Valley, Thames, 4.1X.1963, J.M.D., DAOM 97382; (10) Coprosma sp., Wellington Prov., Ohakune Mt Road Road (2,500ft), Tongariro National Park, 7.111.1963, DAOM 93430; (I1) Cyathea medullaris, Auckland Prov., Piha Stream, Waitakere Range, 11.VI.1963, J.M.D., DAOM 97359; (12) Cyathodes fasciculata, Auckland Prov., Piha Stream, Waitakere Range, 11.VI.1963, J.M.D., DAOM 97358; (13) Geniostoma ligustrifolia, Auckland Prov., Kite Kite Track, Piha, Waitakere Range, 1LVI.1963, PDD 21227 (DAOM 97361); (14) Hoheria populnea, Auckland Prov., Kite Kite Track, Waitakere Range, ll.V1.1963, J.M.D., PDD 21222 (DAOM 97367); (15) Leptospermum ericoides, Auckland Prov., Kite Kite Stream, Waitakere Range, 31.1.1963, PDD 20519 (DAOM 97355); Leptospermum scoparium, Auckland Prov., (16) Cossy's Creek Dam, Hunua, 12.11.1963, DAOM 96729a, (17) Kite Kite Track, Waitakere Range, 11.VI.1963, DAOM 97371, (18) Piha Stream, Waitakere Range, 11.VI.1963, J.M.D., DAOM 97369, (19) Piha, Waitakere Range, 31.VIII.1963, DAOM 97381, (20, 21) Sharps Bush, Waitakere Range, 26.1X.1963, PDD 21574 (DAOM 97387). DAOM 97384, (22) Te Ahamuta (White Cliffs), Gt. Barrier I., 6.III.1963, R. Cooper, DAOM 96108a: North Auckland (2) Puketi Forest, 20.VI.1963, DAOM 96120e, (24) Parahaki Mt, Whangarei, 21.VI.1963, DAOM 96678a; (25) Melicytus ramiflorus, Auckland Prov., Kite Kite Track, Waitakere Range, 11.I.1963, PDD 21224/5 (DAOM 97365); (26) Myrsine australis, Auckland Prov., Ngaiotonga Forest, Bay of Islands 11.III.1963, S. Davidson, PDD 21014 (DAOM 96760c); (27-30) Nothofagus fusca, Westland, Granville Forest Orwell Creek, Ahaura, 2.IV.1963, PDD 20825 (DAOM 96718a), DAOM 97299b, 96646a, 96724a; Nothofagus solandri var. cliffortioidies, (31) Wellington Prov., Ohakune Mt Road (2500ft), Tongariro National Park, 7.III.1963, DAOM 93398; North Canterbury, (32) near Ashley Gorge 14.V. 1963, PDD 21325 (DAOM 96621a), (33 Ashley Gorge, 14.V.1963, DAOM 87388c, (34) Okuku Saddle, N of Oxford, 19.X.1963, J.M.D., DAOM 105283, (35) Okuku Valley, 19.X.1963, J.M.D., DAOM 111301a; (36) Olearia rani, Auckland Prov., Piha Stream, Waitakere Range, 11.VI.1963, J.M.D., DAOM 97363; (37) Phyllocladus trichoinanoides, Parahaki Mt, Whangarei, North Auckland, 21.VI.1963, DAOM 96734b; (38) Pseudowintera colorata (leaves), Wellington Prov., Ohakune Mt Road (2,500ft), Tongariro National Park, 7.III.1963, DAOM 96790a; Rhopalostylis sapida (leaves), Auckland Prov., near Piha, Waitakere Range, (39) 31.I.1963, PDD 20518 (DAOM 97356) (40-42) II.VI.1963, DAOM 96131, 97373, 97375; (43) Ulex europaeus, Auckland Prov., near Piha, Waitakere Range, II.VI.1963, J.M.D., DAOM 97360; Vitex lucens (44) Puketi Forest, North Auckland, 20.VI.1963, PDD 21246 (DAOM 97376a); (45, 46) Auckland Prov., near Piha, Waitakere Range, 31.I.1963, F. J. Morton, PDD 20552 (DAOM 97357), PDD 20567 (DAOM 96429b).
Hawaiian Islands (Molokai) : (47) near Maunahui (below Pepeopae), July 10, L. M. Cranwell, O. Selling, C. Skottsberg, Hawaiian Bog Survey 1938, in Herb. UPS.

Subicula are spongy, rusty brown to brown, blackening with age, glistening, with the shape depending to a large extent on the configuration of the substrate. The Subicula may be thin and restricted, as on a leaf (Fig. IA), irregularly thickened and extensive, as on bark and twigs (Fig. 1B, E), or in large lumps up to 3 cm wide and thick, as on leaves of Nikau (Rhopalostylis sapida) (Fig. IC, D). Hemispherical subicula up to 5 cm in diameter and 3 cm thick have been collected on Vitex lucens. The surface of the Subiculum is usually very uneven, mainly because of the development of scattered or crowded, more or less conical or dome-like cushions of hyphae, the apex of each being extended into a column of varying length which is capped by a shining and sticky head of conidia. The mycelium is brown to dark brown, composed of anastomosing, branched, septate, strongly constricted moniliform hyphae which taper toward their distal ends. The hyphae are straight or curved, or geniculate at the point of right-angled branching; they are for the most part smooth, although the ends of vegetative hyphae and germinal hyphae arising from conidia (and ascospores of Limacinia fraserae) are somewhat roughened. The older basal cells are about as broad as they are long, being subspherical and flattened at the ends to barrelshaped and up to 40 µ wide, and the younger distal cells are as narrow as 6 µ; the tapering is gradual but characteristic.

Capnocybe synnemata are up to 4 mm high, more or less conical or rounded and up to 3 mm wide at the spongy base; toward the apex they are usually composed of a single, occasionally forked, compact, glabrous, cylindrical, slightly flattened or tapered, columnar part 100- 700 µ wide and of variable length, which terminates in a more or less subspherical head of conidia up to 800 µ wide. The basal part of the synnema is composed of an outer spongy tangle of frequently branched hyphae and toward the centre these merge with a core of loosely compacted or fasciculate, seldom branched hyphae which extend upwards to the head of conidia. Anastamoses between contiguous cells are frequent, especially in the column of compacted hyphae. At the base of the fasciculate synnematous hyphae the cells are subspherical or barrel shaped and up to 40 µ wide; toward the distal end the hyphae become more closely compacted, progressively narrower (to 5 µ), the constrictions between the cells become less conspicuous and the cells themselves are progressively paler, shorter, barrel-shaped to almost cylindrical and frequently waisted. Distally the synnematous hyphae bear unilateral or randomly arranged penicillate or slightly divergent primary, secondary, and occasionally tertiary branches; the terminal cells function as sympodulae and these are more or less ellipsoidal, 11.7-18.0 µ long, 5.0-7.2 µ wide, and at maturity bear up to four denticulate conidium scars round the apex.
Sympodioconidia, at maturity, are ellipsoidal, usually straight, sometimes curved, (4)6-8(-13)-septate, generally 8-septate, rounded at both ends, dark brown, smooth, thick-walled but with a thinner and paler area at base and apex. The 4-13-septate conidia show considerable variation in length and width, being 40-130 X 12.6-21.6 µ and 8-septate conidia are mostly 63-90 X 16-18 µ; the widest part of the conidium is usually just above the middle. The basal scar is inconspicuous and there are usually no constrictions at the septa; constrictions become apparent during germination and the cells may swell up to 26 µ wide. One or two cells of occasional short and unusually wide conidia may develop a single longitudinal septum. The conidium initial produces the first septum just above the middle. Anastomoses between conidia are not uncommon.

Capnophialophora ( fraserae)* phialides are very scanty on mycelia, hyphae but are frequently produced directly on conidia or on short, branched, germinal hyphae arising from them, sometimes in botryose clusters. They are more or less subspherical with a flattened base, pale brown to dark brown, slightly roughened, and bear a single, terminal, pale brown to brown collarette which is ellipsoidal, closed when young, and finally with an opening at the paler distal end. There is a deep constriction between the collarette and the phialide cell. The phialide cell is 5.7-9.3 µ long and 6.5-8.0 µ, wide, and the collarette 4.5-6.5 µ long and 3.6-4.3 µ wide. Phialospores observed within or immediately outside the collarettes are broadly ellipsoidal to subglobose, hyaline, and measure ca. 1.3-1.4 X 1.0 µ.

The perithecia of Limacinia fraserae, the very probable perfect state of Capnocybe fraserae, are superficial or banally immersed in the subiculum, rusty brown to brown or black, scattered or crowded among Capnocybe synnemata, rarely on the synnemata themselves, subglobose 200-300 µ in diameter, ostiolate at maturity; they bear unbranched, moniliform, hyphal appendages scattered over the surface, up to 150 µ long, slightly tapering, finely roughened, and occasionally anastomosing with each other. The perithecia, wall is 50-70 µ, thick, being composed of an inner layer of small, thin-walled, hyaline, compressed cells which merge gradually with the outer layer of larger, thicker-walled, dark brown, polygonal cells. Asci are fasciculate, ellipsoidal to obclavate, bitunicate, 3-8- (mostly 8-) spored, 120-140 X 30-41 µ. Ascopores (Fig. 3) are usually irregularly multiseriate, ellipsoidal but generally widest just above the middle, brown to dark brown, slightly paler at the rounded ends, thick-walled, 5-11-septate, not or slightly constricted at the septa, smooth, straight or slightly curved, and very variable in size, measuring 30-103 X 9-18 µ. Even in mature 8-spored asci from a single perithecium 5-11-septate ascospores have been seen and these measure 34-72 X 9.0-13.5 µ. The shorter and fewer-septate ascospores are generally toward the apex of an ascus and the lower ones are usually progressively longer with more septa; for example, in one ascus, the ascospore lengths, proceeding from apex to base, were 48, 50, 52, 56, 63, 68, and 72 µ long. In a number of measurements of 8-spared asci it was found that the basal ascospore was between one fifth and twice as long as the uppermost one. Ascospores are commonly seen bearing Capnophialophora phialides (Fig. 3G, H), arising either directly from the ascospore cells or from germinal hyphae.

ubiculum variabile, 1-30 mm crass., usque ad 50 mm diam., planum vel hemisphericum, superficie variabili praeditum. Hyphae ad 40 µ lat., ad ca. 6 µ subulatae. Synnemata ad 4 mm alt., ad basim ad 3 mm lat.; pars superior cylindrica vel subulata, 100-700 µ lat., glabra, in capitem conidiorum terminata. Versus apicem hyphae synnematarum ramulis primariis, secondariis, aliquando tertiisque praeditae. Sympodulae terminales ellipsoideae, 11.7-18.0 µ long., 5.0-7.2 µ lat., circa apicem ad maturitatem cicatricibus denticulatae. Sympodioconidia ellipsoidea, recta, aliquando curvata, atrobrunnea, (4-)6-8 (-13)-septata, 40-130 X 12.6-21.6 µ plerumque 6-8-septata: sympodioconidia 8-septata plerumque 63-90 X 16-18µ.
Habitat: in truncis, ramulisque, aliquando foliis arborum vivorum et foliis palmarum, verisimiliter cum liquore mellifluo (aliter dictum "Honey-dew") ab insectibus excreto consociatus.
Typus: in foliis Rhopalostylidis sapidae, New Zealand, Auckland Province, Piha, Waitakere Range. 31.I.1963, PDD 20518 (DAOM 97356).
On bark of Nothofagus fusca, mixed with other sooty moulds, (1, 2) Woolshed Hill, Hawdon Valley, Canterbury, 16.V.1963, PDD 24945 (type) (DAOM 97302a), DAOM 97301a; (3) Granville Forest, Orwell Creek, Ahaura, Westland, 2.IV.1963, DAOM 97299a.
Subicula are spongy, blackish brown to dark rusty brown, glistening, irregular, with the shape and surface depending to a large extent on the configuration of the substrate; they bear sparse synnemata capped by a sticky head of conidia. This species has been seen only as one of a mixture of three or four sooty moulds growing together. The mycelium is brown, composed of anastomosing, branched, septate, strongly constricted hyphae which taper toward their distal ends; the hyphae are straight or curved, or geniculate at the point of the right ¬angled branching. The cell walls are coarsely roughened at the distal ends of the hyphae but smooth elsewhere. The cells of the vegetative hyphae are about as broad as they are long, sometimes broader, some¬times longer, being barrel-shaped with curved outer wall and flat end walls; older basal cells are up to 30 µm wide and the younger distal cells may be as narrow as 5.5 µm, the tapering being gradual but characteristic.
Capnocybe synnemata are scattered, up to 2.5 mm high, more or less conical or narrowly conical and up to 1 mm wide at the spongy base. Toward the apex they are composed of a single, compact, cylindri¬cal or tapered part up to 150 µm wide, of variable length, and terminating in a more or less subspherical head of conidia up to 400 µm wide; this cylindrical part bears short, downwardly directed, roughened hyphal hairs below, but is glabrous above. The basal part of the synnema is composed of an outer spongy tangle of frequently branched roughened hyphae and toward the inside these merge with a core of loosely com¬pacted or fasciculate smooth hyphae which show sparse parallel branching and numerous anastomoses. The basal internal hyphae are com¬posed of large, globose, to ellipsoidal to pyriform cells up to 35 µm wide. Toward the apex the fasciculate synnematous hyphae are more closely compacted, gradually tapering (to 6 µm), and the cells are progressively paler and more or less ellipsoidal. At their ends the synnematous hyphae are repeatedly branched in a penicillate manner and the terminal cells function as sympodulae. These are more or less ellipsoidal, 9.0-18.0 µm long, 6.0-7.2 µm wide, and at maturity bear up to five denticulate conidium scars round the apex. After producing one or more conidia a sympodula may produce one and sometimes two sympodulae which sporulate in the usual manner; by a repetition of this budding a linear series of up to five cells may develop and these are usually all sympodulae, but occa¬sional cells are sterile.
Sympodioconidia, at maturity, are ellipsoidal or subcylindrical, straight or slightly curved, 3-septate (rarely 2-septate), rounded at both ends, dark brown, thick-walled but with a thin and paler apical area, exter¬nally smooth with some slight internal roughening which occasionally shows through to the outside, 27.0-43.0 x 10.0-13.7 µm, mostly 36-40 µm long. The basal cell may bear the sear on a short denticle, otherwise the scar is inconspicuous; the basal cell is sometimes slightly tapered. There are usually no constrictions at the septa except in conidia which have germinated to produce a hypha or phialides. Capnophialophora phialides are scanty on mycelial hyphae and are occasionally produced directly on conidia and on germinal hyphae arising from conidia. They are more or less subspherical with a truncated base, pale brown to brown, coarsely roughened, and bear a single pale brown collarette which is ellipsoidal, closed when young, and finally with an irregular opening at the paler and subhyaline distal end. There is a deep constriction between the collarette and the phialide cell, the junction being only 1.8-2.0 µm wide. The phialide cells are 5.5-9.0 µm long and 5.0-7.2 µm wide and the collarettes 3.6-5.4 µm long and 2.5-4.5 µm wide. Phialospores observed within the collarettes are broadly ellipsoidal to subglobose, hyaline, and measure ca. 1.4-2.0 µm long and 1.0-1.9 µm wide.
Perithecia of at least two species have been found associated with this Capnocybe and free ascospores may bear the C. novae-zelandiae kind of phialide. However, the collections are mixed and it is hazardous to suggest either of them as the possible perfect state.

Subiculum variabile, atrobrunneum. Hyphae ad 30 µm lat., ad ca. 6 µm lat. subulatae. Synnemata ad 2.5 mm alt., ad basim spongiosa, plus minusve conica, usque ad 1 mm lat., pars superior cylindrica vel subulata, ad 150 µm lat., apicem versus glabra, in capitem conidiorum terminata. Versus apicem, hyphae synnematarum ramulis primariis, secondariis, tertiisque, praeditae. Sympodulae terminales, ali¬quando seriatae, ellipsoideae, 9.0-18.0 µm long., 6.0-7.2 µm lat., circa apicem ad maturitatem cicatricibus denticulata. Sympodioconidia ellipsoidea vel subcylindrica, recta vel pauce curvata, atro¬brunnea, 3-(rare 2-)septata, 27-43 to 10.0-13.7 µm, plerumque 36-40 µm long. Aliquando cellula basali pauce attenuata et breve denticulata. Habitat: in truncis ramulisque vivis Nothofagi fuscae, verisimiliter cum liquore mellifluo (aliter dictum "Honey-dew") ab insectibus excreto consociatus. Typus: in cortice Nothofagi fuscae, New Zealand, Woolshed Hill, Hawdon Valley, Canterbury, 16.V.1963,. PDD 24945 (type) (DAOM 97302a).

Subiculum et mycelium ut in Capnocybe fraserae: Perithecia superficialia vel ad basim immersa, brunnea vel atra, subglobosa, 200-300 µm diam., ostiolata, hyphis simplicibus, moniliformibus, ad 150 µm long., subulatis, leniter asperatis, ornata. Asci fasciculati, ellipsoidei vel obclavati, bitunicati, 3-8-, plerumque octospori, 120-140 x 30-41 µm. Ascosporae irregulariter multiseriatae, ellipsoideae, brunneae vel atrobrunneae, utrinque pallidior rotunda¬taeque, crasso-tunicatae, 5-11-septatae, ad septas non vel vix constrictae, laeves, rectae vel leniter curvatae, variabilissimae, 30-103 x 9-18 µm.

Habitat: ut in Capnocybe fraserae.

Typus: in cortice Leptospermi scoparii, New Zealand, Auckland Province, Piha Stream, Waitakere Range, II.VI.1963, J. M. Dingley, PDD 21219 (DAOM 97369).

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