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Nectria sylvana Mouton 1900

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Nectria sylvana Mouton, Bull. Soc. Roy. Bot. Belgique 39 49 (1900)

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Mouton
Mouton
1900
49
ICN
Nectria sylvana Mouton 1900
species
Nectria sylvana
Type Belgium

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sylvana

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Nectria sylvana Mouton 1900

ADDITIONAL SPECIMENS EXAMINED: NEW ZEALAND: Auckland Province, Auckland, Mt Albert, on Cirsium lanceolatum (L.) Scop., Dingley, 10 May 1956 (PDD 32552) ; Waitemata County, Riverhead State Forest, at base of dead leaves of Phormium tenax, Samuels 73-123 et al., 23 Jun. 1973 (PDD 31895), on rachis of Cyathea medullaris, Samuels 73-150, 2 Aug. 1973 (PDD 31892) ; Titirangi, Clarks Bush, on bark on Neopanax sp., Dingley et al., 13 Jun. 1973 (PDD 31807, Samuels 73-113); Waitakere Ranges, Anawhata Rd, Chateau Mosquito Track, on rachis of Cyathea medullaris, Dingley, 30 Oct. 1973 (PDD 32569, Samuels 73-235), Samuels 73-240 (PDD 32570) : Cascades Kauri Park, at base of dead leaves of Astelia sp., Dingley, 9 Jun. 1973 (PDD 31894), Walker's Bush Track, at base of dead leaf of Phormium tenax, Samuels 73-164, 7 Aug. 1973 (PDD 32025); Waiatarua, on Cyathea medullaris, Dingley, Aug. 1969 (PDD 26713), Samuels, 11 Jul. 1974 (PDD 32579), on Cyathea dealbata, Samuels, 11 Jul. 1974 (PDD 32582), on Astelia sp., Dingley et al., 26 Feb. 1974 (PDD 32474, Samuels 74-7) ; road to Whatipu, track to summit of Mt Donald McLean, on rachis of Cyathea medullaris, Samuels 74-40 & Kendrick, 5 Apr. 1974 (PDD 32583); Waitemata County, Wenderholm Scenic Reserve, on unidentified petiole, Dingley et al., 26 Sep. 1973 (PDD 32553, Samuels 73-196). Westland Province, Westland County, vic. Lake lanthe, Lake Ianthe State Forest (SF 42), on rachis of Cyathea smithii Hook. f., Samuels 74-45, 30 Apr.- 1 May 1974 (PDD 32578). BERMUDA: Smith's Parrish, on Foeniculum vulgare Mill., Seaver and Waterson, 9 Dec. 1938 (NY, HOLOTYPE Calonectria fimbriata). BRAZIL: Para, on leaves of Monstera sp., Baker, Dec. 1907 (FH, ISOTYPE Neohenningsia brasiliensis; Rehm: Ascomyceten no. 1761).

CONIDIAL STATE: Acremonium sp.

Mycelium white, sparse, spreading over the substrate or limited to a fringe of white to ferrugineous hyphae around the base of each perithecium. Perithecia solitary or in scattered groups of 3-4, white at first, becoming orange-brown; hirsute, hairs often forming an apical disc; urniform, 150-200 (-325) µm high x (187-) 220-280 (-374) µm wide, becoming collabent or not collapsing when dry, not changing colour in 3% potassium hydroxide. Perithecial wall 20-30 (-40) µm thick. Surface view: cells prosenchymatous, walls 1-2 µm thick; pigmented. Longitudinal section: cells elliptical to flattened, 4-6 µm long, walls 1-2 µm thick, pigmented, becoming progressively more flattened and thin-walled toward the interior. Perithecial hairs composed of a solitary hypha or a triangular fasicle of tightly bound hyphae.70-200 µm long, 30-40 µm wide basally, orange to brown; hyphae unbranched, septate, 3-4 µm wide, walls c. 1 µm thick, pigmented. Hairs scattered over the upper half of the perithecia) wall or rising in one plane from the perithecia) apex to form a disc 400-500 µm in diam. Perithecial papilla lacking, ostiolar opening formed by narrow hyphal elements arising from the inner region of the perithecia) wall; ostiolar canal periphysate. Asci broadly cylindrical to clavate, (30-) 45-70 (-85) x (6-) 7-9 (-11) µm, 8-spored; apices flat, with an indistinct ring; bases pointed to rounded; ascospores uniseriate or biseriate, forming throughout the length. Ascospores fusiform-ellipsoidal, (9-) 11-15 (-17) x (2.5-) 3-4 (-5) µm, equally 2-celled, 2 drops in each cell, smooth to striate or punctate striate, non-constricted or slightly constricted at the septum, hyaline.

CHARACTERISTICS IN CULTURE CMD: Ascospores germinating overnight, one short germ tube arising from each end of each ascospore. Colonies (2-) 4 cm diam., translucent to opaque, white; aerial mycelium sparse to cottony; hyphal, rope-like strands often forming; margin slightly undulate, non-aromatic, medium non-pigmented. ME: 1-1.5 (-2) cm diam., opaque; white, becoming pink to salmon; aerial mycelium lacking or loose and cottony or as hyphal, rope-like strands; margin undulate, non-aromatic, medium non-pigmented. OA: 2.5-4 cm diam., opaque; white to pale pink at the margin, white to tan to ferrugineous in the centre; aerial mycelium loose and cottony or forming concentric rings of erect, outwardly directed, hyphal, rope-like strands; margin entire, undulate or rarely dissected, non-aromatic, medium non-pigmented. WAS: 3-5 cm diam., transparent; aerial mycelium sparse, undulate, white; margin entire to slightly undulate, non-aromatic, medium non-pigmented. Phialophores arising on CMD, ME, OA, and WAS from the agar surface and from the aerial mycelium; monophialidic, unbranched or rarely verticillately branched, 0-2 (-3) septate, straight or undulate below the tip, smooth, (40-) 45-55 (-78) µm long, (2-) 2.5-3 (-4) µm wide basally, subtending hypha 1.5-2 (-2.5) µm wide. A solitary phialide constituting the terminal (17-) 37-50 (-54) µm of each phialophore, 1-2 µm wide at the unflared tip. Conidial production abundant. Phialoconidia ellipsoidal to nearly cylindrical, rarely elongating, (3-) 5-7 (-11) x (1.5-) 2-3 µm, unicellular, without a basal abscission scar, hyaline. Arising in basipetal succession; held in a solitary, hyaline drop of liquid.

HABITAT: On bark and decaying herbaceous debris.
NOTES: Nectria sylvana superficially resembles N. cyathea, but the two species differ in features of the perithecial wall. N. sylvana and N. vulpina are closely related, the two species are most easily distinguished by the longer ascospores in N. sylvana.
Isolates of N. sylvana grow more rapidly on CMD than on ME, whereas the only isolate of N. vulpina known to me (Samuels 74-37) grows slowly and at the same rate on both media, this isolate was strongly aromatic whereas only one of 10 (Samuels 74-40) isolates of N. sylvana was aromatic.
When the perithecial hairs of N. sylvana are in the form of an apical disc, the perithecia resemble those of N. peristomialis and N. dentifera. The three species are easily distinguished by their ascospores, characteristics in culture, and conidial states.
Because the ascospores of N. sylvana usually contain four drops, they may appear to be multiseptate and one could easily identify the fungus as a Calonectria de Notaris, which is characterised by its phragmosporous ascospores. In studying the type specimen of C. fimbriata I saw only bicellular ascospores; the specimen is unquestionably N. sylvana.
The original description of Nectria peristomata, the only species included in Nectria subg. Zimmermannia Saccardo, suggests that this species is synonymous with N. sylvana.
Gamundi (1974) has recorded and illustrated N. sylvana (as Neohenningsia stellatula) from Argentina.
HOLOTYPE: BELGIUM: Near Liege. on stem of Angelica sylvestris L., no. 21 (BR!).

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Nectria sylvana Mouton 1900
Nectria sylvana Mouton (1900)
Nectria sylvana Mouton 1900
Nectria sylvana Mouton (1900)

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Nectria sylvana Mouton 1900
[Not available]

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typification
Type Belgium

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1cb195ef-36b9-11d5-9548-00d0592d548c
scientific name
Names_Fungi
12 November 1999
12 November 1999
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