Sedecimiella taiwanensis gen. et sp. nov., a marine mangrove fungus in the Hypocreales (Hypocreomycetidae, Ascomycota)
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Ka-Lai Pang
Abstract
In an ongoing survey of marine mangrove fungi in Taiwan, a fungus with light-coloured ascomata, resembling members of the Hypocreales, was found on twigs of Kandelia obovata. Based on morphological characteristics and partial nuclear small and large subunit ribosomal DNA data, the fungus is described as a new genus and species, Sedecimiella taiwanensis, and placed in the Hypocreales (Hypocreomycetidae, Ascomycota). Phylogenetic analyses based on LSU/SSU sequences did not resolve the familial placement of S. tawianensis within the Hypcreales, but it may be related to the Niessliaceae. The characteristic features of S. tawianensis are orange to dark-brown colour, soft-texture and perithecial ascomata with the inner wall layer of the neck extending into the upper part of the centrum; cylindrical, 16-spored, unitunicate asci without an apical pore; and hyaline, smooth-walled and globose ascospores.
©2010 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin New York
Articles in the same Issue
- Guest editorial
- 11th International Marine and Freshwater Mycology Symposium, Taichung, Taiwan R.O.C., November 2009
- Review
- A review on deep-sea fungi: occurrence, diversity and adaptations
- Research articles
- Sedecimiella taiwanensis gen. et sp. nov., a marine mangrove fungus in the Hypocreales (Hypocreomycetidae, Ascomycota)
- Dibenzofurans from the marine sponge-derived ascomycete Super1F1-09
- Antimicrobial activities of marine fungi from Malaysia
- Diversity and abundance of lignicolous marine fungi from the east and west coasts of Peninsular Malaysia and Sabah (Borneo Island)
- Fungal colonization and breakdown of sedge (Cyperus malaccensis Lam.) in an Indian mangrove
- Occurrence and distribution of fungi in a mangrove forest on Siargao Island, Philippines
- Biodiversity of marine fungi in Malaysian mangroves
- Endophytic fungi from mangrove plant species of Thailand: their antimicrobial and anticancer potentials
- Fungal communities in bunker C oil-impacted sites off southern Guimaras, Philippines: a post-spill assessment of Solar 1 oil spill
- Potential use of marine arenicolous ascomycetes as bioindicators of ecosystem disturbance on sandy Cancun beaches: Corollospora maritima as a candidate species
- Effects of Cu(II) and Zn(II) on growth and cell morphology of thraustochytrids isolated from fallen mangrove leaves in Taiwan
- Marine-derived fungi from Kappaphycus alvarezii and K. striatum as potential causative agents of ice-ice disease in farmed seaweeds
- Short communication
- Fungal diversity in bottom sediments of the Kara Sea
- Reviewer acknowledgement Bot. Mar. volume 53 (2010)
Articles in the same Issue
- Guest editorial
- 11th International Marine and Freshwater Mycology Symposium, Taichung, Taiwan R.O.C., November 2009
- Review
- A review on deep-sea fungi: occurrence, diversity and adaptations
- Research articles
- Sedecimiella taiwanensis gen. et sp. nov., a marine mangrove fungus in the Hypocreales (Hypocreomycetidae, Ascomycota)
- Dibenzofurans from the marine sponge-derived ascomycete Super1F1-09
- Antimicrobial activities of marine fungi from Malaysia
- Diversity and abundance of lignicolous marine fungi from the east and west coasts of Peninsular Malaysia and Sabah (Borneo Island)
- Fungal colonization and breakdown of sedge (Cyperus malaccensis Lam.) in an Indian mangrove
- Occurrence and distribution of fungi in a mangrove forest on Siargao Island, Philippines
- Biodiversity of marine fungi in Malaysian mangroves
- Endophytic fungi from mangrove plant species of Thailand: their antimicrobial and anticancer potentials
- Fungal communities in bunker C oil-impacted sites off southern Guimaras, Philippines: a post-spill assessment of Solar 1 oil spill
- Potential use of marine arenicolous ascomycetes as bioindicators of ecosystem disturbance on sandy Cancun beaches: Corollospora maritima as a candidate species
- Effects of Cu(II) and Zn(II) on growth and cell morphology of thraustochytrids isolated from fallen mangrove leaves in Taiwan
- Marine-derived fungi from Kappaphycus alvarezii and K. striatum as potential causative agents of ice-ice disease in farmed seaweeds
- Short communication
- Fungal diversity in bottom sediments of the Kara Sea
- Reviewer acknowledgement Bot. Mar. volume 53 (2010)