Seiridium is a genus of plant pathogens in the family Sporocadaceae.[1]
Seiridium | |
---|---|
Asexual fructifications of Cypress canker disease | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | |
Division: | |
Class: | |
Order: | |
Family: | |
Genus: | Seiridium Petr. (1817)
|
Type species | |
Seiridium marginatum Nees (1816)
|
The genus Lepteutypa is teleomorphic (reproducing sexually) and the corresponding anamorphic name, used to describe the asexual form, is Seiridium (formerly Coryneum). For instance, the name Seiridium cupressi is still be used for the anamorphic form of that species, but now that it is known that a sexual stage exists, the name Lepteutypa cupressi. On the other hand, no sexual stage of species Seiridium cardinale is known, so that is its only name.[2][3]
Seiridium cardinale is important to gardeners and foresters as they cause the devastating Cypress canker disease on Cupressus, Thuja, and related conifers in Northern Europe, America, Australia,[4] and New Zealand.[5][6] Seiridium cardinale is from California and was introduced to Europe around the 1930s, probably from infected nursery stock. A separate introduction affected the southern hemisphere.[7]
Species
editAs accepted by Species Fungorum;[8]
- Seiridium abietinum (Ellis & Everh.) B. Sutton (1975)
- Seiridium anceps (Sacc.) B. Sutton (1975)
- Seiridium aquaticum Z.L. Luo, K.D. Hyde & H.Y. Su (2019)
- Seiridium bignoniae (Sousa da Câmara) B. Sutton (1975)
- Seiridium breviaristatum (Tracy & Earle) B. Sutton (1975)
- Seiridium caffrum Matsush. (1996)
- Seiridium camelliae Maharachch. & K.D. Hyde (2015)
- Seiridium canariense (Petr.) Nag Raj & W.B. Kendr. (1986)
- Seiridium cancrinum G. Bonthond, M. Sand.-Den. & P.W. Crous (2017)
- Seiridium cardinale (W.W. Wagener) B. Sutton & I.A.S. Gibson (1972)
- Seiridium castaneae (Berk. & M.A. Curtis ex Sacc.) B. Sutton (1975)
- Seiridium ceratosporum (De Not.) Nag Raj (1993)
- Seiridium chinense C.M. Tian & N. Jiang (2019)
- Seiridium corni (Allesch.) B. Sutton (1970)
- Seiridium cupressi (Nattrass, C. Booth & B. Sutton) Bonthond, Sand.-Den. & Crous (2019)
- Seiridium delleanii (Servazzi) B. Sutton (1963)
- Seiridium embeliae Rashmi Dubey & Akh.K. Pandey (2009)
- Seiridium eriobotryae Y.X. Chen & G. Wei (2002)
- Seiridium eucalypti Nag Raj (1993)
- Seiridium indicum Pavgi & U.P. Singh (1971)
- Seiridium intermedium (Sacc.) B. Sutton (1975)
- Seiridium italicum Samarak., Camporesi & K.D. Hyde (2022)
- Seiridium jefferisii (Ellis) Nag Raj (1993)
- Seiridium kartense G. Bonthond, M. Sand.-Den. & P.W. Crous (2017)
- Seiridium kenyanum G. Bonthond, M. Sand.-Den. & P.W. Crous (2017)
- Seiridium mali (Ellis & Everh.) Nag Raj (1993)
- Seiridium marginatum Nees (1816)
- Seiridium neocupressi G. Bonthond, M. Sand.-Den. & P.W. Crous (2017)
- Seiridium papillatum Z.Q. Yuan (1997)
- Seiridium persooniae Crous (2017)
- Seiridium pezizoides (De Not.) Crous (2019)
- Seiridium phylicae Crous & M.J. Wingf. (2012)
- Seiridium podocarpi Crous & A.R. Wood (2014)
- Seiridium proteae Marinc., M.J. Wingf. & Crous (2008)
- Seiridium pseudocardinale Wijayaw., Camporesi, McKenzie & K.D. Hyde (2016)
- Seiridium rosarum Wanas., Camporesi, E.B.G. Jones & K.D. Hyde (2018)
- Seiridium rostratum (Zabriskie) Nag Raj (1993)
- Seiridium spyridiicola G. Bonthond, M. Sand.-Den. & P.W. Crous (2017)
- Seiridium syzygii Crous (2021)
- Seiridium tecomae (Sacc.) B. Sutton (1975)
- Seiridium terebinthi (Briosi) Nag Raj (1993)
- Seiridium turgidum (G.F. Atk.) Nag Raj (1993)
- Seiridium venetum (Sacc.) Nag Raj (1989)
- Seiridium viburni (Sousa da Câmara & Luz) B. Sutton (1963)
Former species;[8]
- S. acerinum (Bäumler) B. Sutton (1975) = Sporocadus acerinus, Sporocadaceae
- S. banksiae Crous & Summerell (2011) = Distononappendiculata banksiae, Sporocadaceae
- S. juniperi (Allesch.) B. Sutton (1975) = Pestalotia juniperi, Pestalotiopsidaceae
- S. liquidambaris Berk. & M.A. Curtis (1874) = Harknessia liquidambaris, Harknessiaceae
- S. unicorne (Cooke & Ellis) B. Sutton (1975) = Seiridium cupressi
References
edit- ^ Wijayawardene, Nalin; Hyde, Kevin; Al-Ani, Laith Khalil Tawfeeq; Somayeh, Dolatabadi; Stadler, Marc; Haelewaters, Danny; et al. (2020). "Outline of Fungi and fungus-like taxa". Mycosphere. 11: 1060–1456. doi:10.5943/mycosphere/11/1/8. hdl:11336/151990.
- ^ Graniti, A. (September 1986). "Seiridium cardinale and other cypress cankers". EPPO Conference on Pest and Disease Problems in European Forests. 16 (3): 479–486. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2338.1986.tb00309.x.
- ^ Tsopelas, P.; Angelopoulos, A.; Nikolaou, K. (August 2008). "Seiridium cardinale is a new threat to cypress trees in Cyprus". Plant Pathology. 57 (4): 784–784. doi:10.1111/j.1365-3059.2007.01812.x.
- ^ "TREETEC | Cypress Canker | Conifer dieback | Seiridium sp | Fungal disease in cypress trees".
- ^ Graniti A. (1998). "CYPRESS CANKER: A Pandemic in Progress". Annual Review of Phytopathology. 36: 91–114. doi:10.1146/annurev.phyto.36.1.91. PMID 15012494.
- ^ See this New Zealand Farm Forestry site.
- ^ Della Rocca G, Eyre CA, Danti R, Garbelotto M (2011). "Sequence and SSR analyses of the fungal pathogen Seiridium cardinale indicate California is the most likely source of the Cypress canker epidemic for the Mediterranean region". Phytopathology. 101 (12): 1408–1417. doi:10.1094/PHYTO-05-11-0144. PMID 21879790.
- ^ a b "Seiridium - Search Page". www.speciesfungorum.org. Species Fungorum. Retrieved 16 February 2023.