Polycephalomycetaceae, a new family of clavicipitoid fungi segregates from Ophiocordycipitaceae
Clavicipitoid fungi comprise three families, namely Clavicipitaceae , Cordycipitaceae , and Ophiocordycipitaceae . They are found worldwide and are specialized pathogens of invertebrate, plant and fungal hosts. Over the last decade, morphology- and phylogeny-based studies on clavicipitoid fungi have...
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Published in | Fungal diversity Vol. 120; no. 1; pp. 1 - 76 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Dordrecht
Springer Netherlands
01.05.2023
Springer Nature B.V |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Clavicipitoid fungi comprise three families, namely
Clavicipitaceae
,
Cordycipitaceae
, and
Ophiocordycipitaceae
. They are found worldwide and are specialized pathogens of invertebrate, plant and fungal hosts. Over the last decade, morphology- and phylogeny-based studies on clavicipitoid fungi have increased. The latter have revealed that
Polycephalomyces
,
Perennicordyceps
and
Pleurocordyceps
consistently cluster together. These genera are currently considered as members of
Ophiocordycipitaceae
. Nonetheless, information with regard to their diversity and ecology remains sparse. To fill this gap, we collected 29 fresh specimens from insect and fungal substrates from tropical and subtropical evergreen forests in Thailand and southwestern China. We performed detailed morphological analyses and constructed photoplates for all isolated fungi. We used extensive taxon sampling and a dataset comprising internal transcribed spacer gene region (ITS), small subunit ribosomal RNA gene region (SSU), large subunit rRNA gene region (LSU), translation elongation factor 1-alpha gene region (TEF-1α), RNA polymerase II largest subunit gene region (RPB1) and RNA polymerase II second largest subunit (RPB2) to infer order-, family and genus-level phylogenetic trees. Based on these biphasic analyses, we segregate
Polycephalomyces
,
Perennicordyceps
, and
Pleurocordyceps
from
Ophiocordycipitaceae
and introduce the new family
Polycephalomycetaceae
to accomodate these three genera. The majority of species in this family have a vast range of insect and fungal hosts. The sexual morph of
Polycephalomycetaceae
has stromatic ascomata, long stipes, thick peridium, and cylindrical secondary spores. The asexual morph is characterized by colonies on the host surface or synnemata with stipes on the host, one or two types of phialides, and cylindrical to fusiform conidia. We expand the number of taxa in the new family by introducing seven new species (
Polycephalomyces albiramus
,
Perennicordyceps lutea
,
Pleurocordyceps parvicapitata
,
Pleurocordyceps lanceolatus
,
Pleurocordyceps nutansis
,
Pleurocordyceps heilongtanensis
,
Pleurocordyceps vitellina
), nine new hosts, and one new combination (
Perennicordyceps elaphomyceticola
). The results herein hint at a high level of diversity for
Polycephalomycetaceae
. Future investigations focusing on obtaining additional collections and specimens from different geographical areas would help to reveal not only the extent of the group’s diversity, but also resolve its deeper phylogenetic placement. |
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ISSN: | 1560-2745 1878-9129 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s13225-023-00517-4 |