Podonectria is a genus in the monotypic Podonectriaceae family of fungi.[2] They are parasitic fungus on scale insects, other fungi, or on substrates that had previously colonized by other fungi.
The family of Podonectriaceae was introduced to accommodate genus Podonectria by Dao et al. in 2016.[3] This was later confirmed by ITS and LSU data.[4]
Description
They generally have a sexual morph that has a byssoid (wispy, cottony or teased wool appearance) stromata which is well-developed or scant and white to brown or dark-brown. The ascomata is solitary or aggregated, superficial on or immersed in the stroma. It is globose to subglobose, obpyriform or ovoid in shape, cream white to light yellow, or brown to dark brown in colour and covered with hairs or absent. The hamathecium (i.e., all of the fungal hyphae or other tissues between asci) consists of numerous reticulate, filiform, septate and branched pseudoparaphyses. The asci is 8-spored, bitunicate (double walled) and long clavate to cylindric in shape. The ascospores are long clavate to long cylindric, or vermiform in shape. They are also multiseptate.
The species in the genus also have an asexual morph that is tetracrium-like. The sporodochia is formed directly on cushion-shaped, white, orange, or brown, and hard stroma. The conidiophores are moniliform (bead-shaped). The conidia are usually 1–4 'arm-like', narrowed toward the apex, joined at the basal cell and multiseptate.[4]
History
Genus Podonectria was introduced by Petch,[1] to accommodate species of Ophionectria (in the Nectriaceae family), which are parasitic on scale insects and have thick-walled asci, long, multiseptate ascospores, and a tetracrium-like conidial stage. The type species, Podonectria coccicola(Ellis and Everh.) Petch was transferred from Ophionectria coccicola(Ellis & Everh.) Berl. & Voglino and is associated with the scale insects of Aonidiella aurantia(Maskell), Aspidiotus perniciosus(Comstock), Chrysomphalus aonidum(Linnaeus), Lepidosaphes beckii(Newman), Lepidosaphes gloverii(Packard), Leucapsis sp., Parlatoria pergandiiComstock, Parlatoria ziziphiLucas, and Unaspis citri(Comstock) which are all mainly found on Rutaceae species of plants.[5][6][3]
Species Puttemansia aurantii(Henn.) Höhn, was initially found to be the type specimen of the asexual morph Tetracrium aurantiiHenn. and is associated with scale insect Parlatoria ziziphi which feeds on Citrus aurantiumL., was also transferred to the Podonectria genus as Podonectria aurantii(Henn.) Petch.[1] A new species collected from Lepidosaphes sp. on Citrus nobilisLour. was named as Podonectria echinata.[1] Additionally, two new species, Podonectria gahniaDingley and Podonectria novae-zelandiaeDingley, were reported by J.M. Dingley in 1954 from scale insects in New Zealand,[5] they were later followed by a new fungus Podonectria tenuisporaDennis collected from Lepidosaphes ulmi(Linnaeus) found on Calluna vulgaris(L.) Hull.[7] Subsequently, Rossman transferred species Ophionectria coccorumPetch, associated with Fiorinia juniperiKuwana, and also Lasiosphaeria larvaesporaCooke & Massee on an undetermined scale insect also to Podonectria, viz. Podonectria coccorum(Petch) Rossman and Podonectria larvaespora(Cooke & Massee) Rossman.[8] The fungal species Trichonectria bambusicolaRehm was referred as Podonectria bambusicola(Rehm) Piroz. on account of it having scolecosporous ascospores (having very long worm-like spores) and tetracrium-like conidia by Pirozynski.[9] However, Podonectria bambusicola was excluded because of its occurrence on living leaves of bamboo rather than scale insects and remained an unclassified loculoascomycete (class of fungi with bitunicate Ascomycota).[6] Rossman then published a monograph on Podonectria and accepted eight species in 1978.[6] A later examination of the type specimen of Trichonectria bambusicola further revealed that this was a synonym of Uredinophila erinaceae(Rehm) Rossman.[10] The genus Podonectria was characterized by having fleshy, white to brown, uninoculated ascomata with bitunicate asci and long, multiseptated ascospores and also being associated with scale insects.[6] Spatafora et al. transferred the previously reported species Podonectria cicadellidicolaKobayasi & Shimizu and Podonectria citrinaKobayasi & Shimizu to genus Ophiocordyceps (family Ophiocordycipitaceae, Order Hypocreales),[11] supported by the previous phylogenetic analyses presented in Quandt et al in 2014.[12] In 2019, Yang et al. found Podonectria sichuanensisC.L. Yang & X.L. Xu parasitic around the ascomata of fungus Neostagonosporella sichuanensisC.L. Yang, X.L. Xu & K.D. Hyde (in the Phaeosphaeriaceae family) on (water bamboo) Phyllostachys heterocladaOliv in China.[13]
In 2021, 3 fungi were associated with Kuwanaspis howardi, a scale insect on Phyllostachys heteroclada (fishscale bamboo) and Pleioblastus amarus (bitter bamboo) in China. New species Podonectria kuwanaspidisX.L. Xu & C.L. Yang sp. nov. and Podonectria novae-zelandiaeDingley, as well as Microcera kuwanaspidisX.L. Xu & C.L. Yang sp. nov. (Nectriaceae family, Hypocreales order),[4]
^ abcdDingley, J.M. (1954). "The Hypocreales of new zealand VI. The genera Hypocrella, Barya, Claviceps and Podonectria". Trans. R. Soc. N. Z. 81: 489–499.
^ abcdRossman, A.Y. (1978). "Podonectria, a genus in the Pleosporales on scale insects". Mycotaxon. 7: 163–182.