Athelia rolfsii

Athelia rolfsii
Sclerotia of Athelia rolfsii at base of foliage of eastern redcedar (Juniperus virginiana L.)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Phylum: Basidiomycota
Subphylum: Agaricomycotina
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Atheliales
Family: Atheliaceae
Genus: Athelia
Binomial name
Athelia rolfsii
(Curzi) C.C. Tu & Kimbr.
Synonyms

Corticium rolfsii Curzi
Pellicularia rolfsii (Curzi) E. West
Botryobasidium rolfsii (Curzi) Venkatar.
Sclerotium rolfsii anamorph Sacc.

Athelia rolfsii is a corticioid fungus in the family Atheliaceae. It is a facultative plant pathogen and is the causal agent of "southern blight" disease in crops.

Taxonomy

The species was first described in 1911 by Italian mycologist Pier Andrea Saccardo, based on specimens sent to him by Peter Henry Rolfs who considered the unnamed fungus to be the cause of tomato blight in Florida. The specimens sent to Saccardo were sterile, consisting of hyphae and sclerotia. He placed the species in the old form genus Sclerotium, naming it Sclerotium rolfsii. It is, however, not a species of Sclerotium in the strict sense.

In 1932, Mario Curzi discovered that the teleomorph (spore-bearing state) was a corticioid fungus and accordingly placed the species in the form genus Corticium. With a move to a more natural classification of fungi, Corticium rolfsii was transferred to Athelia in 1978.

Description

The fungus produces effused basidiocarps (fruit bodies) that are smooth and white. Microscopically, they consist of ribbon-like hyphae with clamp connections. Basidia are club-shaped, bearing four smooth, ellipsoid basidiospores, measuring 4-7 by 3-5 μm. Small, brownish sclerotia (hyphal propagules) are also formed, arising from the hyphae.[1]

Southern blight

Athelia rolfsii occurs in soil as a saprotroph, but can also attack living plants. It has an almost indiscriminate host range, but its capacity to form sclerotia (propagules that remain in the soil) means that it particularly attacks seasonal crops. It mostly occurs in warm soils (above 15°C) and can be a serious pest of vegetables in tropical and subtropical regions (including Florida, where it was first recognized), causing "southern blight".[2]

It can also be called mustard seed fungus.[3]

See also

External links

Media related to Athelia rolfsii at Wikimedia Commons

References

  1. Tu CC, Kimbrough JW (1978). "Systematics and phylogeny of fungi in the Rhizoctonia complex". Botanical Gazette. 139: 454–466. doi:10.1086/337021.
  2. Koike ST, Gladders P, Paulus AO (2007). Vegetable diseases: a color handbook. Gulf Professional. p. 448.
  3. "Southern Blight". ipm.ucdavis.edu. Retrieved 6 March 2015.
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