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| True Fungi (Eumycophyta) 1Deuteromycota – Fungi
  Imperfecti(Contact)         Please CLICK on underlined
  links & included illustrations for details           Use Ctrl/F to search
  for Subject Matter:   
   Introduction             This group of fungi comprises over
  20,000 species and is very important in breaking down organic matter, as
  plant and animal pathogens and for industrial importance.  They are all higher true fungi, which lack
  a known perfect stage.  Their mycelium
  is like that in the Ascomycota and vegetative reproduction structures are
  common to both groups.  Over 90
  percent of the important fungi that have been shown to possess a perfect, or
  sexual, stage have been Ascomycota. 
  Most of the Deuteromycota produce conidia of one kind or another.  There is substantial evidence that at
  least the majority of these fungi are of Ascomycetous affinities.  Indeed, it is probable that a great many
  of them are Ascomycota whose perfect stages have simply escaped
  discovery.  Mycologists continue to
  report finding ascigerous stages of several fungi previously included in this
  group.  Thereafter these drop out of
  the Fungi Imperfecti and are renamed and reclassified on the basis of the
  newly acquired information.  How many
  other members of the Fungi Imperfecti will in a similar way ultimately be
  eliminated from the group can only be conjectured.  However, it seems likely that among the large number of species
  at present catalogued as Deuteromycota, there are some that never do produce
  a perfect stage, perhaps having lost the ability in the course of evolution,
  reproduction by conidia or other vegetative means having proved adequate for
  survival.  Four orders that will be
  discussed here are Sphaeropsidales, Melanconiales, Moniliales and Mycelia Sterilia.             In 1952 Alexopoulos gave a
  detailed narrative of the Deuteromycota, and the following description is
  derived therefrom [Alexopoulos, C. J.  1952. 
  Introductory Mycology. 
  John Wiley & Sons, NY.  482
  p.].   -------------------------------------           A great many
  fungi are known which have septate mycelium and which, so far as anyone has
  been able to discover, reproduce only by means of conidia. Since these fungi
  apparently lack a sexual phase (perfect stage), we call them commonly
  "imperfect fungi," and technically "Fungi Imperfecti."
  Many of these are saprobic, but many are of great importance to us because
  they are parasites that cause diseases of plants, animals, and human beings. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
             The same
  methods employed for the formation of pycnidia also serve for the formation
  of. acervuli, the origin of which may be simple meristogenous, compound
  meristogenous, or symphogenous. This undoubtedly explains the fact that
  intermediate forms, between pycnidia and acervuli are produced by some fungi
  which ~re, therefore, difficult to classify. 
 
 
 
 
 -------------------------------------           Sphaeropsidales In
  this order the spores are borne in a flask-shaped pycnidium on the inside of
  which are conidiophores bearing conidia (pycnospores).               Four
  form-families have been distinguished as follows:  (1) Sphaeropsidaceae
  (pycnidia dark colored,
  leathery to carbonous, stromatic or non-stromatic generally provided with a
  circular opening).  (2) Zythiaceae (pycnidia
  as in the Sphaeropsidaceae but light colored instead of dark, and soft or
  waxy instead of leathery).  (3) Leptostromataceae (pycnidia
  shield-shaped or elongated, flattened). 
  (4) Excipulaceae (mature pycnidia
  somewhat deeply cup-shaped).             In the family Sphaeropsidaceae species of the genus Darluca are
  hyperparasitic on rusts.  Species of Cicinnobolus
  are hyperparasites of powdery mildew. 
  Their mycelium is grown longitudinally in the mycelium of their hosts.   ------------------------------------- Please
  refer to the following plates for characteristic structures in the
  Sphaeropsidales:   Deuteromycota (Fungi
  Imperfecti):  Sphaeropsidales   Plate
  150 = Pycnidia types:  Zythis fragariae, Dendrophoma
  abscurans, Chaetomella atra, Diplodia zeae,                         Fusicoccum  viticolum & Endothia parasitica. Plate 151 = Pycnidial
  development:  Phoma herbarum, P.
  pirina & Zythia fragariae. Plate 153 = Sphaeropsidales:  Pycnidiospore types. Plate
  240 = Example Structures: 
  Deuteromycota: Sphaeropsidales: Sphaerioidaceae   -------------------------------------           Melanconiales Spores are borne on an
  acervulus in this order (as in the genus Higginsia of the Ascomycota)               Only one
  form-family has been designated:  Melanconiaceae.  Many species are parasitic on plants and
  cause a group of diseases called anthracnoses.  The acervuli that are the characteristic
  structures of this family usually develop below the cuticle or below the
  epidermis of the host plant.  They
  release their conidia in characteristic droplets, which may be white,
  cream-colored, pink, orange or black depending on the pigmentation of the
  conidia.             In the family
  Melanconiaceae the
  genus Gloeosporium
  has setae, the genus Colletotrichum does not have setae and Cylindrosporium
  is lit the genus Higginsia of the Ascomycota: Helotiales.   -------------------------------------           Please refer to the
  following plates for characteristic structures in the Melanconiales:   Deuteromycota (Fungi Imperfecti):  Melanconiales   Plate 152
  = Acervuli:  Gloeosporium sp.
  & Colletotrichum lindemuthianum. Plate 154
  = Melanconiales:  Conidia types. Plate 241 = Example
  Structures:  Deuteromycota:  Melanconiales & Mycelia Sterilia   -------------------------------------           Moniliales This
  order includes all the other spore-producing forms and contains the greatest
  number of species.  Many species are
  of great importance and the group contains most of the fungal
  pathogens of humans.  It is also the group that has many of the
  fungi that or of industrial importance. 
  Species of Penicillium and Aspergillus that are not
  known to form cleistothecia are included. 
  The so-named "false yeasts" that are not known to produce
  ascospores are grouped here.  There
  are a number of serious plant pathogens as well and some common contaminants
  of the biological laboratory and many soil fungi what are saprobic and may
  play a significant role in the soil economy. 
  Eight family are included here.             The family Stilbaceae has
  a coremium or synnema.  The majority
  of species are saprobic.  The
  form-genus Graphium
  is economically important because several species are
  responsible for blue stain of lumber
  that reduces market value.  The
  imperfect stage of Ophiostoma ulmi (= Graphium ulmi) belongs here
  also.             The family Tuberculariaceae has
  a sporodochium, which is a cushion-like mass of hyphae.  The genera Tubercularia, Volutella
  and Fusarium are well known. 
  In Tubercularia the sporodochium is usually shaped like a
  mushroom, with a very short stalk and a smooth surface.  In Volutella the sporodochium produces
  setae that arise here and there over the entire fructification.  Volutella fructi causes Dry Rot
  of Apples.  The form-genus Fusarium is the largest in this family and taxonomically one of the
  most difficult of all fungal groups.  Fusarium
  produces long, crescent-shaped, multiseptate macroconidia usually borne on
  sporodochia, and very small spherical, oval elongated or crescent shaped
  microconidia on simple or branched single hyphae.  Chlamydospores are also regularly produced by the mycelium, and
  sclerotia are often formed.  Parasitic
  species are generally vascular parasites that cause wilts of plants by
  plugging the conducting tissues and by toxin secretions.  Among the most destructive species are Fusarium
  solani on potato, Fusarium cubense on banana and Fusarium
  lini on flax (Plate 159).             The families Moniliaceae and Dermatiaceae have
  spores scattered over the mycelium. 
  The Moniliaceae have hyaline spores whereas the Dermatiaceae have dark
  pigmented spores.  The genus Thielaviopsis
  has endoconidia, but they may also produce macroconidia or chlamydospores in
  chains.               The
  Moniliaceae is the larges of all the form-families.  It includes all imperfect fungi that produce conidia on
  unorganized, hyaline conidiophores or directly on the somatic hyphae.  Most species are saprobic, but many are
  important plant parasites
  and others are human pathogens.  The imperfect stages of Aspergillus and
  Penicillium belong here (Plate 102,f).               The family Dermophyta is
  related to Gymnoascaceae of the Ascomycota.             In the family Cryptococcaceae there
  are asporagenous yeasts, which are related to Saccharomyces of the
  Ascomycota.  The Genus Candida incites a human disease
  called "Thrush."  The Genus Cryptococcus
  includes animal pathogens and Torulopsis is
  a food yeast that is used for animal food.             The family Rhodotorulaceae is asporagenous yeasts
  that are possibly related to the Basidiomycota:  Dacryomycetales.               The family Sporobolomycetaceae is
  also asporagenous yeasts that are possibly related to the Basidiomycota:  Dacryomycetales.  Sporobolomyces species have pink or orange-pigmented
  forms.  They may reproduce by simple
  budding or they may produce sterigmata with spores that are shot off forcibly
  (= ballistospores).   -------------------------------------           Please refer to the
  following plates for characteristic structures in the Moniliales:   Deuteromycota (Fungi Imperfecti):  Moniliales   Plate 155
  = Capsules of Cryptococcus neoformans. Plate 156
  = Structures of Candida albicans & Geotrichum sp. Plate 157
  = Budding & spore production:  Nectaromyces
  spp. & Sporobolomyces spp. Plate 158
  = Moniliales:  Conidia types. Plate 159
  = Sporodochium of Fusarium lini & Fusarium sp. Plate
  242 = Example Structures: 
  Deuteromycota:  Moniliales   -------------------------------------           Mycelia Sterilia  includes a group of fungi in which no
  conidia or other reproductive cells are known.  Sclerotia are formed, but there are no fruiting bodies (=
  spores).  Many of the Mycelia Sterilia
  proved to be Basidiomycota when their perfect stages were discovered.  Of the over two form-genera in this group,
  Rhizoctonia
  and Sclerotium are the best known and most
  widely distributed.  Rhizoctonia
  is usually found in soils causing damping-off and
  root rot of their host
  plants.  Pellicularia
  filamentosa, a basidiomycete, has Rhizoctonia solani as
  its imperfect stage.  It causes Black
  Scurf of potatoes
  and attacks other plants as well.  Sclerotium cepivorum known in the form of small black
  slcerotia produced on white, cottony hyphae, causes white rot of onions and
  garlic.  Sclerotium rolfsii is
  omnivorous and can be very destructive on plants.   -------------------------------------           Please
  refer to the following plates for characteristic structures in the Mycelia
  Sterilia:   Deuteromycota (Fungi Imperfecti):  Mycelia
  Sterilia   Plate 241 = Example
  Structures:  Deuteromycota:  Melanconiales & Mycelia Sterilia   -------------------------------------   Recognition of Tribes And Sub-Tribes             The final subdivision of most of
  the families into the equivalent of tribes and sub-tribes is done on the basis
  of spore form, structure and color, and utilizing the "Saccardo
  Spore Sections" (= Italian mycologist: 1880-1925) with the
  following possibilities:   Amerosporae = spores 1-celled but not long, notstellate, spiral, or
  filiform        Hyalosporae = spores hyaline      Phaeosporae = spores dark   Didymosporae = spores 2-celled, not stellate, spiral, or filiform        Hylodidymae = spores hyaline      Phaeodidymae = spores dark   Phragmosporae = spores more than 2-celled (variable), not stellate,
  spiral, or filiform        Hyalophragmiae = spores hyaline      Phaeophragmiae = spores dark   Scoloecosporae = spores long and slender (scolecospores) septate or
  non-septate   Dictyosporae = spores muriform        Hyalodictyae = spores hyaline      Phaeodictyae = spores dark   Helicosporae = spores spirally coiled, continuous or septate   Staurosporae = spores
  stellate (star-shaped) or radiate, continuous or septate     ========================     |