Biology:Ascosphaera

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Short description: Genus of fungi

Ascosphaera
Ascosphaera callicarpa.png
A) habitat. Phragmites reeds and female Chelostoma florisomne returning with pollen for her brood. B) fecal pellet of C. florisomne larva covered with spore cysts; pale spore balls are visible through the transparent spore cyst wall. C) close-up of spore cyst showing spore balls and smooth, unornamented spore cyst wall. D) spore balls. E) bacilliform ascospores. Scale bars: B = 200 µm, C = 50 µm, C = 10 µm, D = 15 µm, E = 10 µm.
Scientific classification
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Ascosphaera

L.S.Olive & Spiltoir (1955)
Type species
Ascosphaera apis
(Maasen ex Claussen) L.S.Olive & Spiltoir (1955)
Synonyms

Pericystis Betts (1912)[1]

Ascosphaera is a genus of fungi in the family Ascosphaeraceae. It was described in 1955 by mycologists Charles F. Spiltoir and Lindsay S. Olive.[2] Members of the genus are insect pathogens. The type species, A. apis, causes chalkbrood disease in honey bees.[3] The reproductive ascospores of the fungus are produced within a unique structure, the spore cyst, or sporocyst.[4]

Species

  • A. acerosa
  • A. aggregata
  • A. apis
  • A. asterophora
  • A. atra
  • A. callicarpa[5]
  • A. celerrima
  • A. cinnamomea
  • A. duoformis
  • A. fimicola
  • A. flava
  • A. fusiformis
  • A. larvis
  • A. major
  • A. naganensis
  • A. osmophila
  • A. parasitica
  • A. pollenicola
  • A. proliperda
  • A. scaccaria
  • A. solina
  • A. subcuticularis
  • A. tenax
  • A. torchioi
  • A. variegata
  • A. verrucosa
  • A. xerophila

References

  1. Betts AD. (1912). "A bee-hive fungus, Pericystis alvei, gen. et sp. nov.". Annals of Botany 26 (3): 795–800. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.aob.a089417. 
  2. "A reclassification of the genus Pericystis Betts". Mycologia 47 (2): 238–44. 1955. doi:10.2307/3755414. http://www.cybertruffle.org.uk/cyberliber/59350/0047/002/0238.htm. 
  3. Capinera JL. (2008). Encyclopedia of Entomology. Springer. p. 304. ISBN 978-1-4020-6242-1. https://books.google.com/books?id=i9ITMiiohVQC&pg=PA304. 
  4. Wynns, A.A.; Jensen, A.B.; Eilenberg, J.; James, R. (2012), "Ascosphaera subglobosa, a new spore cyst fungus from North America associated with the solitary bee Megachile rotundata", Mycologia 104 (1): 108–114, doi:10.3852/10-047, PMID 21828215 
  5. "Ascosphaera callicarpa, a new species of bee-loving fungus, with a key to the genus for Europe". PLoS ONE 8 (9): e73419. 2013. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0073419. PMID 24086280. Bibcode2013PLoSO...873419W. 

External links

Wikidata ☰ Q4804012 entry