11-05-2024 00:33
Ethan CrensonI'm not entirely sure that Encoelia-like is the ri
07-05-2024 00:04
Ethan CrensonA friend found these black gelatnous cups on a twi
09-05-2024 13:07
Thorben HülsewigHi there,i'm looking for following pdf:Morris, E.F
06-05-2024 10:02
François BartholomeeusenGood morning,At the end of an excursion in De Zegg
Salut Andgelo,
Tu as regardé vers les Cercophora ?
Il serait intéressant de comparer à une espèce comme Cercophora newfieldiana par exemple.
Alain
http://ascofrance.com/recolte/2773/sordariomycetes-sordariales-lasiosphaeriaceae-eosphaeria-uliginosa
This is a rare species and one I have been wanting to sequence for 22 years!!! Can you please send me the specimen so I can try to sequence it, por favor?
Best,
Andy
Hi Andy,
Of course you knew it !
My last idea was Lasiosphaeria dichroospora (from Hilber, I read Seaver ; they have descriptions of newfieldiana somewhere different), I completly forgot the existence of uliginosa.
Perfect !
Alain
Eosphaeria uliginosa (Fr.) von Hohnel, Annis mycol. 15; 363 (1917).
Sphaeria uliginosa Fr., Syst. mycol. 2: 457 (1823).
Lasiosphaeria dichroospora Ell. & Ev., Erythea t: 197 (1893).
Herminia dichroospora (Ell. & Ev.) Hilber, Z. Mykol. 45: 225 (1979).
Hilber (1979) erected the new genus Herminia to accommodate a fungus described by Ellis & Everhart ( 1893) as Lasiosphaeria dichroospora Ell. & Ev. In doing so, she overlooked what had been already reported by Fernier (1954), i.ei L. dichroospora is identical with Eosphaeria uliginosa (Fr.) von Hohnel (non Eosphaera E. S. Barghoorn, 1965, a fossil alga), based on Sphaeria uliginosa Fr. Fernier (1954) gave precedence to the name L. dichroospora erroneously, thus contravening Art. 57 (ICBN).
Cheers,
Andy
Yes, it should be possible to culture this species. The ascospores should be alive for a couple of weeks and should germinate on standard media (CMA, MEA, PDA, etc.).
Andy
Thanks for all Andy.
Andgelo, pour répondre en partie à ta question qui je suppose porte sur la répartition en France, il y a une récolte connue de Françoise Candoussau (64). Mais il serait étonnant que Jacques n'ait pas cela dans son herbier.
C'est un chouette pyréno que tu nous as encore déniché !
A fresh specimen from Andgelo would be easier to sequence.
Cheers,
Andy