The genus Cladosporium

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Date: June 2012
From: Studies in Mycology(Vol. 72)
Publisher: Centraalbureau voor Schimmelcultures
Document Type: Report
Length: 24,725 words
Lexile Measure: 1620L

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34. Cladosporium cladosporioides (Fresen.) G.A. de Vries, Contr. Knowl. Genus Cladosporium: 57. 1952. Figs 74-76.

Basionym: Penicillium cladosporioides Fresen., Beitr. Mykol. 1: 22. 1850.

[equivalent to] Hormodendrum cladosporioides (Fresen.) Sacc., Michelia 2(6): 148. 1880.

[equivalent to] Cladosporium herbarum f. hormodendroides Ferraris, Flora Ital. Crypt., Pars I, Fungi, Fasc. 8: 332. 1912

Type: Germany, on overwintered leaves of Hydrangea sp. (Hydrangeaceae) (not preserved). Neotype (designated in Bensch et al. 2010): Germany, isol. from indoor air, Ch. Trautmann (CBS H-20428). Ex-type culture: CBS 112388.

= ? Ramularia meliloti Ellis & Everh., Erythea 2: 26. 1894 [holotype: NY].

= Cladosporium myriosporum Ellis & Dearn., Proc. Canad. Inst., N.S., 3, 1: 90. 1897, p.p. (nom. confus., type material composed of C. macrocarpum and C. cladosporioides) [syntypes: DAOM, NYS].

= Monilia humicola Oudem., Arch. Neerl. Sci. Exact. Nat. 7: 286. 1902.

= Cladosporium herbarum f. camelliae-japonicae Bubak, in RabenhorstPatzschke, Fungi Eur. Exs., Cent. 43, No. 4289. 1901, nom. nud. [syntypes: e.g. B, HAL, HBG].

Lit.: Yamamoto (1959: 3), Ellis (1971: 319), Subramanian (1971: 285), Shvartsman et al. (1975: 93-94), Domsch et al. (1980: 202), Ellis & Ellis (1985: 290, 468), Wang & Zabel (1990), Braun (1998: 301), Ho et al. (1999: 121), Samson et al. (2000: 108), de Hoog et al. (2000: 583), Samson et al. (2001: 340), Zhang et al. (2003: 69-74), Park et al. (2004), Schubert & Braun (2004: 304), Heuchert et al. (2005: 46^7), Pasqualetti et al. (2005), Schubert (2005b: 155-156), Bensch et al. (2010: 29-34).

Ill.: Fresenius (1850: Taf. 3, figs 23-28), de Vries (1952: 58-59, figs 10-11), Yamamoto (1959: 4, figs 9-12), Ellis (1971: 318, fig. 219 C), Domsch et al. (1980: 203, fig. 82), Ho et al. (1999: 122, figs 8-9), de Hoog et al. (2000: 583-584, figs), Samson et al. (2000: 108, fig. 48; 109, pl. 46), Schell (2003: 582, fig. 16), Zhang et al. (2003: 70, fig. 30), Bensch et al. (2010: 30-32, figs 17-19).

Exs.: Rabenhorst, Fungi Eur. Exs. 4289.

In vivo: Colonies usually effuse, sometimes rather inconspicuous, greyish green, olivaceous-brown or brownish. Mycelium usually immersed in the substratum. Stromata lacking. Conidiophores solitary to loosely caespitose, erect, long, filiform or subcylindrical, neither distinctly geniculate-sinuous nor nodulose, usually unbranched, occasionally once branched, 10-250 x (2.5-)3-5(6) [micro]m, mostly less than 100 [micro]m long, aseptate to pluriseptate throughout, smooth, rarely faintly rough-walled, thin-walled, s 1(-1.5) [micro]m. Conidiogenous cells integrated, terminal, rarely also intercalary, occasionally conidiophores aseptate, i.e., reduced to conidiogenous cells, 10-30(-40) [micro]m long, usually not or barely geniculate, i.e., usually without any proliferation, neither sympodial nor percurrent, but often subdenticulate, with 1-3, rarely more, denticle-like, somewhat protuberant conidiogenous loci at the apex, (0.5)1-2(-2.5) [micro]m diam, distinctly coronate, somewhat darkened-refractive. Conidia in branched chains, broadly subglobose, ellipsoid-ovoid, limoniform, (3-)4-8(-11) x 2-4(-5) [micro]m, 0(-1)-septate, ramoconidia and secondary ramoconidia ellipsoid-subcylindrical to cylindrical, 8-30 x (2.5-)3-5(-5.5) [micro]m, 0-2-septate, subhyaline, pale olivaceous to olivaceous-brown, smooth, rarely with faintly rough-walled conidia mixed with smooth conidia, thin-walled, s 1 [micro]m, ends attenuated to rounded, hila (0.5)1-2(-2.5) diam, somewhat protuberant and somewhat darkened-refractive.

In vitro: Mycelium immersed, rarely superficial; hyphae sparse, unbranched...

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