18.12.2012 Views

NAMC – Newsletter of the Asian Mycological Committee

NAMC – Newsletter of the Asian Mycological Committee

NAMC – Newsletter of the Asian Mycological Committee

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

<strong>NAMC</strong> <strong>–</strong> <strong>Newsletter</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Asian</strong> <strong>Mycological</strong><br />

Editor in Chief: Kevin D Hyde, Jiang Na, o<strong>the</strong>rs<br />

<strong>Committee</strong><br />

Chairman and <strong>of</strong>fice bearers<br />

Chairman<br />

Xingzhong Liu<br />

State Key Laboratory <strong>of</strong> Mycology<br />

Institute <strong>of</strong> Microbiology, Chinese Academy <strong>of</strong> Sciences<br />

No. 3 1st Beichen West Rd., Chaoyang District, Beijing 100101, P. R.China<br />

liuxz@im.ac.cn<br />

Vice-Chairman<br />

Tae Soo Lee<br />

Division <strong>of</strong> Life Sciences<br />

University <strong>of</strong> Incheon<br />

Incheon 406-840, Korea<br />

younslee@kangwon.ac.kr<br />

Vice-Chairman<br />

Vikineswary Sabaratnam<br />

Institute <strong>of</strong> Biological Sciences<br />

Faculty <strong>of</strong> Science<br />

University <strong>of</strong> Malaya<br />

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia<br />

viki@um.edu.my<br />

General Secretary<br />

Lei Cai<br />

State Key Laboratory <strong>of</strong> Mycology<br />

Institute <strong>of</strong> Microbiology, Chinese Academy <strong>of</strong> Sciences<br />

No. 3 1st Beichen West Rd., Chaoyang District, Beijing 100101, P. R.China<br />

mrcailei@gmail.com


� Australasian<br />

Peter Buchanan<br />

Private Bag 92170<br />

Auckland Mail Centre<br />

Auckland 1142<br />

New Zealand<br />

BuchananP@landcareresearch.co.nz<br />

<strong>Committee</strong> members<br />

� Bangladesh<br />

Amin Uddin Mridha<br />

Plant Production Department<br />

King Saud University<br />

P.O.Box 2460, Riyadh 11451, Kingdom <strong>of</strong> Saudi Arabia<br />

mridha@abnetbd.com<br />

� Cambodia<br />

Hean Vanhan<br />

Deputy Director General<br />

General Directorate <strong>of</strong> Agriculture (GDA)/ MAFF, Cambodia<br />

No.54B/49F, Street 395-656, Toeuk Laak 3, Tuol Kok, Phnom Penh, Cambodia.<br />

hean_vanhan@yahoo.com<br />

� China<br />

Xingzhong Liu<br />

State Key Laboratory <strong>of</strong> Mycology<br />

Institute <strong>of</strong> Microbiology, Chinese Academy <strong>of</strong> Sciences<br />

No. 3 1st Beichen West Rd., Chaoyang District, Beijing 100101, P. R.China<br />

liuxz@im.ac.cn<br />

� China<br />

Lei Cai<br />

State Key Laboratory <strong>of</strong> Mycology<br />

Institute <strong>of</strong> Microbiology, Chinese Academy <strong>of</strong> Sciences<br />

No. 3 1st Beichen West Rd., Chaoyang District, Beijing 100101, P. R.China<br />

mrcailei@gmail.com<br />

� HongKong<br />

Lilian LP Vrijmoed<br />

College <strong>of</strong> Science and Engineering<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Biology and Chemistry<br />

City University Hong Kong


Tat Chee Avenue, Kowloon, Hong Kong SAR<br />

bhlilian@city.edu.hk<br />

� India<br />

Chandralata Raghukumar<br />

313, Vainguinim Valley<br />

Dona Paula, Goa, 403 004, India<br />

lata_raghukumar@rediffmail.com<br />

� Indonesia<br />

Kartini Kramadibrata<br />

Herbarium Bogoriense<br />

Bidang Botani, Pusat Penelitian Biologi-LIPI<br />

Cibinong Science Center (CSC)-LIPI<br />

Jl. Raya Jakarta-Bogor<br />

INDONESIAkkramadibrata@yahoo.co.uk<br />

� Iran<br />

Rasoul Zare<br />

Iranian Research Institute <strong>of</strong> Plant Protection, Tehran, Iran<br />

simplicillium@yahoo.com<br />

� Israel<br />

Oded Yarden<br />

The Buck Family Chair Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Plant Pathology<br />

Head, Dept. <strong>of</strong> Plant Pathology and Microbiology<br />

The Robert H. Smith Faculty <strong>of</strong> Agriculture, Food and Environment<br />

The Hebrew University <strong>of</strong> JerusalemRehovot 76100<br />

Israel<br />

oded.yarden@huji.ac.il<br />

� Japan<br />

Toru Okuda<br />

Mycology & Metabolic Diversity Research Center<br />

Tamagawa University Research Institute<br />

6-1-1 Tamagawa-Gakuen, Machida<br />

Tokyo 194-8610, Japan<br />

torula@lab.tamagawa.ac.jp<br />

� Korea<br />

Tae Soo Lee<br />

Division <strong>of</strong> Life Sciences<br />

University <strong>of</strong> Incheon<br />

Incheon 406-840, Korea


younslee@kangwon.ac.kr<br />

� Kuwait<br />

Azza A.AlMusallam<br />

Faculty <strong>of</strong> Science<br />

PO Box 5969<br />

Safat 13060<br />

Kuwait<br />

azza.almusallam@ku.edu.kw<br />

� Laos<br />

Phengsintham Pheng<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Biology<br />

National University <strong>of</strong> Laos<br />

P.O. Box T32, Xaysetha, Vientiane, Laos<br />

pheng_phengsintham@hotmail.com<br />

� Malaysia<br />

Vikineswary Sabaratnam<br />

Institute <strong>of</strong> Biological Sciences<br />

Faculty <strong>of</strong> Science<br />

University <strong>of</strong> Malaya<br />

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia<br />

viki@um.edu.my<br />

� Mongolia<br />

Tsetseg Baljinova<br />

Laboratory <strong>of</strong> Microbiology<br />

Institute <strong>of</strong> Biology<br />

Mongolian Academy <strong>of</strong> Sciences<br />

Ulaanbaatar-51<br />

Mongolia<br />

tsetseg110@yahoo.com<br />

� Myanmar<br />

Thida W. Ko Ko<br />

Mushroom Research Centre<br />

Chiang Mai<br />

Thailand<br />

thidawinkoko@gmail.com<br />

� Nepal<br />

Mahesh K. Adhikari<br />

Adhikari Niwas


KUKL 4/536<br />

Dakshin Tol<br />

BhaniMandal,<br />

Lalitpur, Nepal<br />

mkg_adh@wlink.com.np<br />

� Philippines<br />

Thomas Edison E. dela Cruz<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Biological Sciences<br />

College <strong>of</strong> Science<br />

University <strong>of</strong> Santo Tomas<br />

España 1015 Manila<br />

Philippines<br />

thomasdelacruz@yahoo.com<br />

� Russia<br />

Larissa Vasilyeva<br />

Institute <strong>of</strong> Biology & Soil Science<br />

Far East Branch <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Russian Academy <strong>of</strong> Sciences<br />

Vladivostok 690022<br />

Russia<br />

vasilyeva@biosoil.ru<br />

� Saudi Arabia<br />

A.H. Bahkali<br />

Botany and Microbiology Department<br />

College <strong>of</strong> Science, King Saud University<br />

Riyadh<br />

Saudi Arabia<br />

abahkali@ksu.edu.sa<br />

� Singapore<br />

Teck Koon Tan<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Biological Science<br />

National University <strong>of</strong> Singapore<br />

14 Science Drive 4<br />

Singapore 117543<br />

dbstantk@nus.edu.sg<br />

� Sri Lanka<br />

Nimal Adikaram<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Botany<br />

Faculty <strong>of</strong> Science<br />

University <strong>of</strong> Peradeniya


Peradeniya (20400)<br />

Sri Lanka<br />

nkba@pdn.ac.lk<br />

� Taiwan<br />

Sung-Yuan Hsieh<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Botany<br />

National Museum <strong>of</strong> Natural Science<br />

Taichung, Taiwan 404<br />

sungyuan@gmail.com<br />

� Thailand<br />

Kasem Soytong<br />

Biocontrol Research Unit and Mycology Section<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Plant Pest Management<br />

Faculty <strong>of</strong> Agricultural Technology<br />

King Mongkut’s Institute <strong>of</strong> Technology Ladkrabang (KMITL)<br />

Bangkok 10520<br />

Thailand<br />

kskasem@yahoo.com<br />

� Vietnam<br />

Min Lam Duong<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Microbiology and Biotechnology, Faculty <strong>of</strong> Biology<br />

Hanoi National University <strong>of</strong> Education<br />

136 Xuanthuy, Caugiay<br />

Hanoi, Vietnam<br />

duong.minhlam@gmail.com<br />

� Thailand<br />

Kevin D. Hyde<br />

PO Box 58<br />

Bandoo Post Office<br />

Muang, Chiang Rai 57100<br />

Thailand<br />

kdhyde3@gmail.com<br />

� Japan<br />

Akira Suziki<br />

Faculty <strong>of</strong> Education/Graduate School <strong>of</strong> Horticulture<br />

Chiba University<br />

Japan<br />

asmush@faculty.chiba-u.jp


<strong>Asian</strong> <strong>Mycological</strong> Congress 2011<br />

12th International Marine and Freshwater Mycology Symposium<br />

7-11 August 2011<br />

The University <strong>of</strong> Incheon Convention Centre, Incheon, Korea, was <strong>the</strong> venue for <strong>the</strong> 2011 AMC<br />

and IMFMS meetings, an impressive new campus <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> University. 269 participants attended<br />

from 22 countries, with host country fielding <strong>the</strong> highest number (163). The AMC programme<br />

included 72 oral presentations in 16 symposia, 263 posters and five plenary lectures by Robert<br />

Samson (Fungi and food: Friends or enemies), Gareth Jones (Marine fungal diversity: How many<br />

species are <strong>the</strong>re?), Toru Okuda (Mycology for mycology?), Ching-Hua Su (Fluconaole induced<br />

drastic genetic change in Candida albicans), and Hyun-Sook Lee (Mycoviruses and mushrooms<br />

diseases and <strong>the</strong>ir detection systems).<br />

The conference was opened by Pr<strong>of</strong>. Tae-Soo Lee, Chair <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> organizing committee who<br />

welcomed all <strong>the</strong> participants. Besides <strong>the</strong> scientific presentation we were also treated to a<br />

culture show and some wonderful photographs <strong>of</strong> mushrooms.<br />

Two AMC awards were made at <strong>the</strong> meeting: Distinguished Mycologists 2011 award to<br />

Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Kevin Hyde, Thailand and Young Mycologists award to Dr Lei Cai. There were a<br />

number <strong>of</strong> distinguished nominations considered by <strong>the</strong> search committee and set a very high<br />

standard for <strong>the</strong>se new awards by AMC.<br />

IMFMS 12 attracted fewer participants than <strong>the</strong> very successful meeting in Taiwan in 2009. The<br />

programme was reduced to four sessions with 19 oral presentations and 20 posters. This<br />

prompted Gareth at <strong>the</strong> closing session to query whe<strong>the</strong>r <strong>the</strong> meeting had outlived its<br />

usefulness with <strong>the</strong> declining numbers <strong>of</strong> mycologists working on aquatic fungi. However many<br />

disagreed with this and <strong>the</strong> meeting in China will decide <strong>the</strong> future <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> IMFMS. Pr<strong>of</strong>. Yang<br />

Soo Lee (Korea) <strong>of</strong>fered to set up a website to promote IMFMS in <strong>the</strong> hope <strong>of</strong> attracting a wider<br />

audience for future meetings. We wish this venture every success.


I am grateful to <strong>the</strong> following for supplying summaries and photographs: Natarajan Velmurugan,<br />

Satinee Suetrong, Yang Soo Lee, Lei Cai and Hyeon-Su Ro.<br />

Gareth Jones<br />

Institute <strong>of</strong> Ocean and Earth Sciences<br />

University Malaysia<br />

Presentation <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> AMC Young Mycologist award 2011 to Dr Cai Lei<br />

Opening address by Pr<strong>of</strong>. Tae-Soo Lee


Banner for <strong>the</strong> 2011 meeting in Incheon<br />

Culture show after <strong>the</strong> <strong>of</strong>ficial dinner <strong>of</strong> AMC


Closing speech by <strong>the</strong> new Chairperson AMC<br />

Plenary talk by Gareth Jones<br />

Gallery <strong>of</strong> muchroom fungi at AMC


Plenary talk by Rob Samson<br />

Group photograph <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> 2011 <strong>Asian</strong> Mycology Congress


<strong>Asian</strong> <strong>Mycological</strong> Awards<br />

Distinguished <strong>Asian</strong> Mycologist Award<br />

Dr Kevin D. Hyde was given <strong>the</strong> award <strong>of</strong> Distinguished <strong>Asian</strong> Mycologist in August 2011 at <strong>the</strong><br />

<strong>Asian</strong> <strong>Mycological</strong> Congress for his services in promoting <strong>Asian</strong> Mycology. Dr Hyde has been<br />

Head and Associate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Institute <strong>of</strong> Excellence in Fungal Research, School <strong>of</strong><br />

Science, Mae Fah Luang University, Chiang Rai since January 2008 and is also <strong>the</strong> Managing<br />

Director <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Mushroom Research Foundation, Chiang Mai, Thailand.<br />

Dr Hyde looking for freshwater fungi in sou<strong>the</strong>rn France (photographed by Jacques Fornier)<br />

Dr Hyde was <strong>the</strong> Coordinator <strong>of</strong> EASIANET from 2004 until 2007. This was an elected<br />

position in <strong>the</strong> body designated by CBD with <strong>the</strong> role to remove taxonomic impediments from<br />

<strong>the</strong> East Asia region. Dr Hyde was also Chairman <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Mycological</strong> Association <strong>of</strong> Hong Kong<br />

between 2002-2007 which was inaugurated in 1997. As Chairman <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Asian</strong> <strong>Mycological</strong><br />

<strong>Committee</strong> from 2007-2011 he promoted <strong>the</strong> study <strong>of</strong> mycology throughout <strong>the</strong> <strong>Asian</strong> region.


He was editor-in-chief <strong>of</strong> Fungal Diversity for 11 years, a journal that Dr Hyde introduced, and<br />

was also EIC <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Fungal Diversity Research Series, <strong>the</strong> International Journal <strong>of</strong> Agricultural<br />

Microbiology, and Mycology and is associate editor <strong>of</strong> eight o<strong>the</strong>r journals. Dr Hyde has<br />

published more than 800 refereed papers and <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se 560 are in SCI journals. He has also<br />

published 17 books. Dr Hyde’s passion though is in training students and he supervised some 20<br />

postdoctoral fellows, more than 60 PhD students, and 15 MPhil students up to now. Currently<br />

he is supervising /co-supervising more than 25 postgraduate students at Mae Fah Luang<br />

University, Thailand and in China.<br />

Dr Hyde teaching his students in <strong>the</strong> Mushroom Research Centre classroom. Students from left<br />

to right: Marivic Cabenella, Nilam Wulanderi, Dr Iman Hidiyat, Dr Subbu and Mr Sophia.<br />

Dr Hyde’s academic career is a very unlikely success story as on three occasions it<br />

appeared he would opt for o<strong>the</strong>r career paths. When he was 15 and about to start his last year<br />

at high school his parents moved from Cheltenham to Poole, Dorset, UK. This had <strong>the</strong><br />

unfortunate result that he had to restart his O-level studies because <strong>of</strong> a change in exam body


syllabus and take his exams within 10 months. With four sultry O-level grades he was <strong>of</strong>fered a<br />

job in a chrome plating factory as a chemical apprentice and his fa<strong>the</strong>r, John Hyde,<br />

recommended that he take this up. However, after discussions with <strong>the</strong> teachers at Poole<br />

Grammar School <strong>the</strong>y persuaded his fa<strong>the</strong>r to allow Kevin to pursue his A-levels which John<br />

fortunately accepted. Following his A-levels Dr Hyde carried out his B.Sc. in Zoology at Cardiff<br />

University at <strong>the</strong> University <strong>of</strong> Wales between 1976 and 1979, followed by a one year M.Sc. at<br />

Portsmouth University. At this stage he decided to leave academia and carried out a one year<br />

Post graduate diploma in teaching and in August 1980 took up his first job as a high school<br />

teacher at Hurst School near Basingstoke. His strong desire to travel soon saw him travel to<br />

Seychelles, landing a teaching position where he spent 24 months teaching in a high school. He<br />

had maintained constant contact with Pr<strong>of</strong>. Gareth Jones his M.Sc. program supervisor and in<br />

September 1984 he returned to Portsmouth University in UK and commenced his Ph.D. in<br />

Marine Mycology under <strong>the</strong> guidance <strong>of</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Jones at University <strong>of</strong> Portsmouth. Never<br />

happy to be back in <strong>the</strong> UK, Dr Hyde finished his Ph.D. in two and a half years and moved to<br />

Brunei and again opted out <strong>of</strong> academia to take up yet ano<strong>the</strong>r high school teaching position in<br />

this oil-rich state. In Brunei, he was able to continue his marine mycology research with <strong>the</strong><br />

help <strong>of</strong> two microscopes borrowed from Pr<strong>of</strong> Jones (Portsmouth University) and in about three<br />

years had published 50 international research articles. By 1989, Dr Hyde tired <strong>of</strong> high school<br />

teaching, migrated to Australia where he was jobless for a while. After four months <strong>of</strong> seeking<br />

research or university positions in vain, disillusionment set in and he almost accepted that a<br />

career in research would never be possible for him. To make matters worse he walked through<br />

a glass door seriously injuring a knee cap which had to be removed, cleaned and replaced.<br />

Fortunately, Ian Moorhead who was <strong>the</strong> director <strong>of</strong> Department <strong>of</strong> Primary Industries,<br />

Queensland at this time, saw Dr Hyde’s mycological potential and invited Dr Hyde for an<br />

interview as a NAQS scientist. Dr Hyde attended <strong>the</strong> interview on crutches but was <strong>of</strong>fered <strong>the</strong><br />

position. The subsequent new job surveying plant pathogens throughout north Queensland and<br />

Papua New Guinea set <strong>the</strong> tone for future research on tropical fungi. Although <strong>the</strong> NAQS job<br />

was pretty routine involving looking for 20 or so target organisms, he spent as much time as<br />

possible looking at o<strong>the</strong>r fungi <strong>of</strong> interest and by 2002 had more than 100 SCI publications,


mostly unrelated to his work. Dr Hyde desperately wanted to get into a University so he could<br />

concentrate on research and teach research students. His dream came true in November 2002<br />

at <strong>the</strong> age <strong>of</strong> 37, when he was <strong>of</strong>fered a tenured lectureship at <strong>the</strong> Department <strong>of</strong> Botany in <strong>the</strong><br />

University <strong>of</strong> Hong Kong where he remained for 15 years before moving to Thailand. He was <strong>the</strong><br />

director <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Centre for Research in Fungal Diversity, Department <strong>of</strong> Ecology & Biodiversity, The<br />

University <strong>of</strong> Hong Kong from 1998 to 2007. Throughout this time he was very much inspired by<br />

his Ph.D. supervisor, Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Jones. During this time he gained a Doctor <strong>of</strong> Science degree in<br />

Biodiversity and Biology <strong>of</strong> Tropical Micro-fungi at <strong>the</strong> University <strong>of</strong> Wales. In 2008 Dr Hyde<br />

retired from his position in Hong Kong, as he wanted a life where he could live in a house with a<br />

garden and have a car and pets, much <strong>of</strong> which was not possible in <strong>the</strong> cramped Hong Kong<br />

lifestyle. It had also become seriously hard to get research funding in Hong Kong. His moved to<br />

Mae Fah Luang University, Thailand was purely by chance and mostly due to meeting <strong>the</strong> <strong>the</strong>n<br />

Dean <strong>of</strong> Science, <strong>the</strong> late Pr<strong>of</strong> Keith Syers. This move was a shear stroke <strong>of</strong> luck and since<br />

joining MFLU Dr Hyde has managed to develop a large hard working active research group.


April 2007, party at Dr Hyde’s small Hong Kong apartment, from left to right: Dr Rui-lin Zhao, Dr<br />

Rampai Kodsueb, Dr (Joy) Ratchadawan Cheewangkoon, Dr Damodar Shenoy, Dr Zhang Ying, Dr<br />

Hyde<br />

As stated early Dr Hyde’s passion is to train young mycologists. His counsel to young<br />

researchers is always to persevere in <strong>the</strong>ir research, publish as <strong>of</strong>ten as <strong>the</strong>y can and let <strong>the</strong><br />

world see what research <strong>the</strong>y are capable <strong>of</strong>, and be patient when trying to get a research<br />

position. Eventually because <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>ir expertise and perseverance, <strong>the</strong>y will be <strong>of</strong>fered <strong>the</strong> jobs<br />

matching <strong>the</strong>ir visions. However he states “remember jobs for mycologists are few and far<br />

between, but so is a molecular mycologist who also understands morphology and thus a<br />

position will eventually materialise”. He always guides his students as follows, “I really want to<br />

see you developing yourselves. “Be a general mycologist and do not specialize on one genus”.<br />

He has said many times, “a Ph.D. trains you to run your own research group - advance science<br />

and train yourself to be a scientist. If you cannot get things done and push yourself what hope<br />

do you have when you leave <strong>the</strong> nest? So try to learn to push yourselves and achieve. You are<br />

working for yourselves - not me and whatever you achieve will go towards your future - not<br />

mine. You are not doing a PhD just to get <strong>the</strong> title “Dr” in front <strong>of</strong> your name. If you are, <strong>the</strong>n<br />

you should not continue, but quit now”.<br />

Dr Hyde’s students are represented by many nationalities from Asia, among <strong>the</strong>m are<br />

Thais, Sri Lankans, Chinese, Laos, Myamarese, Vietnamese, Pilipino, Nepali and Indians. He also<br />

has one Kenyan MS student. Dr Hyde has provided a great deal <strong>of</strong> opportunities to young<br />

qualified students who were unable to find opportunities in <strong>the</strong>ir interest areas, and provide<br />

scholarships through <strong>the</strong> Mushroom Research Foundation for PhD’s in mycology.<br />

This article is not enough to express and explain <strong>the</strong> good work Dr Hyde has done to<br />

promote mycology in <strong>the</strong> <strong>Asian</strong> region as well as worldwide. He strives to mould each <strong>of</strong> his<br />

students into renowned mycologists in <strong>the</strong>ir own right. In <strong>the</strong> recent round <strong>of</strong> IMA Young<br />

Mycologists Awards, two out <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> five young awardees (Australasia and Asia) were Dr Hyde’s<br />

previous students.<br />

In Dr Hyde’s laboratory, we are budding mycologists, who have been taught, trained and<br />

mentored by Dr Hyde and would like to wish Dr Hyde all <strong>the</strong> very best and good luck as his


endeavors to train and mould mycologists to salvage <strong>the</strong> world <strong>of</strong> mycology which is in dire<br />

need <strong>of</strong> many more mycologists.<br />

Samantha Chandranath Karunarathna<br />

PhD Candidate<br />

Mae Fah Luang University,<br />

Chiang Rai, Thailand


mycologist in <strong>the</strong> region.<br />

Dr. Lei Cai awarded <strong>the</strong> Young Mycologist Award in Asia<br />

Dr. Lei Cai is one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> leading young mycologists in China.<br />

He is a Pr<strong>of</strong>essor at <strong>the</strong> Institute <strong>of</strong> Microbiology, Chinese<br />

Academy <strong>of</strong> Sciences and has been working on <strong>the</strong> systematic<br />

and biodiversity <strong>of</strong> plant pathogenic, aquatic, coprophilous<br />

and <strong>the</strong>rmophilic fungi for many years. For his outstanding<br />

achievements in his carrier life he received <strong>the</strong> <strong>Asian</strong><br />

<strong>Mycological</strong> Association (AMA) Young Mycologist Award<br />

during <strong>the</strong> <strong>Asian</strong> mycological congress held in South Korea<br />

August 2011. This is <strong>the</strong> first time that AMA awarded a young<br />

Dr. Lei Cai was graduated from Tsinghua University, Beijing, China in 1998 and joined to <strong>the</strong><br />

Yunnan University, China as a research assistant. As <strong>the</strong> turning step in to <strong>the</strong> field <strong>of</strong> mycology<br />

he has completed his MSC in Mycology during 2000-2002 in Yunnan University, China. He<br />

started his PhD in 2002 under <strong>the</strong> supervision <strong>of</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>. Kevin D. Hyde in <strong>the</strong> University <strong>of</strong> Hong<br />

Kong. After <strong>the</strong> successful completion <strong>of</strong> his PhD, Dr. Cai joined R&D centre, Novozymes, Beijing<br />

as a research scientist (2006-2009), and senior research scientist (2009-2010). For his<br />

invaluable achievement in <strong>the</strong> mycological research, Dr. Cai was awarded <strong>the</strong> prestigious<br />

“Hundred-Talent Program” <strong>of</strong> Chinese Academy <strong>of</strong> Sciences (CAS) in 2010.<br />

Dr Lei Cai has been a dedicated young mycologist in Asia and worldwide during <strong>the</strong> past decade.<br />

He has attained a notable number <strong>of</strong> publications including one monograph, 2 book chapters,<br />

54 publications on international journals and <strong>the</strong>se publications attained 378 citations (H’ Index<br />

=12). He accomplished 13 research projects, based on which he described 5 new genera, 48<br />

new species and 7 new combinations. This exceptional contribution to <strong>the</strong> field <strong>of</strong> mycology is<br />

very appreciable considering <strong>the</strong> time in his career life as an active young scientist in <strong>the</strong> field.<br />

Dr. Lei Cai is not only a talented researcher but also an active teacher. He conducts <strong>the</strong> courses<br />

on systematic mycology and phytopathology for <strong>the</strong> postgraduate students in CAS, and Chinese<br />

Academy <strong>of</strong> Agricultural Science (CAAS). He also gave lectures in various international


workshops, seminars and conferences. Dr. Cai is currently supervising 5 MSC students, 3 PhD<br />

students and 2 post doctoral associates. He is popular among students as a talented and kind<br />

hearted teacher. As <strong>the</strong> executive associate editor, Dr. Cai played a significant role in<br />

establishing and managing <strong>the</strong> new international journal “Mycology”. He is also an associate<br />

editor <strong>of</strong> Fungal Diversity and reviews papers for journals such as Biodiversity and Conservation,<br />

Journal <strong>of</strong> Plant Pathology, Plant Pathology, Plant Disease, Microbial Ecology, Mycologia,<br />

Mycoscience and Nova Hedwigia.


� The <strong>Mycological</strong> Society <strong>of</strong> China<br />

2011 Mycology in China<br />

The <strong>Mycological</strong> Society <strong>of</strong> China (MSC), is an academic organization devoted to <strong>the</strong> research<br />

and extension <strong>of</strong> mycology in China. MSC, formerly a division <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Botanical Society <strong>of</strong> China<br />

(BSC) (1980-1992), became an independent society in May 1993. Currently <strong>the</strong>re are 12<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>essional committees, 6 working committees and nearly 3,000 Chinese and international<br />

members. MSC is a sustainable member <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> International <strong>Mycological</strong> Association and <strong>Asian</strong><br />

<strong>Mycological</strong> Association.<br />

PROFESSIONAL COMMITTEES<br />

1. Division <strong>of</strong> fungal diversity and systematic mycology<br />

2. Division <strong>of</strong> plant pathogenic fungus<br />

3. Division <strong>of</strong> entomogenous fungus<br />

4. Division <strong>of</strong> medical mycology<br />

5. Division <strong>of</strong> edible fungi<br />

6. Division <strong>of</strong> pharmaceutical fungi<br />

7. Division <strong>of</strong> industrial fungi<br />

8. Division <strong>of</strong> myxomycetes<br />

9. Division <strong>of</strong> lichenology<br />

10. Division <strong>of</strong> mycorrhiza and endophytic fungi<br />

11. Division <strong>of</strong> fungal chemistry<br />

12. Division <strong>of</strong> fungal genetics and molecular biology<br />

MSC focuses on <strong>the</strong> development <strong>of</strong> fungal science in China and international community and<br />

aims to provide a platform to meet <strong>the</strong> needs <strong>of</strong> a demanding and growing field, and to serve<br />

and engage dialogue between Chinese mycologists and <strong>the</strong> international community. To publish


journals and organize international conferences, national annual meetings, various symposia<br />

and workshops are <strong>the</strong> main tasks <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> society.<br />

Highlights <strong>of</strong> 2011<br />

� The Tenth China-Korea Joint Symposium was held at Shandong Agricultural University, Tai’an city<br />

on 22-25 April, 2011. Fifteen representatives from Korea and 60 representatives from China<br />

attended this symposium. Fourteen speeches covering fungal diversity, phylogeny and evolution,<br />

edible and medicinal fungi and o<strong>the</strong>r aspects were reported on <strong>the</strong> meeting.<br />

� The tenth mycological symposium <strong>of</strong> cross-strait sponsored by <strong>Mycological</strong> Society <strong>of</strong> China and<br />

<strong>Mycological</strong> Society <strong>of</strong> Taiwan, was held at Wuhan Agriculture University on 15-18 July, 2011.<br />

Sixteen members <strong>of</strong> <strong>Mycological</strong> Society <strong>of</strong> Taiwan attended this symposium. Fifty<br />

representatives presented <strong>the</strong>ir latest research outcomes. To enhance <strong>the</strong> exchange and co-<br />

operation between mycologists from Cross-Taiwan Straits and facilitate <strong>the</strong> development in<br />

mycology, <strong>the</strong> joint symposium has been run every two years since 1993 in mainland or Taiwan<br />

respectively.<br />

� The 2011 MSC annual meeting was held in Guangzhou on 15-17 August. More than 400<br />

members <strong>of</strong> MSC participated this annual meeting. There are 150 presentations in 11 sections.<br />

These reports exhibited <strong>the</strong> latest research results on <strong>the</strong> followed aspects: fungal diversity and<br />

systematics, plant pathology, medical mycology, edible mushroom, pharmaceutical fungi,<br />

industrial fungi, myxomycete, mycorrhiza and endophytic fungi, fungal chemistry, fungal genetics<br />

and molecular biology. Postgraduate student awards were given to six student presentations.<br />

� China’s Fungal Genome Initiative (CFGI) proposed by <strong>the</strong> MSC are now investing great efforts for<br />

fungal genomics. More than 60 species <strong>of</strong> plant, insect and nematode pathogens as well as <strong>the</strong><br />

mushrooms and mycorrhizal fungi have been or are being sequenced. To incorporate <strong>the</strong> joint<br />

efforts, <strong>the</strong> first CFGI Symposium was successfully held in Shanghai on September 20-22, 2009.<br />

The studies on fungal genomics have been extensively advanced for <strong>the</strong> past two years. To<br />

continue promoting fungal genomics studies in China, <strong>the</strong> second CFGI symposium was<br />

organized by MSC and Yunnan University on October 23-25, 2011. Following <strong>the</strong> invited talks, a<br />

workshop was held for sharing <strong>the</strong> techniques/methods for genomic data analysis.


� “Mini Symposium on Advances in Fungal Genomics and Evolution - In Celebration <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

Founding <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> State Key Laboratory <strong>of</strong> Mycology” kicked <strong>of</strong>f at <strong>the</strong> Institute <strong>of</strong> Microbiology,<br />

Chinese Academy <strong>of</strong> Sciences, Beijing, on 22 October. Six prestigious international mycologists<br />

were invited to give presentations at this mini-symposium. The speakers shared <strong>the</strong>ir state-<strong>of</strong>-art<br />

research and ideas in fungal genomics and evolution with over 140 Chinese participants <strong>of</strong> this<br />

mini-symposium.<br />

Publications<br />

� An <strong>of</strong>ficial journal <strong>of</strong> <strong>Mycological</strong> Society <strong>of</strong> China entitled “Mycology, an international<br />

journal on fungal biology” had been launched in January 2010 and published by Taylor &<br />

Francis. Mycology publishes papers on all aspects <strong>of</strong> mycology including lichens, with<br />

preference in systematics, ecology and biodiversity, genomics and proteomics, and<br />

molecular phylogeny and evolution. O<strong>the</strong>r appreciate subjects for <strong>the</strong> journal include<br />

bioinformatics, physiology and biochemistry, pathology, morphology development, cell<br />

biology, genetics, molecular biology, fungal enzymology, fungal metabolites and new<br />

techniques.<br />

� Mycosystema is a merger <strong>of</strong> former Acta Mycologica Sinica (1982-1997) and Mycosystema<br />

(1987-1997) sponsored by <strong>the</strong> <strong>Mycological</strong> Society <strong>of</strong> China and <strong>the</strong> Institute <strong>of</strong><br />

Microbiology, Chinese Academy <strong>of</strong> Science and published bimonthly. The journal includes<br />

original papers and short communications based on research results, as well as literature<br />

and book reviews dealing with various aspects <strong>of</strong> mycology. Mycosystema publishes<br />

papers mainly in <strong>the</strong> fields <strong>of</strong> taxonomy, biodiversity, molecular systematics <strong>of</strong> fungi. The<br />

papers related to ecology, phytopathology, physiology, genetics, medical mycology,<br />

industrial mycology and veterinary mycology are also encouraged and acceptable.<br />

� Journal <strong>of</strong> Fungal Research is a quarterly journal sponsored by MSC and Jilin Agricultural<br />

University and was launched in December 2003. The journal publishes <strong>the</strong> papers<br />

concerning <strong>the</strong> scientific researches on <strong>the</strong> organisms studied by mycologists, which are<br />

accepted as fungi in <strong>the</strong> Kingdom (Mycota), pseud<strong>of</strong>ungi and slime molds along with<br />

bacteria (Monera), plants (Plantae), animals (Animalia) and protists (Protista). The journal


<strong>of</strong> Fungal Research is a window for academic exchange <strong>of</strong> scientific research, technology<br />

and education <strong>of</strong> pan-fungi.


Indian Mycology (2010-2011)<br />

Fungal research is being carried out in several universities and research institutions in India,<br />

each group having established its own special niche.<br />

Damodar Shenoy at <strong>the</strong> Institute <strong>of</strong> Microbial Technology, Chandigarh, is interested in<br />

phylogeny and molecular diversity <strong>of</strong> plant pathogenic fungi and DNA barcoding <strong>of</strong> fungi. G.S.<br />

Prasad at <strong>the</strong> same institute works on <strong>the</strong> phylogeny and molecular diversity <strong>of</strong> yeasts. He has<br />

described several new species <strong>of</strong> yeasts from India.<br />

Shenoy BD, Jeewon R, Wang HK, Amandeep K, Ho WH, Bhat DJ, Crous PW, Hyde KD. 2010.<br />

Sequence data reveals phylogenetic affinities <strong>of</strong> fungal anamorphs Bahusutrabeeja,<br />

Diplococcium, Natarajania, Paliphora, Polyschema, Rattania and Spadicoides. Fungal<br />

Diversity 44: 161<strong>–</strong>169.<br />

Daniel HM, Prasad GS. 2010. The role <strong>of</strong> culture collections as an interface between providers<br />

and users: <strong>the</strong> example <strong>of</strong> yeasts. Res Microbiol. 161(6):488-96.<br />

Extensive research on endophytic fungi <strong>of</strong> forest trees, algae and mangroves is being carried<br />

out by T.S. Suryanarayana and his team at <strong>the</strong> Vivekananda Institute <strong>of</strong> Tropical Mycology. He<br />

has recently described heat-resistant, ‘agni’ fungi from <strong>the</strong> forests <strong>of</strong> Western Ghats, whose<br />

spores survive exposure to 100-115 o C. D.J. Bhat and his students have carried out enormous<br />

work on diversity <strong>of</strong> fungi in various habitats in Goa and have described several new species<br />

and reported new records <strong>of</strong> fungi from India.<br />

Suryanarayanan TS, Govinda Rajulu MB, Thirumalai E, Reddy MS and Money NP. 2011. Agni’s<br />

fungi: heat-resistant spores from <strong>the</strong> Western Ghats, sou<strong>the</strong>rn India. Fungal Biology<br />

Reviews 115: 833-838.<br />

Thirunavukkarasu N, Suryanarayanan TS, Murali TS. Ravishankar JP, Gummadi SN. 2011. L-<br />

asparaginase from marine derived fungal endophytes <strong>of</strong> seaweeds. Mycosphere 2:147<strong>–</strong><br />

155.


Pratibha J, Bhat DJ and Raghukumar S. 2011. Four anamorphic fungi from forests <strong>of</strong> Western<br />

Ghats, India, with two new species. 117: 269<strong>–</strong>278.<br />

T. Satyanarayana and his team in Delhi University South Campus concentrate on fungal<br />

enzymes, especially phytase and its applications. M.S. Reddy at <strong>the</strong> Thapar Research Institute,<br />

Patiala works on molecular diversity <strong>of</strong> AM fungi and reclamation <strong>of</strong> polluted lands using plants<br />

inoculated with <strong>the</strong>se fungi. Alok Adholeya at <strong>the</strong> Tata Institute <strong>of</strong> Fundamental Research (TERI)<br />

has a large group devoted to research on <strong>the</strong> application <strong>of</strong> AM fungi as bi<strong>of</strong>ertilizers, to<br />

increase <strong>the</strong> productivity <strong>of</strong> crop plants and towards reclamation <strong>of</strong> land degraded by several<br />

industrial pollutants. He has developed a protocol for mass production <strong>of</strong> AM fungi and<br />

commercialized <strong>the</strong> technology.<br />

Kaur, P., Singh, B., Böer, E., Straube, N., Piontek, M., Satyanarayana, T. and Kunze, G. 2010.<br />

Pphy <strong>–</strong> a cell-bound phytase from <strong>the</strong> yeast Pichia anomala: molecular cloning <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

gene PPHY and characterization <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> recombinant enzyme. J. Biotechnol. 149: 8<strong>–</strong>15.<br />

Singh, B. and Satyanarayana, T. 2011. Microbial phytases in phosphorus aquisition and plant<br />

growth promotion. Physiol. Mol. Biol. Plants 17: 93-103.<br />

K.R. Sridhar and his research group at <strong>the</strong> Mangalore University concentrate on diversity<br />

<strong>of</strong> fresh water and marine fungi and <strong>the</strong>ir ecology. J. Muthumary and her team have screened<br />

several endophytic fungi for production <strong>of</strong> taxol and anticancer activity. Production <strong>of</strong><br />

nanoparticles <strong>of</strong> various metals using metal-tolerant fungi or <strong>the</strong>ir enzymes is carried out by<br />

several research groups. Absar Ahmed at <strong>the</strong> National Chemical Laboratory, Pune has several<br />

publications and patents on production <strong>of</strong> nanoparticles <strong>of</strong> gold and silver by fungi.<br />

Sridhar KR, Karamchand KS and Sumathi P. 2010. Fungal colonization and breakdown <strong>of</strong> sedge<br />

(Cyperus malaccensis Lam.) in a southwest mangrove, India. Botanica Marina 53, 525-<br />

533.<br />

Baerlocher F, Charette N, Letourneau A, Nikolcheva LG and Sridhar KR. 2010. Sequencing DNA<br />

extracted from single conidia <strong>of</strong> aquatic hyphomycetes. Fungal Ecology 3, 115-121.


Visalakchi S and Muthumary J. 2010. Taxol (Anticancer Drug) producing endophytic fungi: An<br />

overview. International Journal <strong>of</strong> Pharma and Bio Sciences.1 (3): 1-9.<br />

Research on fungal technology is done in private firms also. Research on dermatophytic and<br />

keratinophilic fungi is being carried out by S.K. Deshmukh and his group at <strong>the</strong> Nicholas Piramal<br />

Research Centre, Mumbai. Raghukumar’s MykoTech Pvt Ltd., Goa, specializes on<br />

biotechnological application <strong>of</strong> fungi, <strong>the</strong>ir enzymes and metabolites.<br />

Deshmukh SK and Verekar SA 2011. Incidence <strong>of</strong> keratinophilic fungi from <strong>the</strong> soils <strong>of</strong><br />

Vedanthangal water bird sanctuary (India). Mycoses. 54: 487-490.<br />

Deshmukh SK, Verekar SA. 2011. Prevalence <strong>of</strong> keratinophilic fungi in ‘Usar’ soils <strong>of</strong> Uttar<br />

Pradesh, India. Microbiology Research. 3:e15 doi:10.4081/mr.2011.e15<br />

Pratibha Jalmi, Pranali Bodke, Solimabi Wahidullah and Seshagiri Raghukumar. 2011. The<br />

fungus Gliocephalotrichum simplex as a source <strong>of</strong> abundant, extracellular melanin for<br />

biotechnological applications. Published online in World Journal <strong>of</strong> Microbiology and<br />

Biotechnology.<br />

Research on ecology, diversity and phylogeny <strong>of</strong> deep-sea fungi and fungi from oxygen-<br />

depleted coastal and oceanic zones <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Arabian Sea is being carried out at <strong>the</strong> National<br />

Institute <strong>of</strong> Oceanography. Culture-dependent as well as culture-independent approaches were<br />

used to describe abundance, distribution and diversity <strong>of</strong> fungi from <strong>the</strong>se extreme<br />

environments. Besides, bioremediation <strong>of</strong> industrial pollutants by marine fungi is also pursued<br />

by this group. These studies have resulted in filing several national and international patents.<br />

Jebraj C, Raghukumar C, Behnke A, Stoeck T. 2010. Fungal diversity in oxygen-depleted regions<br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Arabian Sea revealed by targeted environmental sequencing combined with<br />

cultivation. FEMS Microbiology Ecology. 71 (3) 399-412.<br />

Singh P, Raghukumar C, Verma P, Shouche Y. 2010. Phylogenetic diversity <strong>of</strong> culturable fungi<br />

from <strong>the</strong> deep-sea sediments <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Central Indian Basin and <strong>the</strong>ir growth characteristics.<br />

Fungal Diversity 40: 89-102.


Verma AK, Raghukumar C, Naik CG. 2011. A novel hybrid technology for remediation <strong>of</strong><br />

molasses-based raw effluents. Bioresource Technology 102: 2411-2418.<br />

Ravindran C and Naveenan T. 2011. Adaptation <strong>of</strong> marine derived fungus Chaetomium<br />

globosum (NIOCC 36) to alkaline stress using antioxdant properties. Process<br />

Biochemistry 46: 847-857<br />

Detailed studies on genetics <strong>of</strong> Neurospora crassa is being done by Kasbekar and his team <strong>of</strong><br />

researchers at <strong>the</strong> Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology, Hyderabad. Physiology, molecular<br />

studies and biochemistry <strong>of</strong> yeast is pursued in <strong>the</strong> department <strong>of</strong> biochemistry, Indian Institute<br />

<strong>of</strong> Science, Bangalore.<br />

Keshav Prasad et al. 2010. Comparative proteomic analysis <strong>of</strong> Candida albicans and C.globrata.<br />

Clinical Proteomics 6: 167-173.<br />

Kasbekar D. et al. 2011. Carrefour Mme. Gras: A wild-isolated Neurospora crassa strain that<br />

suppresses meiotic silencing by unpaied DNA and uncovers a novel ascospore stability<br />

defect. Fungal Genet.Biol. (in press) Doi:10.1016/j.fgb.2011.01.012<br />

Several books ei<strong>the</strong>r authored or edited by <strong>the</strong>se mycologists are listed below.<br />

Books<br />

Bhat DJ. 2010. Fascinating Micr<strong>of</strong>ungi (Hyphomycetes) <strong>of</strong> Western Ghats, India. Broadway<br />

Publishers, Panaji, Goa. 249 pp<br />

Misra JK, Tiwari JP, Deshmukh SK. (Eds) 2011. Systematics and Evolution <strong>of</strong> Fungi, Science<br />

Publishers, Inc Enfield USA.<br />

Sridhar KR. (Ed) 2011. Aquatic Plants and Plant Diseases: Types, Characteristics and<br />

Management. Nova Science Publishers Inc., New York,<br />

Patents granted<br />

A process for production <strong>of</strong> low temperature active alkaline protease from a deep-sea fungus.<br />

Chandralata Raghukumar, Samir Damare, Usha Devi Muraleedharan.<br />

2010. Patent No.4504311 JAPAN.


A process for decolorization <strong>of</strong> colored effluents uing a marine fungus, its enzymes and<br />

extracellular polymeric substance. Chandralata Raghukumar, Donna Trella D’souza Ticlo<br />

2010. Patent No.: GB2434364. UNITED KINGDOM<br />

Several o<strong>the</strong>r groups are engaged in mycological research whose work I could not<br />

accommodate here due to space constraint. I will write about it in <strong>the</strong> next issue <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Asian</strong><br />

mycological newsletter.<br />

Awards<br />

Samir Damare from <strong>the</strong> National Institute <strong>of</strong> Oceanography received CSIR Young<br />

Scientist award in 2010 under <strong>the</strong> Earth, Atmosphere, Ocean and Planetary Sciences. The award<br />

was for his studies on deep-sea fungi which he carried out for his PhD degree. The award<br />

carries cash prize, a citation and research grant for a period <strong>of</strong> 5 years.<br />

Meetings<br />

The annual national seminar <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Mycological</strong> Society <strong>of</strong> India was held in Chennai at <strong>the</strong><br />

Centre for Advanced Study in Botany in February 2011. The seminar was attended by about 150<br />

delegates from all over India.<br />

Dr.Chandralata Raghukumar,<br />

313, Vainguinim Valley,<br />

Dona Paula, Goa, 403 004,<br />

India.


Some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> new fungi described from Goa.<br />

Anaselenosporella indica Pratibha,<br />

Bhat & Raghuk.<br />

Stauriella indica Pratibha, Bhat and Raghuk.


Dendryphiopsis goanensis Praibha, Raghuk. And Bhat<br />

Dr. Samir Damare, recipient <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> CSIR Young scientist award for his work on deep-sea fungi.


Pr<strong>of</strong>. D.J. Bhat, displaying his catch during one <strong>of</strong> his fungal <strong>–</strong>hunting trips. He retired from<br />

<strong>the</strong> Goa University on November 30, 2011.<br />

Dr. Lata Raghukumar completed her tenure as an emeritus scientist at <strong>the</strong> National Institute <strong>of</strong><br />

Oceanography on July 31, 2011.


Djafar Ershad and Rasoul Zare<br />

Research Institute <strong>of</strong> Plant Protection<br />

Iranian Research Institute <strong>of</strong> Plant Protection<br />

Mycology in Iran: A historical review<br />

Study <strong>of</strong> fungi in Iran was initiated by foreign mycologists. Most <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se mycologists have not<br />

visited Iran but <strong>the</strong>y received fungal material from botanists who came to Iran for plant<br />

collections. These botanists also collected fungi separately or <strong>the</strong>ir plant material was examined<br />

by mycologists for epiphytic/parasitic fungi. As <strong>the</strong> result <strong>the</strong> list <strong>of</strong> fungi separately or toge<strong>the</strong>r<br />

with <strong>the</strong> list <strong>of</strong> plants was published in European literature.<br />

In order to summarize <strong>the</strong> history <strong>of</strong> mycology in Iran five periods are described here:


1. First period: until 1860<br />

In this early period <strong>of</strong> time <strong>the</strong>re is no sign <strong>of</strong> Iranian fungi in <strong>the</strong> literature and in case <strong>the</strong>re<br />

was anything published, it was never noticed by later mycologists.<br />

2. Second period: from 1860 to 1941<br />

In fact study on Iranian fungi was started in this period. In this period all publications on Iranian<br />

fungi belong to foreign researchers. These in chronological order are listed here.<br />

1. The first publication on Iranian fungi is published by two European botanists, E. Boissier<br />

and F. Buhse, where 33 fungal species, mostly cap fungi, are named. The fungi in this<br />

publication (Boissier & Buhse 1860) were collected by F. Buhse.<br />

2. Rabenhorst (1871) authored <strong>the</strong> second publication based on fungi collected by C.<br />

Haussknecht during two excursions in Iran.<br />

3. M.C. Cooke in a publication (Cooke 1880) toge<strong>the</strong>r with <strong>the</strong> fungi <strong>of</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

world named eight Iranian species collected from Kurdistan and Loristan provinces.<br />

4. Ano<strong>the</strong>r contributor to Iranian mycology was Wettstein (1885) who studied Iranian<br />

fungi collected by J.F. Polak and Th. Pitcher.<br />

5. Masse (1899) published a list <strong>of</strong> various fungi containing two Iranian species.<br />

6. Study <strong>of</strong> Iranian fungi was continued more seriously when J. Bornmüller, famous<br />

botanist, started his excursions in <strong>Asian</strong> countries. This scientist collected fungi toge<strong>the</strong>r<br />

with plants. The material collected by Bornmüller were given to famous mycologists<br />

such as P. Magnus and H. Sydow. Bornmüller himself reported part <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> fungi he<br />

collected toge<strong>the</strong>r with plants in two publications (Bornmüller 1908, 1911). Ano<strong>the</strong>r<br />

part <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> fungi were reported by Sydow & Sydow (1908a, 1908b). The rest and <strong>the</strong><br />

majority <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> fungi were identified by P. Magnus and published in six papers (Magnus<br />

1896, 1899, 1899, 1903, 1912).<br />

7. Worth to mention that Chatin (1897) reported two species <strong>of</strong> Iranian truffles.<br />

8. Ano<strong>the</strong>r mycologist who published three Iranian fungal species based on material<br />

collected by O. Paulsen from central Asia and Iran was Rostrup (1908).


9. R. G. Fragosu is ano<strong>the</strong>r mycologist who, based on material collected by F.M. de la<br />

Escalera from Khuzestan and upstream <strong>of</strong> Karun river, published two papers.<br />

10. Iran is mentioned in <strong>the</strong> title <strong>of</strong> a publication authored by R. Picbauer (1932), but no<br />

locality <strong>of</strong> Iran is mentioned in <strong>the</strong> paper. The materials this scientist studied, were<br />

collected by F. Nabelek who traveled to Iran and Turkey for plant collection.<br />

11. One <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> greatest foreign mycologists who contributed most to Iranian mycology was<br />

<strong>the</strong> famous Austrian mycologist F. Petrak. This mycologist published his first paper in<br />

1939. The materials he studied were collected by K.H. Rechinger. F. Petrak started his<br />

study on Iranian fungi in this period, however, published his major papers on Iranian<br />

fungi in <strong>the</strong> third period. He even published a paper in <strong>the</strong> fourth period.<br />

3. Third period: from 1941 to 1963<br />

This period is different from o<strong>the</strong>rs in that Iranian mycologists started studying fungi <strong>of</strong> Iran.<br />

Researchers who contributed most to Iranian mycology are listed here in chronological order.<br />

1. E. Esfandiari is <strong>the</strong> first Iranian mycologist who published <strong>the</strong> result <strong>of</strong> his studies in<br />

collaboration with F. Petrak (Petrak & Esfandiari 1941). Esfandiari had a close<br />

collaboration with Petrak during <strong>the</strong> course <strong>of</strong> his studies and even published ano<strong>the</strong>r<br />

paper with Petrak in 1950 in Sydowia. Esfandiari has also worked with A. Pilát,<br />

Czechoslovakian mycologist, on <strong>the</strong> identification <strong>of</strong> cap fungi <strong>of</strong> Iran. Esfandiari has<br />

published ano<strong>the</strong>r 10 papers on fungi or plant pathogenic fungi <strong>of</strong> Iran.<br />

2. F. Petrak has contributed most to <strong>the</strong> Iranian mycology in this period. He studied on <strong>the</strong><br />

fungi that were collected by E. Esfandiari and/or G. Scharif and were sent to Vienna.<br />

Petrak published ano<strong>the</strong>r 18 papers in this period.<br />

3. J.A. von Arx in a paper published in 1949 on <strong>the</strong> genus Mycosphaerella mentions <strong>the</strong><br />

names <strong>of</strong> a few Iranian specimens that were already reported by earlier mycologists.<br />

4. E. Khabiri is ano<strong>the</strong>r Iranian mycologist who published his studies in a French journal in<br />

1952, 1956 and 1958. Besides, he published a book on mycology for Iranian students.<br />

5. R.L. Steyaert, Belgian mycologist, was in Iran in 1952 and 1953 who worked on plant<br />

diseases with Iranian scientists. During his stay in Iran he published a book in French on


Diseases <strong>of</strong> Forest Trees that was translated into Persian by A. Manuchehri and G.<br />

Scharif.<br />

6. D.M. Henderson in five papers published on <strong>Asian</strong> rust fungi in 1957, 1959, 1961, 1966<br />

and 1969 reported a few rust fungi <strong>of</strong> Iran too (Henderson 1969).<br />

7. Ano<strong>the</strong>r Iranian mycologist who in this period considerably contributed to Iranian<br />

mycology was G. Scharif. He published his first paper on grape anthracnose in 1959. The<br />

title <strong>of</strong> his <strong>the</strong>sis was: Etude morphologique et biologique de quelques champignons<br />

folicole de agrumes en Iran. He also published a number <strong>of</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r papers mostly on<br />

fungal plant diseases in Iran. As mentioned earlier, Scharif had collected and<br />

preliminarily studied <strong>the</strong> fungi that were later studied and published by F. Petrak.<br />

8. R. Pakravan is ano<strong>the</strong>r Iranian mycologist who did his PhD <strong>the</strong>sis on biology and<br />

classification <strong>of</strong> fungi attacking rose shrubs in Iran in 1958.<br />

9. G. Viennot-Bourgin, <strong>the</strong> French mycologist, was invited by <strong>the</strong> University <strong>of</strong> Tehran and<br />

some collection on <strong>the</strong> fungi <strong>of</strong> Iran that he published in 1958.<br />

10. I. Jørstad, Norwegian mycologist, in a few papers reported <strong>the</strong> result <strong>of</strong> his study on <strong>the</strong><br />

fungi <strong>of</strong> Iran in 1960. The materials were collected from Iran by his compatriot botanist,<br />

P. Wendelbo.<br />

11. R. Heim, French mycologist, travelled to Iran in 1960 and published a paper on a<br />

mushroom species <strong>of</strong> Iran (Heim 1960).<br />

12. Among foreign mycologists we should also name <strong>of</strong> C. Golato, Italian mycologist, who<br />

himself did not work on Iranian fungi but published a paper in 1960 in which he names a<br />

few fungal species that were already published by earlier mycologists.<br />

13. A. Manuchehri and E. Mohammadi-Doustdar considerably contributed to Iranian<br />

mycology mostly in <strong>the</strong> field <strong>of</strong> mycology teaching.


E.Esfandiari F.Petrak G. Scharif<br />

4. Fourth period: from 1963 to 2000<br />

This period is distinct from o<strong>the</strong>r periods for <strong>the</strong> following reasons:<br />

i. Until this period, no artificial media were used in order to grow/identify <strong>the</strong> fungi. In<br />

this period after <strong>the</strong> foundation <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Iranian Research Institute <strong>of</strong> Plant Protection<br />

in Tehran equipments and materials for culture <strong>of</strong> fungi were prepared and<br />

developed. Therefore, it became possible to work on most fungal species. This type<br />

<strong>of</strong> research was initiated in Iranian universities at 1963.<br />

ii. In this period due to <strong>the</strong> growing number <strong>of</strong> Iranian mycologists and plant<br />

pathologists most <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> work on Iranian fungi was done by Iranian mycologists.<br />

iii. In earlier periods most papers on <strong>the</strong> identification <strong>of</strong> fungi <strong>of</strong> Iran were generally<br />

covering all groups <strong>of</strong> fungi, but in this period papers on specific fungal groups in<br />

addition to identification monographs on <strong>the</strong> fungi <strong>of</strong> Iran were published.<br />

Due to <strong>the</strong> ra<strong>the</strong>r large number <strong>of</strong> Iranian mycologists in this period we refrain from<br />

writing <strong>the</strong>ir names. But we feel it is necessary to introduce foreign researchers who<br />

contributed to Iranian mycology in this period.<br />

1. E. Niemann was a German plant pathologist who for many years worked for <strong>the</strong><br />

Iranian Research Institute <strong>of</strong> Plant Protection as a colleague <strong>of</strong> Iranian


esearchers. His contribution to Iranian plant pathology and mycology was<br />

considerable enough to name him as one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> main founders <strong>of</strong> modern fungal<br />

plant pathology in Iran. He authored nine papers on plant diseases co-authored<br />

by his Iranian colleagues that were published in <strong>the</strong> Iranian journal Applied<br />

Entomology and Plant Pathology during 1963 to 1967.<br />

2. In 1963 A. Dubuis & L. Faurel reported eight fungal species in a list <strong>of</strong> plant<br />

species that were collected by R. Pasquier.<br />

3. In 1964 F. Petrak published ano<strong>the</strong>r paper and reported two new fungal species<br />

from Iran.<br />

4. D. Boubls & A. Nazemille wrote a paper on grape diseases in Azarbaijan province<br />

(west <strong>of</strong> Iran) in 1966 and reported <strong>the</strong> fungi <strong>the</strong>y isolated from grape in that<br />

region.<br />

5. W.J. Kaiser, American researcher, worked for many years at <strong>the</strong> College <strong>of</strong><br />

Agriculture, Tehran University on disease <strong>of</strong> pulses and published his first paper<br />

in 1967.<br />

6. G. Viennot-Bourgin travelled to Iran in <strong>the</strong> same period and authored four<br />

papers alone or jointly with Iranian colleagues.<br />

7. Norwegian mycologist, Eckblad (1970) published his findings on Gasteromycetes<br />

<strong>of</strong> Iran, Afghanistan and Iraq based on material that were collected by P.<br />

Wendelbo from Iran.<br />

8. W. Gerlach, German mycologist, worked for three months in Iran in 1968 and<br />

published three papers on Iranian Fusarium and Cylindrocarpon species alone or<br />

jointly with Iranian colleagues (Gerlach & Ershad 1970).<br />

9. W. Frey & H.J. Mayeo (1971) listed papers published about plants and fungi <strong>of</strong><br />

Iran.<br />

10. R.L. Steyaert was again in Iran in this period, in 1972 published a paper on<br />

Ganoderma and reported a few Iranian fungi too.


11. J. Altman, American researcher, who worked in Iran (Power & Water<br />

Organization, Dezful, Khuzistan) on plant diseases, published a few papers on<br />

fungal diseases <strong>of</strong> plants.<br />

12. H. Riedl travelled to Iran in spring 1974 in order to collect plants, fungi and<br />

lichens <strong>of</strong> Iran. He jointly published a paper with his Iranian collaborator (Riedl &<br />

Ershad 1977).<br />

13. N. Hallenberg, Swedish mycologist, who worked on wood inhabiting fungi as <strong>the</strong><br />

subject <strong>of</strong> his <strong>the</strong>sis, travelled to <strong>the</strong> Caspian Sea region in a couple <strong>of</strong> occasions<br />

with his Iranian collaborators and <strong>the</strong> result <strong>of</strong> his worked was published in four<br />

papers (Hallenberg 1978).<br />

14. K. Vánky, smut specialist, travelled to Iran in spring 1990 and with his Iranian<br />

collaborator visited central, eastern and nor<strong>the</strong>rn parts <strong>of</strong> Iran and published<br />

two papers on Iranian smut fungi (Vánky & Ershad 1993).<br />

15. H.B. Gjaerum, Norwegian rust specialist, collaborated with Iranian rust specialists<br />

5. Fifth period: from 2000<br />

and reported Iranian rust fungi in a few papers and also published a joint paper<br />

with Iranian mycologists (Ershad et al. 1997).<br />

This period is distinct from o<strong>the</strong>r periods because molecular techniques were used in <strong>the</strong><br />

identification <strong>of</strong> fungi <strong>of</strong> Iran. In this period several Iranian mycologists were educated abroad<br />

or at Iranian universities who used molecular techniques in <strong>the</strong>ir works.<br />

A turning point in <strong>the</strong> history <strong>of</strong> mycology in Iran is <strong>the</strong> foundation <strong>of</strong> Iranian <strong>Mycological</strong><br />

Society which took place on 15 September 2010 at <strong>the</strong> Iranian Research Institute <strong>of</strong> Plant<br />

Protection, Tehran, where five executive committee members were elected during <strong>the</strong> first<br />

general meeting <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> society.<br />

The number <strong>of</strong> Iranian mycologists was increased and nearly most papers were dedicated to<br />

specific groups <strong>of</strong> fungi. Due to <strong>the</strong> large number <strong>of</strong> Iranian mycologists in this period we refrain<br />

from writing <strong>the</strong>ir names. It is important here to mention <strong>the</strong> names <strong>of</strong> two outstanding<br />

mycologists whose collaboration and support to young Iranian mycologists significantly


contributed to <strong>the</strong> advancement <strong>of</strong> mycology in Iran. These great mycologists are W. Gams<br />

(Swiss-Austrian mycologists who works in <strong>the</strong> Ne<strong>the</strong>rlands) and U. Braun (German mycologist).<br />

As was mentioned here, in <strong>the</strong> first paper published on Iranian fungi (Biossier & Buhse 1860) 33<br />

species were reported. In <strong>the</strong> third edition <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> 'Fungi <strong>of</strong> Iran' Ershad (2009) listed 3229 fungal<br />

species/varieties toge<strong>the</strong>r with <strong>the</strong>ir substrates and localities. Now after 151 years <strong>of</strong><br />

mycological study in Iran <strong>the</strong> number <strong>of</strong> fungal species/varieties <strong>of</strong> Iran reaches some 3300.<br />

These taxa belong to 871 genera that are: 20 <strong>of</strong> Protozoa, 15 <strong>of</strong> Chromista, 261 <strong>of</strong><br />

Deuteromycota, 225 <strong>of</strong> Ascomycota, 315 <strong>of</strong> Basidiomycota (including 289 <strong>of</strong> Agaricomycotina,<br />

21 <strong>of</strong> Pucciniomycotina and 15 <strong>of</strong> Ustilaginomycotina), 4 <strong>of</strong> Blastocladiomycota, 2 <strong>of</strong><br />

Chytridiomycota, 9 <strong>of</strong> Glomeromycota and 20 <strong>of</strong> Zygomycota.<br />

The first general meeting <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Iranian <strong>Mycological</strong> Society on 15 September 2010


References<br />

Boissier E., Buhse F. (1860) Aufzählung der auf eine Reise durch Transkaukasien und Persien<br />

gesammelten Pflanzen Fungi. Nouveaux Mémoires de la Société Imperiale des Naturalistes de<br />

Moscou, Tom 12: 244-246.<br />

Bornmüller J (1908) Beiträge zur Flora der Elbusgebirge, Nord-Persiens. Fungi Bull. Herb. Boisser.<br />

2 ser. 8: 917-922.<br />

Bornmüller J (1911) Collectiones Straussianae novae. Weiter Beiträge zur Kenntnis der Flora<br />

West-Persiens, Fungi. Beih. Bot. Centralbl. 28: Abt: II. Heft 3: 529-531.<br />

Chatin M (1897) Les terfas (truffles) de Pers. C. r. Séanc. Acad. Sci., Paris 125: 387-388.<br />

Cooke MC (1880) Exotic fungi, Persia. Grevillea 9: 13-14.<br />

Eckblad F-E (1970) Gasteromycetes from Iraq. Iran and Afghanestan. Nytt. Mag. Bot. 17: 129-<br />

138.<br />

Ershad D, Abbasi M and Gjaerum HB (1997) Report <strong>of</strong> several rust taxa from Iran. Iran. J. Plant<br />

Path. 19: 40-45.<br />

Fragoso RG (1918) Pugillus seundus mycetorum Persiae (Lecti. A Ferd Martinez de la Escalera)<br />

Boln R. Soc. Esp. Hist. nat. 18: 78-85.<br />

Hallenberg N (1978) Wood-fungi (Corticiaceae, Coniophoraceae, Lachnocladiaceae,<br />

Telephoraceae) in N. Iran. I. Iran. J. Plant Path. 14: 38-87.<br />

Heim R (1960) Le pleurote des ombellifères en Iran. Revue Mycol. 25: 242-247.<br />

Henderson DM (1969) Two new puccinias from south west Asia. Notes R. Bot. Gdn Edinb. 29:<br />

389-390.<br />

Jørstad I (1960) Iranian plants collected by Per Wendelbo in 1959. II. Uredinales and some o<strong>the</strong>r<br />

parasitic fungi. Arb. Univ. Bergen. Nat.-Natur. Serie 11: 1-33.


Khabiri E (1952) Contribution á la myc<strong>of</strong>lore de ľ Iran. Premiere liste. Revue Mycol. 17: 154-157.<br />

Magnus P (1896) J. Bornmüller. Iter Persico-turcicum 1892/93. Fungi Pars I. Ein Beitrag zur<br />

Kenntnis der Pilze des Orients. Verh. K. K. Zool.-Bot. Gesellsch. Wien 46: 426-438.<br />

Magnus P (1899) J. Bornmüller. Iter Persico-turcicum 1892/93. Fungi Pars II. Ein Beitrag zur<br />

Kenntnis der Pilze des Orients. Verh. K. K. Zool.-Bot. Gesellsch. Wien 49: 432-449.<br />

Massee GE (1899) Fungi exotici II Persia. Kew Bull. 146: 153-154.<br />

Petrak F (1939) Fungi in K.H. Rechinger: Ergebnisse einer botanichen Reise nach dem Iran, 1937.<br />

Ann. Naturh. Mus. Wien 50: 414-521.<br />

Petrak F und Esfandiari E (1941) Beiträge zur Kenntnis der iranischen Pilzflora. Ann. Mycol. 39:<br />

204-228.<br />

Rabenhorst L. (1871) Ü bersicht der von Herrn Pr<strong>of</strong>. Dr. Hassknecht im Orient gesammelten<br />

Kryptogammen. Hedwigia 10: 17-27.<br />

Riedl H und Ershad D (1977) Mykologishe Ergebnisse einer Sammelreise in den Iran im Frühgahr<br />

1974. I. Sydowia 29: 155-169.<br />

Rostrup PE (1908) Lieutenant Olufsen's second Pamir-Expedition. Plant collected in Asia Media<br />

and Persia by Ova Paulsen. V. Fungi. Bot. Tidsskr. 28: 215-218.<br />

Sydow H und Sydow P (1908a) Einige neuve von Herrn J. Bornmüller in Persien gesammelte<br />

Pilze. Ann. Mycol. 6: 17-18.<br />

Sydow H und Sydow P (1908b) Micromycetes orientales acl. J. Bornmüller communicati. Ann.<br />

Mycol. 6: 526-530.<br />

Vánky K and Ershad D (1993) Smut fungi (Ustilaginales) new to Iran. Iran J. Plant Path. 29: 1-29.<br />

Viennot-Bourgin G (1958) Contribution á la connaissanse des champignons parasities de ľ Iran.<br />

Ann. Epiphyt. N. S. 9: 97-210.


Wettstein R (1885) Fungi in O. Stapf: Die botanischen Ergebnisse der polakschen Expedition<br />

nach Persien im Jahre 1882. Denkschr. Akad. Wiss. Wien 50: 1-4.<br />

Studies <strong>of</strong> fungal diversity in nor<strong>the</strong>rn Thailand<br />

Thailand is rich in tropical forests where fungi and fungi-like organisms are hyperdiverse. Many<br />

areas however, remain unexplored, thus, many organisms still await discovery and<br />

identification. The National Science Foundation provided funds that support a program that<br />

provides opportunities to aspiring mycologists to carry out studies on fungi and fungi-like<br />

organisms in nor<strong>the</strong>rn Thailand. Selected undergraduate and graduate students from <strong>the</strong><br />

United States and Thailand participated in <strong>the</strong> workshop on “Fungal Diversity in Nor<strong>the</strong>rn<br />

Thailand” in June 2011. The students were able to interact with International mycologists from<br />

various universities in <strong>the</strong> United States and Thailand who gave <strong>the</strong>m educational experiences<br />

related to biodiversity. Dr. Steve Stephenson, <strong>the</strong> program coordinator from <strong>the</strong> University <strong>of</strong><br />

Arkansas and Dr. Steve Miller, one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> co-directors from <strong>the</strong> University <strong>of</strong> Wyoming<br />

facilitated <strong>the</strong> workshop. They shared <strong>the</strong>ir expertise in micr<strong>of</strong>ungi and macr<strong>of</strong>ungi as well as<br />

fungi-like organisms such as myxomycetes. Dr. Kevin D. Hyde <strong>of</strong> Mae Fah Luang University and<br />

Dr. Saisamorn Lumyong <strong>of</strong> Chiang Mai University were also involved in <strong>the</strong> program.<br />

Dr. Stephenson, explaining to <strong>the</strong> students <strong>the</strong> does and don’t’s in collecting fungal specimens.


Dr. Miller, showing <strong>the</strong> students Lactarius sp. and Rhizophogun (truffles) collected from Doi Inthanon.<br />

Various study sites in nor<strong>the</strong>rn Thailand were chosen based on <strong>the</strong> accessibility and diversity <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>the</strong> area. These include, Doi Inthanon, Doi Su<strong>the</strong>p, Mae Sae, Mushroom Research Center and<br />

Pamathikaram temple. The laboratory activities, lectures, processing <strong>of</strong> samples and analyzing<br />

<strong>of</strong> data were all conducted at <strong>the</strong> Mushroom Research Centre. The students from different<br />

countries (America, China, Laos, Myanmar, Philippines, Sri Lanka and Thailand) worked toge<strong>the</strong>r<br />

in processing <strong>of</strong> samples and analyzing data that helped <strong>the</strong>m develop camaraderie and<br />

understand <strong>the</strong> value <strong>of</strong> team work.


The Mushroom Research Centre. A bliss. An ideal place to learn Mycology.<br />

Personally, <strong>the</strong> fungal diversity workshop has helped me a lot to widen my knowledge in<br />

Mycology. I am very fortunate to be chosen as one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> participants <strong>of</strong> this workshop<br />

because I was able to work with international mycologists. I will never forget all <strong>the</strong> knowledge<br />

and skills <strong>the</strong>y have shared us during classroom discussions, laboratory activities and field work.<br />

They provided us with a deeper understanding about biodiversity and made us realize that as<br />

aspiring mycologists we should know our responsibilities.<br />

Also, It was a great opportunity to work with foreign students from America, Sri Lanka, China,<br />

Myanmar, Laos and Thailand. I learned a lot from <strong>the</strong>m. I hope one day, we can come up with<br />

a big project that will contribute to fungal diversity. More brains, more ideas. The interaction<br />

with <strong>the</strong>m, joint activities and field work made me realized that <strong>the</strong>re is so much research to be<br />

carried out. Each country needs to establish information based on <strong>the</strong>ir biodiversity and make


national collections <strong>of</strong> organisms found in <strong>the</strong>se areas. Our journey does not stop here. There is<br />

a long way to go, thus, <strong>the</strong> search for <strong>the</strong> missing fungi continues.<br />

Overal, <strong>the</strong> workshop was a great success! I went back to my country carrying a collection<br />

basket not full <strong>of</strong> mushrooms but filled with knowledge about mycology. It has been my dream<br />

for <strong>the</strong> Philippines to follow <strong>the</strong> path <strong>of</strong> carrying out <strong>the</strong> field <strong>of</strong> research <strong>of</strong> mycology.<br />

Kudos to <strong>the</strong> organizers <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> MRC WORKSHOP 2011.<br />

PAMELA P. ALVA (Pam)<br />

Philippines<br />

Ph.D. Student, Mae Fah Luang University<br />

Chiang Rai Thailand<br />

The Fungal Diversity Research Group 2011.


Mycology in Laos<br />

Phengsintham P 1,2 , E. Chukeatirote E 1 , Hyde KD 1 and Braun U 3<br />

1 School <strong>of</strong> Science, Mae Fah Luang University, Chiang Rai 57100. Thailand<br />

2 Biology Department, Faculty <strong>of</strong> Sciences, National University <strong>of</strong> Laos<br />

3 Martin-Lu<strong>the</strong>r-Universität, Institut für Biologie, Bereich Geobotanik und Botanischer Garten, Herbarium, Neuwerk<br />

21 D-06099 Halle/S. Germany<br />

Abstract: Lao PDR is considered to be globally important for biodiversity conservation due to its<br />

relatively high forest cover and high diversity <strong>of</strong> flora and fauna. A total <strong>of</strong> 12,116 species:<br />

8,000-11,000 species <strong>of</strong> flowering plants, fauna includes 166 species <strong>of</strong> reptiles and amphibians,<br />

at least 700 bird species, 90 known species <strong>of</strong> bats and at least 100 species <strong>of</strong> large mammals,<br />

and fungi 60 species.<br />

There have very few studies on Lao fungi. 1959-1974 was <strong>the</strong> war condition period and<br />

almost temporary stop study in Mycology, and for each institute <strong>the</strong> teaching curriculum only<br />

mentioned about <strong>the</strong> general mycology and focused on macr<strong>of</strong>ungi such as edible and<br />

poisonous mushroom. From 1975 up to now <strong>the</strong> teaching curriculum has been<br />

developed and started studying specific subjects on fungi. A total <strong>of</strong> 201 fungi species have<br />

recorded from Laos: Ascomycota 24 species, Basidiomycota 44 species, Deuteromycota 133<br />

species. By integrating <strong>the</strong> morphological and molecular characters, nine new taxa were<br />

established, namely Passalora dipterocarpi, P. helicteris-viscidae, Pseudocercospora<br />

mannanorensis Bagyan., U. Braun & Jagad. var. paucifasciculata, Zasmidium aporosae, Z.<br />

jasminicola, Z. meynae-laxiflorae, Z. micromeli, Z. suregadae, Z. pavettae, while o<strong>the</strong>r<br />

cercosporoids species represent new record for Laos.These data are expected to shed light on<br />

<strong>the</strong> diversity <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> fungal group in this region.<br />

Keywords: Mycology / Biodiversity / Curriculum / South East Asia.


Introduction<br />

Overview <strong>of</strong> Biodiversity in Laos<br />

Lao PDR is considered to be globally important for biodiversity conservation due to its<br />

relatively high forest cover and high diversity <strong>of</strong> flora and fauna. Approximately 41% <strong>of</strong> Lao PDR<br />

is covered with forest which contains an estimated 8,000-11,000 species <strong>of</strong> flowering plants.<br />

The country’s fauna includes 166 reported species <strong>of</strong> reptiles and amphibians, at least 700 bird<br />

species, 90 known species <strong>of</strong> bats and at least 100 species <strong>of</strong> large mammals (STEA, 2003), and<br />

fungi 60 species (Phengsintham & Hyde, 2003a).<br />

<strong>Mycological</strong> studies from 1959 to 1974<br />

1959-1974 it was <strong>the</strong> war condition period and temporary stop studying in Mycology,<br />

and for teaching curriculum only mentioned about general information about fungi.<br />

The fungi <strong>of</strong> Laos were little studied. Vidal (1959), a French botanist, published a<br />

checklist <strong>of</strong> plant species <strong>of</strong> Laos which included 33 species <strong>of</strong> Lao fungi. Almost all names <strong>of</strong><br />

fungi are local names, but include some scientific names.<br />

<strong>Mycological</strong> studies from 1975 to 2011<br />

For this period can be divided into two phases:<br />

(1) In 1975, combined two institutes such as Viengxay Pedagogical Institute, in Hua<br />

Phanh province and Dongdok Pedagogical Institute into one institute called “Dongdok<br />

Pedagogical Institute <strong>of</strong> Vientiane, Lao PDR”. The study in Mycology is focused on general<br />

information about fungi. In that time, <strong>the</strong> Kingdom fungi still belong to plant.<br />

(2) In 1996, <strong>the</strong> National University <strong>of</strong> Laos was established on <strong>the</strong> Prime Minister’s<br />

Decree No. 50/PM, dated 09/06/1995 and began first academic year on 5 November 1996, by<br />

merging 10 higher learning institution previously operated under different governmental<br />

department and ministries to form a full-fledged university called “National University <strong>of</strong> Laos<br />

(NUOL)”. The one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> main objectives is to educate Lao students to become qualified


economic staff with good behaviour, generosity, and <strong>the</strong> advanced capability leading regional<br />

and international standards. So far, <strong>the</strong> National University has <strong>of</strong>fered <strong>the</strong> following academic<br />

programs <strong>of</strong> 96 bachelor degree programs, 33 continuing bachelor programs, 37 master’s<br />

degree programs, and 3 doctoral degree programs (Saignaleut, 2011).<br />

More new buildings were constructed; one <strong>of</strong> those is laboratory <strong>of</strong> Biology Department,<br />

Faculty <strong>of</strong> Sciences, NUOL (Fig. 1). National University <strong>of</strong> Laos has taken <strong>the</strong> measures in<br />

providing students with more opportunity to gain access to university in <strong>the</strong> equitable manner<br />

through <strong>the</strong> annual entrance examination and quota system called a quota and non-quota<br />

programs. The number <strong>of</strong> students graduating from NUOL has been increasing every year as<br />

shown in <strong>the</strong> following Table 1.<br />

Table 1: Number <strong>of</strong> student summary<br />

Academic year Number <strong>of</strong> registered students Number <strong>of</strong> graduating students<br />

Total Female Total Female<br />

1996-1997 8,137 2,270 687 237<br />

1997-1998 9,890 2,976 1,521 384<br />

1998-1999 11,168 3,663 1,400 381<br />

1999-2000 11,746 4,345 1,655 428<br />

2000-2001 13,079 5,426 2,157 579<br />

2001-2002 16,613 5,982 2,959 882<br />

2002-2003 18,366 6,215 2,734 651<br />

2003-2004 20,550 7,457 3,090 905<br />

2004-2005 22,624 8,263 3,742 1,036<br />

2005-2006 26,673 9,415 3,981 1,299<br />

2006-2007 28,366 10,215 4,925 1,608<br />

2007-2008 32,332 11,069 5,595 1,813<br />

2008-2009 36,706 12,963 5,849 2,016<br />

2009-2010 40,731 14,537 6,639 2,492<br />

2010-2011 37,504 16,729 6,611 2,404<br />

Total 323,915 121,525 53,545 17,115<br />

Source: Reports on <strong>the</strong> activities <strong>of</strong> NUOL within 15 years (1996-2011).


The fungi study was started by updating teaching curriculum and focused study on<br />

macr<strong>of</strong>ungi such as edible and poisonous mushroom, but almost data only in reports, no<br />

publications.<br />

Our overseas collaboration was carried with <strong>the</strong> “Mushroom Research Centre, Chiang<br />

Mai, Thailand”, School <strong>of</strong> Science, Mae Fah Luang University (MFU), Chiang Rai, Thailand and<br />

o<strong>the</strong>r institutions, and attempted to document macro- and micr<strong>of</strong>ungi respectively:<br />

Phengsintham & Hyde (2003a) updated list <strong>of</strong> fungi from Laos, including 60 fungi species, and<br />

published “Twenty ascomycetes on palms from Laos” (Phengsintham & Hyde, 2003b). seven (7)<br />

genera (Alternaria, Cercospora, Cladosporium, Chlamydomyces, Curvularia, Passalora,<br />

Pseudocercospora) <strong>of</strong> dematiaceous hyphomycetes were recorded in <strong>the</strong> B.Sc. report <strong>of</strong><br />

Vongphachanh et al. (2007), and ten (10) genera (Alternaria, Arthrinium, Cephaleros,<br />

Cladosporium, Dictyoerthirinium, Meliola, Scolecostigmina, Spirops, Pseudocercospora and<br />

Tripospermum) <strong>of</strong> Hyphomycetes and 2 genera (Pestalopsis & Collectotrichum) <strong>of</strong> Coelomycetes<br />

on leaf and fruit <strong>of</strong> Mango (Mangifera indica) were recorded in BSc <strong>the</strong>sis (Vanavong &<br />

Khamphonvixay, 2009). Phengsintham et al. (2009) published paper “Cercospora and allied<br />

genera from Laos 1: notes on five new species <strong>of</strong> Zasmidium”. Beside that, Phengsintham et al.<br />

(2010a, 2010b) also published papers “Cercospora and allied genera from Lao 2&3”. A total <strong>of</strong><br />

201 fungi species have recorded from Laos: Ascomycota 24 species, Basidiomycota 44 species,<br />

Deuteromycota about 133 species (Table 2).<br />

By integrating <strong>the</strong> morphological and molecular characters, nie new taxa were<br />

established, namely Passalora dipterocarpi, P. helicteris-viscidae, Pseudocercospora<br />

mannanorensis Bagyan., U. Braun & Jagad. var. paucifasciculata, Zasmidium aporosae, Z.<br />

jasminicola, Z. meynae-laxiflorae, Z. micromeli, Z. suregadae, Z. pavettae, while o<strong>the</strong>r<br />

cercosporoids species represent new record for Laos.


Fig.1. Laboratory building and microscopes<br />

Lab. building <strong>of</strong> Biology Department, Faculty<br />

<strong>of</strong> Sciences, NUOL<br />

Table 2. Fungi species described from Laos<br />

Microscopes and stereoscopes are used in <strong>the</strong><br />

lab. for research activities<br />

Taxa<br />

ASCOMYCOTA<br />

Local<br />

name<br />

Appendicospora<br />

Apiospora- Decaying on<br />

hongkongensis Yanna,<br />

ceae<br />

petiole <strong>of</strong><br />

K.D. Hyde & Frohl.<br />

Livistona chinensis<br />

Arecophila motobilis K.D. Cainiaceae Decaying on stem<br />

Hyde<br />

<strong>of</strong> Calamus<br />

viminalis<br />

Astrocystis sp. Xylariaceae Decaying on stem<br />

<strong>of</strong> C. flagellum<br />

Astrosphaeriella<br />

Melanommat Decaying on stem<br />

fisurostroma J. Frohl. &<br />

K.D.Hyde<br />

aceae <strong>of</strong> C. flagellum<br />

Astrosphaeriella<br />

Melanom- Decaying on stem<br />

malayensis K.D. Hyde &J.<br />

mataceae <strong>of</strong> Calamus<br />

Frohl.<br />

viminalis<br />

Diapor<strong>the</strong> palmarum J.E.<br />

Valsaceae Decaying on stem<br />

Taylor, K.K.Hyde & E,B,G.<br />

Jones<br />

<strong>of</strong> C. flagellum<br />

Fasciatispora petrakii<br />

Xylariaceae Decaying on leaf<br />

(Mhaskar & V.G. Rao)<br />

<strong>of</strong> Borassus<br />

K.D. Hyde<br />

flabellifer<br />

Guignardia calami (Syd.<br />

Mycosphae- Decaying on leaf<br />

P. Syde) Arx & E. Moll.<br />

rellaceae <strong>of</strong> Cocos nucifera<br />

Family Host H LM Ref.<br />

T S Phengsintham &<br />

Hyde. 2003a&b<br />

T S Phengsintham &<br />

Hyde. 2003a&b<br />

T S Phengsintham &<br />

Hyde. 2003a&b<br />

T S Phengsintham &<br />

Hyde. 2003a&b<br />

T S Phengsintham &<br />

Hyde. 2003a&b<br />

T S Phengsintham &<br />

Hyde. 2003a&b<br />

T S Phengsintham &<br />

Hyde. 2003a&b<br />

T S Phengsintham &<br />

Hyde. 2003a&b


Taxa Local<br />

name<br />

Family Host H LM Ref.<br />

Hirsutella citriformis<br />

Baculoviri- On Ant T P Keokene (NOUL 022)<br />

Speare<br />

dae<br />

Lophiostoma graciale<br />

Lophiosto- Decaying on stem T S Phengsintham &<br />

(Fuckel) Holm<br />

mataceae <strong>of</strong> C. flagellum<br />

Hyde. 2003b<br />

Massarina corticola<br />

Lophiosto- Decaying on T S Phengsintham &<br />

(Fuckel) Holm<br />

mataceae petiole <strong>of</strong> Licuala<br />

grandis<br />

Hyde. 2003a&b<br />

Massarina palmicola<br />

Lophiosto- Decaying on stem T S Phengsintham &<br />

K.D.Hyde & Aptroot<br />

mataceae <strong>of</strong> C. flagellum<br />

Hyde. 2003a&b<br />

Myelosperma tumidum<br />

Myelosper- Decaying on stem T S Phengsintham &<br />

Syd. & P. Syd.<br />

maceae <strong>of</strong> C. flagellum<br />

Hyde. 2003b<br />

Mytilidion cf. acicola<br />

Mytilidaceae Decaying on stem T S Phengsintham &<br />

Winter.<br />

<strong>of</strong> C. flagellum<br />

Hyde. 2003b<br />

Ophiocordycep s<br />

Ophiocordy- On Wasp T P Keokene (NOUL 005)<br />

shecocephala (Klotzsch)<br />

G.H. Sung, J.M. Sung,<br />

Hywel-Jones & Spatafora<br />

cipitaceae<br />

Ophiocordyceps<br />

Ophiocordy- On Wasp T P Keokene (NOUL 023)<br />

myrmecophila (Cesati)<br />

G.H. Sung, J.M. Sung,<br />

Hywel-Jones & Spatafora<br />

cipitaceae<br />

Oxydothis bruneiensis J.<br />

Hyponectri- Decaying on stem T S Phengsintham &<br />

Frohl. & K.D. Hyde<br />

aceae <strong>of</strong> Cocos nucifera<br />

Hyde. 2003a&b<br />

Oxydothis elaeicola Petr.<br />

Hyponectri- Decaying on stem T S Phengsintham &<br />

Apud Petrak & deighton<br />

aceae <strong>of</strong> C. flagellum<br />

Hyde. 2003a&b<br />

Oxydothis rattanica J.<br />

Hyponectri- Decaying on stem T S Phengsintham &<br />

Frohl. & K.D. Hyde<br />

aceae <strong>of</strong> C. flagellum<br />

Hyde. 2003a&b<br />

Pestalosphaeria elaeidis<br />

Amphisphae- Decaying on leaf T S Phengsintham &<br />

(Booth & Robertson) Ao<br />

riaceae <strong>of</strong> Cocos nucifera<br />

Hyde. 2003b<br />

Phaeodothis sp. Phaeosphae- Decaying on leaf T S Phengsintham &<br />

riaceae <strong>of</strong> Caryota mitis<br />

Hyde. 2003b<br />

Phomatospora sp. Xylidaceae Decaying on leaf T S Phengsintham &<br />

<strong>of</strong> Caryota mitis<br />

Hyde. 2003b<br />

Torrubiella iriomoteana<br />

Cordycipita- Insect<br />

T P Keokene<br />

Kobayasi & Shimizu<br />

ceae<br />

(Hemiptera)<br />

(MUO00001.1)<br />

Valsa chlorine Pat. Valsaceae Decaying on stem T S Phengsintham &<br />

BASIDIOMYCOTA<br />

<strong>of</strong> Cocos nucifera<br />

Hyde. 2003b<br />

Agaricus cinereus Het Agaricaceae On soil under T S Vidal, 1959<br />

Schaeff.<br />

Khi<br />

Khou<br />

ay<br />

grass<br />

Agaricus equestris Lour. Het<br />

Khi<br />

Mah<br />

Agaricaceae On host dug T S Vidal, 1959<br />

Agaricus sp. Het<br />

Poua<br />

Agaricaceae On soil T S Vidal,1959


Taxa Local<br />

name<br />

k<br />

Family Host H LM Ref.<br />

Astraeus hygrometricus Het Astreaceae On soil in dry T S Vidal,1959<br />

(Pers) Morg.<br />

Phoh<br />

dipterocarp forest<br />

Amanita vaginata Fr. Het Amanitaceae On soil T S Thavatdy et al., 2008<br />

var. alba (Fr.) Gill. La<br />

Ngok<br />

Khao<br />

Amanita vaginata (Fr.) Het Amanitaceae On soil T S Thavatdy et al., 2008<br />

Quel. Var. fulva<br />

La<br />

Ngok<br />

Luang<br />

Auricularis auricular Het Auricula-ceae Decaying wood in T S Vidal, 1959, Khamta<br />

(Hook F.) Underw. Hou<br />

Nou<br />

forest<br />

et al, 2003<br />

Auricularia polytricha Het Auricula-ceae Decaying wood in T S Khamta et al., 2003<br />

(Mont.) Sacc.<br />

Hou<br />

Nou,<br />

Het<br />

Sa<br />

Noun<br />

, Het<br />

sa<br />

Tao<br />

forest<br />

Auricularia ternus (Lev.) Het Auricula-ceae Decaying wood in T S Khamta et al., 2003<br />

farlow<br />

Hou<br />

Nou<br />

forest<br />

Boletus sp. (1) Het<br />

Tup<br />

Tau<br />

Dam<br />

Boletaceae On soil T S Khamta et al., 2003<br />

Boletus sp. (2) Het<br />

Tup<br />

Tau<br />

Dam<br />

Boletaceae On soil T S Khamta et al., 2003<br />

Calvatia craniformis Het Lycoperda- On soil T S Khamta et al., 2003<br />

Coker et Couch<br />

Chao<br />

Mark<br />

ceae<br />

Cantharella minor Pek Het Canthrarel- On soil T S Phengsintham and<br />

Khi<br />

Minn<br />

oy<br />

laceae<br />

Hyde, 2003a<br />

Cantharella<br />

Het Canthrarel- On soil T S Phengsintham and<br />

subbrubarius Pek Mun<br />

Pau<br />

laceae<br />

Hyde, 2003a<br />

Clavaria sp. Clavaria-ceae On soil T S Vidal, 1959<br />

Coprinus disseminates<br />

Coprina-ceae Decaying wood T S Phengsintham and<br />

(Schaeff. Ex Fr.) S.F. Gray<br />

Hyde, 2003a


Taxa Local<br />

name<br />

Coprinus cinereus<br />

(Schaeff. Ex Fr.) S.F. Gray<br />

Coriolus caperatus Berk. Het<br />

hou<br />

Sua<br />

Coriolus biformis KI. Het<br />

Bok<br />

Dictyophora indusiata Het<br />

(vent.) Fisch.<br />

dang<br />

Hae<br />

Ganoderma lucidum (Fr.) Het<br />

Karst<br />

Lin<br />

Chu<br />

Lactarius flavidulus Imai Het<br />

Khah<br />

Lactarius sp. (1) Het<br />

Khah<br />

Lactarius sp. (2) Het<br />

Khah<br />

Lepiota sp. Het<br />

Khon<br />

Kong<br />

Lentinus flavidulus Imai. Het<br />

Kha<br />

Lentinus sajar-caju (Fr.) Het<br />

Fr.<br />

Pok<br />

Lentinus polychrous Lev. Het<br />

Khon,<br />

Het<br />

Both<br />

Lentinus squarrosulus<br />

Mont.<br />

Het<br />

Khon<br />

Khao<br />

Het<br />

Hom<br />

Het<br />

Seng<br />

Lentinus edodes (Berk.)<br />

Singer.<br />

Microporus xanthopus<br />

(fr.) Pat.<br />

Mycena sp. Het<br />

Khau<br />

Tok,<br />

Het<br />

Kai<br />

Noy<br />

Pleurotus ostreatus (Fr.) Het<br />

Guil.<br />

Nang<br />

Lom<br />

Family Host H LM Ref.<br />

Coprina-ceae Decaying wood T S Khamta et al., 2003<br />

Polyporaceae<br />

Decaying wood T S Vidal, 1959<br />

Polyporaceae<br />

Decaying wood T S Vidal, 1959<br />

Phallaceae On soil T S Vidal, 1959<br />

Polyporaceae<br />

On soil T S Vidal, 1959<br />

Russualaceae<br />

On soil T S Khamta et al, 2003<br />

Russualaceae<br />

On soil T S Khamta et al, 2003<br />

Russualaceae<br />

On soil T S Khamta et al, 2003<br />

Agarica-ceae On soil T S Vidal, 1959<br />

PolypodiaceaePolypodiaceae <br />

Polypodiaceae <br />

Polypodiaceae<br />

Decaying wood T S Thavatdy et al, 2008<br />

Decaying wood <strong>of</strong><br />

Terminalia,<br />

Cratoxylon sp., etc<br />

T S Khamta et al, 2003<br />

Decaying wood T S Khamta et al, 2003<br />

Decaying wood T S Khamta et al, 2003<br />

Polypodiaceae<br />

Decaying wood T S Khamta et al, 2003<br />

Polypodiaceae<br />

Decaying wood T S Vidal, 1959<br />

Agarica-ceae On soil T S Khamta et al, 2003<br />

Pleurota-ceae Decaying wood T S Thavatdy et al, 2008


Taxa Local<br />

name<br />

Russula cyanoxantha Het<br />

Schaeff. Ex fr.<br />

Naa<br />

Muan<br />

g<br />

Russula nigricans Fr. Het<br />

Thain<br />

Ngai<br />

Russula sanguine Fr. Het<br />

Nam<br />

mak<br />

Rusulla sp. (1) Het<br />

Than<br />

Noi<br />

Rusulla sp. (2) Het<br />

Than<br />

Noi<br />

Rusulla sp. (3) Het<br />

Than<br />

Noi<br />

Russula violeipis Quel. Het<br />

Naa<br />

Muan<br />

g<br />

Schizophyllum commune Het<br />

Fr.<br />

Bee,<br />

het<br />

Tupk<br />

ae<br />

Termitomyces sp. Het<br />

Puak<br />

Termitomyces<br />

microcarpus (Berk & Br.)<br />

Heim<br />

Volvariella volvacea<br />

(Bull. & fr.)<br />

Het<br />

tupka<br />

i<br />

noy<br />

Het<br />

Fuan<br />

g<br />

Family Host H LM Ref.<br />

Russulaceae On soil in dry<br />

dipterocarp and<br />

oak forests<br />

Russula-ceae On soil in dry<br />

dipterocarp and<br />

oak forests<br />

T S Phengsintham et al.,<br />

1996; Khamta et al.,<br />

2003<br />

T S Phengsintham et al.,<br />

1996; Khamta et al.,<br />

2003<br />

Russula-ceae On soil in forest T S Thavady et al., 2008<br />

Russula-ceae On soil in dry<br />

dipterocarp and<br />

oak forests<br />

Russula-ceae On soil in dry<br />

dipterocarp and<br />

oak forests<br />

Russula-ceae On soil in dry<br />

dipterocarp and<br />

oak forests<br />

Russula-ceae On soil in dry<br />

dipterocarp and<br />

oak forests<br />

Schizophyllaceae<br />

DEUTEROMYCOTA<br />

Acremonium sp. Dematiaceae Decaying on<br />

petiole <strong>of</strong> Borasus<br />

flabellifer<br />

Alternaria brassicae<br />

(Berk.) Sacc.<br />

Alternaria cucurbitae<br />

Letendre & Braun.<br />

T S Khamta et al., 2003<br />

T S Khamta et al., 2003<br />

T S Khamta et al., 2003<br />

T S Khamta et al., 2003<br />

Decaying wood T S Khamta et al., 2003<br />

Agarica-ceae On soil T S Vidal, 1959;<br />

Phengsintham et al,<br />

2003<br />

Agaricaceae On soil T S Vidal, 1959;<br />

Phengsintham et al,<br />

2003<br />

Pluteaceae On grasses T S Vidal, 1959; Thavady<br />

et al., 2008<br />

Dematiaceae Parasitic on living<br />

leaf on Brassica<br />

integrifolia<br />

Dematiaceae Parasitic on living<br />

leaf on Cucurbita<br />

T S Phengsintham &<br />

Hyde, P2003a<br />

T P Vongphachanh et al.<br />

2007<br />

T P Vongphachanh et al.<br />

2007


Taxa Local<br />

name<br />

Alternaria solani (Ellis &<br />

Dematiacea<br />

hispida<br />

Parasitic on living<br />

G. martin) L.R. Jones &<br />

leaf on<br />

Grauz.<br />

Lycopersicon<br />

esculentum<br />

Cercospora achyranthis<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Syd. & P. Sydow.<br />

Achyran<strong>the</strong>s<br />

aspera<br />

Cercospora alocasiae<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Goh & W.H. Hsieh<br />

Alocasia<br />

macrorrhiza<br />

Cercospora apii Fresen. Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Byttneria<br />

andamanensis<br />

Cercospora artemisiae Y.<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

L. Guo & Y. Jiang<br />

Artemisia caudata<br />

Cercospora asparangi<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Sacc.<br />

Asparagus<br />

<strong>of</strong>ficinalis<br />

Cercospora begoniae<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Nori<br />

Begonia inflate<br />

Cercospora bidentis<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Tharp.<br />

Bidens pilosa<br />

Cercospora brassicicola<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

P. Hennings<br />

Brassica<br />

integrifolia<br />

Cercospora canescens<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Ellis & G. Martin<br />

Lablab purpureus<br />

subsp.<br />

Bengalensis<br />

Cercospora cannabis<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Hara & Fukui<br />

Cannabis sativa<br />

Cercospora c<strong>of</strong>feicola<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Berk. & Cooke<br />

C<strong>of</strong>fea Arabica<br />

Cercospora citrulina<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Cooke<br />

Luffa cylindrical<br />

Cercospora cocciniae<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Munjal, Hall & Chona<br />

Coccinia indica<br />

Cercospora copsigena<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Bhartiya, R, Dubey & S.K.<br />

Singh<br />

Capsicum annuum<br />

Cercospora crophulariae<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

(Moesz) Chupp<br />

Scrophilaria sp<br />

Cercospora crotalaria<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Sacc.<br />

Crotalaria<br />

uncinella Lamk.<br />

Subsp. elliptica<br />

Family Host H LM Ref.<br />

T P Vongphachanh et al.<br />

2007<br />

T P Phengsintham (P43)<br />

T P Phengsintham (P464)<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010a<br />

T P Phengsintham (P597)<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010b<br />

T P Phengsintham (P517)<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010b<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010a<br />

T P Phengsintham (P172)<br />

T P Phengsintham (P646)<br />

T P Phengsintham (P301)<br />

T P Phengsintham (P199)<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010b<br />

T P Phengsintham (P380)<br />

T P Phengsintham (P570)<br />

T P Phengsintham (P574)


Taxa Local<br />

name<br />

Cercospora diplaziicola<br />

A.K. Das<br />

Cercospora durantae<br />

Chupp. & Muller<br />

Cercospora erechtitis<br />

Atkison<br />

Cercospora erythrinicola<br />

Tharrp<br />

Cercospora gossypina<br />

Cooke.<br />

Cercospora hyptidicola<br />

R.K.Srivast., N. Srivast. &<br />

A.K.Srivast.<br />

Cercospora ipomoeae G.<br />

Winter<br />

Cercospora meliicola<br />

Speg.<br />

Cercospora nasturtii<br />

Passerini.<br />

Cercospora nicotianicola<br />

J. M. Yen<br />

Cercospora nilhirensis<br />

Govinda & Thirun<br />

Family Host H LM Ref.<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Diplazium<br />

esculentum<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Duranta repens<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Erechtites<br />

valerianifolius<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Erythrina stricta<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Gossypium<br />

herbaceum<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Hyptis suaveolens<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Ipomoea<br />

involucrata<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Chukrasia<br />

tabularis<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Nasturtium<br />

<strong>of</strong>ficinale<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Nicotiana<br />

tabacum<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Conyza<br />

banariensis<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Oroxylum indicum<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Paederia scandens<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Carica papaya<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Smilax chinensis<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010b<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010b<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010a<br />

T P Phengsintham (P333)<br />

T P Crous & Braun, 2003<br />

T P Phengsintham (P22)<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010a<br />

T P Phengsintham (P581)<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010b<br />

T P Phengsintham (P583)<br />

T P Phengsintham (P240)<br />

Cercospora oroxyli<br />

Fresen.<br />

T P Phengsintham (P23)<br />

Cercospora paederiicola<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

Y.L. Guo<br />

2010a<br />

Cercospora papayae<br />

Hansf.<br />

T P Phengsintham (P122)<br />

Cercospora petersii<br />

(Berk. & M.A. Curtis) G.F.<br />

Atk.<br />

T P Phengsintham (P460)<br />

Cercospora physalidis<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

Ellis<br />

Physalis angulata<br />

2010a<br />

Cercospra ricinella Sacc.<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham (P594)<br />

& Berl.<br />

Ricinus communis<br />

Cercospora sambuci Y.L.<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham (P233)<br />

Guo & Jiang<br />

Sambucus<br />

Cercospora Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham (P567)


Taxa Local<br />

name<br />

Family Host H LM Ref.<br />

senecionicola J.J. Davis Senecio walkeri<br />

Cercospora somchi<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham (P600)<br />

Chupp.<br />

Taraxacum<br />

<strong>of</strong>ficinale<br />

Cercospora stahlianthi<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

Z.D. Jiang & P.K. Chi<br />

Stahlianthus<br />

thorelii<br />

2010a<br />

Cercospora taccae (Syd.<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

& P. Syd.) Chupp.<br />

Tacca intergrifoia<br />

2010b<br />

Cercospora trewiae A.K.<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham (P580)<br />

Kar & M. Madal<br />

Trewia nudiflora<br />

Cercospora tridacis-<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham (P282)<br />

procumbens Govindu &<br />

Tridax<br />

Thirum.<br />

procumbens<br />

Cercospora volkameriae<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

Speg.<br />

Clerodendron<br />

schmidtii<br />

2010a<br />

Cercospora zinniae A.<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham (P82)<br />

Pande<br />

Zinnia elegans<br />

Cladoporium maculans<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham (P39)<br />

Schwein.<br />

Jasmium<br />

undulatum<br />

Cladosporium<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham (P413)<br />

alternioloratum R.F.<br />

Cyperus<br />

Castañeda & W.B.<br />

Kendr.<br />

alternifolius<br />

Cladosporium citri G.<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham (P12)<br />

Briosi, & R. Farneti<br />

Citrus grandis<br />

Cladosporium colocasiae<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham (P185)<br />

Sawada<br />

Colocasia<br />

antiquorum<br />

Cladosporium fulvum<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham (P224)<br />

Cooke<br />

Lycopersicon<br />

esculentum<br />

Cladosporium musae<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham (P150)<br />

Mason.<br />

Musa sapientum<br />

Cladosporium<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham (P04)<br />

oxycarpum Berk. & Curt.<br />

Anadendrum<br />

latifolium<br />

Cladosporium zeae Peck Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Zea mays<br />

T P Phengsintham (P32)<br />

Corynespora sp. Dematiaceae Decaying on T S Phengsintham &<br />

petiole <strong>of</strong><br />

Calamus flagellum<br />

Hyde, P2003a<br />

Gyrotrix sp. Dematiaceae Decaying on T S Phengsintham &<br />

petiole <strong>of</strong> Cocos<br />

nucifera<br />

Hyde, P2003a


Taxa Local<br />

name<br />

Passalora aenea (Cif.) U.<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Braun & Crous<br />

Cassia siamea<br />

Passalora benninghii<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

(Allesch.) R. F. Castañeda<br />

Manihot<br />

& U. Braun<br />

utilissima<br />

Passalora bougainvilliae<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

(Munt.-Cvetk.) R.F.<br />

Bougainvillea<br />

Castañeda & U. Braun<br />

spectabilis<br />

Passalora capsicicola<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

(Vassiljevsky) U. Braun<br />

and F. Freire.<br />

Capsicum annuum<br />

Passalora dipterocarpii<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

P. Phengsintham, K.D.<br />

Dipterocarpus<br />

Hyde. & U. Braun<br />

sp.nov.<br />

alatus<br />

Passalora erytrinae (Ellis<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

& Everh.) U. Braun &<br />

Crous.<br />

Erythrina stricta<br />

Passalora haldinae C.<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Nakash. & Meeboon<br />

Haldina cordifolia<br />

Passalora helicteris-<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

viscidae P.<br />

Phengsintham, E.<br />

Chukeatirote, K.<br />

Abdelsalam, K.D. Hyde.<br />

& U. Braun sp.nov<br />

Helicteres viscida<br />

Passalora perfoliati (Ellis<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

&Everh) U. Braun &<br />

Crous.<br />

Chromolaena sp.<br />

Passalora tithoniae (R. E.<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

D. Naker & W. T. Dale)<br />

Tithonia<br />

U. Braun & Crous.<br />

diversifolia<br />

Penicillium sp. Dematiaceae Decaying on<br />

petiole <strong>of</strong><br />

Livistona chinensis<br />

Periconiela lygodii Arch.<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Singh, Bhalla & S.K.<br />

Lygodium<br />

Singh ex U. Braun<br />

flexuosum<br />

Pestalotiopsis smilasis<br />

Coelomyces Decaying on<br />

(Schusinithze) Sutton<br />

petiole <strong>of</strong> Cocos<br />

nucifera<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

alacicola (Muthappa)<br />

Kamal, M.K. Khan & R.K.<br />

Verma<br />

Olax scandens<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

alangii Y.L. Guo & X.L.<br />

Alangium kurzii<br />

Family Host H LM Ref.<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010b<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010a<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010a<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010b<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010a<br />

T P Phengsintham (P27)<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010b<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2009<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010b<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010b<br />

T S Phengsintham &<br />

Hyde, P2003a<br />

T P Phengsintham (P579)<br />

T S Phengsintham &<br />

Hyde, P2003a<br />

T P Phengsintham (P192)<br />

T P Phengsintham (P596)


Taxa Local<br />

name<br />

Liu<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

baliospermi (S. Chowdry)<br />

Deighton<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

buddleiae (W. Yammam)<br />

Goh & W.H. Hsieh<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

cassiae-occidentalis<br />

(J.M. Yen) J.M.Yen<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

catappae (Henn.) X.J.<br />

Liiu &Y. L. Guo<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

centromaticola (J.M. Yen<br />

& G. Lim) J.M. Yen<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

combretigena U. Braun<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

cotizensis (A.S. Mull. &<br />

Chupp) Deighton<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

cruenta (Sacc.) Deighton<br />

Pseudocercospora cyclea<br />

(Chidd.) Deighton<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

duabangae M.D.<br />

Mehrotra & R.K. Verma<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

ecdysan<strong>the</strong>rae (J.M. Yen)<br />

J. M. Yen<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

eupatorii<strong>–</strong>formasani U.<br />

Braun & Bagyan.<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

formasana (W. Yamam)<br />

Deighton<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

fuligena (Roldan)<br />

Deighton<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

giranensis Sawada ex<br />

Goh & W.H. Hsieh<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

gmelinae (J.M. Yen &<br />

Family Host H LM Ref.<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Baliospermum<br />

montanum<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Buddleia asiatica<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Cassia<br />

occidentalis<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Terminalia<br />

tomentosa<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Centrosema<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Calycopteris<br />

floribunda<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Crotalaria<br />

uncinella subsp.<br />

elliptica<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Mucuna pruriens<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Cyclea peltata<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Duabanga<br />

grandiflora<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Ecdysan<strong>the</strong>ra<br />

rosea<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Chromolaena<br />

odorata<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Lantana camara<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Lycopersicon<br />

esculentum<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Glochidion<br />

eriocarpum<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Gmelina arborea<br />

T P Phengsintham (P549)<br />

T P Phengsintham (P560)<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010b<br />

T P Phengsintham (P543)<br />

T P Phengsintham (P44)<br />

T P Phengsintham (P545)<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010a<br />

T P Phengsintham (P565)<br />

T P Phengsintham (P90)<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010b<br />

T P Phengsintham (P133)<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010a<br />

T P Phengsintham (P576)<br />

T P Phengsintham (P49)<br />

T P Phengsintham (P181)<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010b


Taxa Local<br />

name<br />

Gilles) J.M. Yen<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

holarrhenae (Thirun. &<br />

Chupp.) Deighton<br />

Pseudocercospora ixora<br />

(Solh.) Deighton<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

jussiaeae (G. F. Atk.)<br />

Deighton<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

lythracearum (Heald &<br />

F.A. Wolf) X.J. Liu & Y.L.<br />

Guo<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

macarangae (Sud. & P.<br />

Syd.) Deaighton<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

maesae (Hansf.) X.J. Liu<br />

& Y.L. Guo<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

malloticola Goh & Hsieh.<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

mannanorensis var.<br />

paucifasciculata P.<br />

Phengsintham, E.<br />

Chukeatirote, K.<br />

Abdelsalam, K.D. Hyde &<br />

U. Braun sp.nov<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

melochiae (Henn.)<br />

Deighton<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

musae (Zimm.) Deighton<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

namae (Dearn. & House)<br />

U. Braun & Crous<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

ocimicola (Petr. & Cif.)<br />

Deighton<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

paraguayensis (Tak.<br />

Kobay.) Crous<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

piperis (Pat.) Deighton<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

polygonicola (A.K. Kar &<br />

M. Mandal) Deighton<br />

Family Host H LM Ref.<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Holarrhena curtisii<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Ixora stricta<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Ludwigia<br />

prostrata<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Lagerstroemia<br />

macrocarpa<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Macarangae<br />

denticulata<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Maesa<br />

ramentacea<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Mallotus thorelii<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Microcos<br />

paniculata<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Melochia<br />

corchorifolia<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Musa sapientum<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Hydrolea<br />

zeylanica<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Ocimum<br />

tenuiflorum<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Eucalyptus sp.<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Piper lolot<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Polygonum<br />

pulchrum<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010b<br />

T P Phengsintham (P50)<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010a<br />

T P Phengsintham (P611)<br />

T P Phengsintham (P564)<br />

T P Phengsintham (P575)<br />

T P Phengsintham (P588)<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2009<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010a<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010b<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010b<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010b<br />

T P Phengsintham (P405)<br />

T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

2010b<br />

T P Phengsintham (P599)


Taxa Local<br />

name<br />

Family Host H LM Ref.<br />

Pseudocercospora puderi<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham (P164)<br />

Deighton<br />

Rosa chinensis<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

puerariicola (W.<br />

Pueraria<br />

2010a<br />

Yamam.) Deighton<br />

phaseoloides<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

punicae (Henn.)<br />

Deighton<br />

Punica granatum<br />

2011<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham (P358)<br />

sarcocephalii (Venn-<br />

Sarcocephalus<br />

Bourg) Deighton<br />

cordatus<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham (P644)<br />

scopariicola (J.M. Yen)<br />

Dieghton<br />

Scoparia dulcis<br />

Pseudocercospora sp. Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Micromelum<br />

hirsutum<br />

T P Phengsintham (P582)<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

sphaerellae-eugeniae<br />

(Sacc.) Crous, Alfenas &<br />

R. W. Barreto<br />

Sysygium cuminii<br />

2010b<br />

Pseudocercospora stahlii<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

(F. Stevens) Deighton<br />

Passiflora foetida<br />

2010a<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

tabernaemontanae (Syd.<br />

Tabernaemontana<br />

2010b<br />

& P. Syd.) Deighton<br />

coronaria<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

testonicola Ten, Kas &<br />

Das.<br />

Tectona grandis<br />

2010b<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

tetramilis A.N. Shukla &<br />

Tetrameles<br />

2010b<br />

Sarmah<br />

nudiflora<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

tiliacora (A.K. Kar & M.<br />

Mandal) Deighton<br />

Tiliacora triandra<br />

2010a<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

trematicola (J.M. Yen)<br />

Deighton<br />

Trema orientale<br />

2010b<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

trichophila (F. Stevens)<br />

Deighton<br />

Solanum undatum<br />

2010a<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham (P512)<br />

wendlandiae (U. Braun &<br />

Wendlandia<br />

Crous) B. Sutton<br />

thorelii<br />

Pseudocercospora<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

writiae (Thirum. &<br />

Wrightia<br />

2010a<br />

Chupp) Deighton<br />

pubescens


Taxa Local<br />

name<br />

Family Host H LM Ref.<br />

Pseudocercosporella<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Frank et al, 2010<br />

bakeri (Syd. & P. Syd.)<br />

Deighton<br />

Ipomoea aquatica<br />

Scolecostigmina<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

mangiferae (Koord) U.<br />

Braun & Mouch.<br />

Mangifera indica<br />

2010b<br />

Spegazzinia tessarthra<br />

Dematiaceae Decaying on T S Phengsintham &<br />

(Berk & Curt.) Sacc.<br />

petiole <strong>of</strong> Lcuala<br />

grandis<br />

Hyde, 2003a<br />

Spirops clavatus (Ellis &<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham (P390)<br />

Martin) M. B. Ellis.<br />

Mangifera indica<br />

Zasmidium aporosae P.<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

Phengsintham, K.D.<br />

Hyde & U. Braun sp.nov<br />

Aporosa villosa<br />

2009<br />

Zasmidium jasmicola P.<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

Phengsintham, K.D.<br />

Jasminum<br />

2009<br />

Hyde & U. Braun sp.nov<br />

undulatum<br />

Zasmidium maynae-<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

laxiflorae P.<br />

Phengsintham, K.D.<br />

Hyde & U. Braun sp.nov<br />

Meyna pubescens<br />

2009<br />

Zasmidium micromeli P.<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

Phengsintham, K.D.<br />

Micromelum<br />

2010b<br />

Hyde & U. Braun sp.nov<br />

hirsutum<br />

Zasmidium pavetae P.<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

Phengsintham, K.D.<br />

Hyde & U. Braun sp.nov<br />

Pavetta indica<br />

2009<br />

Zasmidium sp. (2) Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Dalbergia cultrata<br />

T P Phengsintham (P550)<br />

Zasmidium sp.(1) Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong><br />

Spondias pinnata<br />

T P Phengsintham (P605)<br />

Zasmidium suregadae P.<br />

Dematiaceae On living leaf <strong>of</strong> T P Phengsintham et al.,<br />

Phengsintham, K.D.<br />

Suregada<br />

2009<br />

Hyde & U. Braun sp.nov<br />

multiflora<br />

Note: C = Calamus, H = habitat, LM = life modes, S = saprobic. T= terrestrial. P = parasitic<br />

Discussions and Conclusions<br />

(1) Lao PDR is considered to be globally important for biodiversity conservation due to<br />

its relatively high forest cover and high diversity <strong>of</strong> flora and fauna.<br />

(2) A total <strong>of</strong> 12,116 species: 8,000-11,000 species <strong>of</strong> flowering plants, fauna includes<br />

166 reported species <strong>of</strong> reptiles and amphibians, at least 700 bird species, 90 known<br />

species <strong>of</strong> bats and at least 100 species <strong>of</strong> large mammals, and fungi 60 species.


The Future<br />

(3) There have very few studies on Lao fungi. 1959-1974, it was <strong>the</strong> war condition<br />

period and almost temporary stop study in Mycology, and for each institute teaching<br />

curriculum only mentioned about <strong>the</strong> general information <strong>of</strong> fungi, especially<br />

focused on mar<strong>of</strong>ungi. A total <strong>of</strong> 33 fungi species had recorded, and almost those<br />

fungi are belong to Basidiomycota.<br />

(4) From 1975 up to now <strong>the</strong> teaching curriculum has been developed and started study<br />

on fungi by cooperation with international organizations. A total <strong>of</strong> 168 fungi species<br />

have recorded from Laos: Ascomycota 24 species, Basidiomycota 11 species,<br />

Deuteromycota about 133 species. By integrating <strong>the</strong> morphological and molecular<br />

characters, nine new taxa were established, namely Passalora dipterocarpi, P.<br />

helicteris-viscidae, Pseudocercospora mannanorensis Bagyan., U. Braun & Jagad. var.<br />

paucifasciculata, Zasmidium aporosae, Z. jasminicola, Z. meynae-laxiflorae, Z.<br />

micromeli, Z. suregadae, Z. pavettae, while o<strong>the</strong>r cercosporoids species represent<br />

new record for Laos.These data are expected to shed light on <strong>the</strong> diversity <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

fungal group in this region.<br />

(5) As we known <strong>the</strong> forest cover in Laos about 41 % <strong>of</strong> a total country, and <strong>the</strong>re still<br />

have primary forest and limestone areas, so that unexpoitation forests, may be have<br />

more fungal diversity.<br />

Based on <strong>the</strong> strategic plan for <strong>the</strong> development <strong>of</strong> NUOL, and to achieve <strong>the</strong> goals,<br />

vision and functions <strong>of</strong> NUOL for <strong>the</strong> educational quality development, six development<br />

strategic plans have been determined as follows:<br />

(1) Improve teachers, staff, and students.<br />

(2) Improve administration and management systems.<br />

(3) Improve <strong>the</strong> quality <strong>of</strong> teaching and learning.<br />

(4) Improve <strong>the</strong> quality <strong>of</strong> research and academic services.<br />

(5) Improve <strong>the</strong> infrastructure and facilities.<br />

(6) Improve <strong>the</strong> national and international collaborations.


Based on <strong>the</strong> strategic plan above, <strong>the</strong> fungi research activities are need to improve in<br />

teaching curriculum and research on fungi.<br />

Acknowledgements<br />

The authors would like to thank <strong>the</strong> Mushroom Research Foundation (MRF) for financial<br />

support. Special thanks also go to <strong>the</strong> MRF organizers and members <strong>of</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>. K.D. Hyde’s<br />

laboratory, Mae Fah Luang University, and members <strong>of</strong> Biology department, Faculty <strong>of</strong> sciences,<br />

National University <strong>of</strong> Laos for <strong>the</strong>ir assistance.<br />

References<br />

Cous PW and Braun U 2003 <strong>–</strong> Mycosphaerella and its anamorphs: 1. Names published in<br />

Cercospora and Passalora. CBS Biodiversity Series 1: 1<strong>–</strong>569.<br />

Frank J, Crous PW, Groenewald JZ, Oertel B, Hyde KD, Phengsintham P and Schroers HJ 2010 <strong>–</strong><br />

Microcyclospora and Microcyclosporella: novel genera accommodating epiphytic fungi causing<br />

sooty blotch on apple. Persoonia 24, 2010: 93<strong>–</strong>105.<br />

Khamta D, Payaming B, Pravongviengkham S and Phengsintham P 2003 <strong>–</strong> Studies on Wild edible<br />

mushroom in Xaythani District, Vientiane Municipality, BSc report. National University <strong>of</strong> Laos.<br />

NUOL 2011 <strong>–</strong> Strategic plan National University <strong>of</strong> Laos, Vientiane, Lao PDR.<br />

Phengsintham P and Hyde KD 2003a <strong>–</strong> Check list <strong>of</strong> Lao fungi. Building Capacity in Biodiversity<br />

Information Sharing 2003. Ksukuba Japan, 184<strong>–</strong>190.<br />

Phengsintham P and Hyde KD 2003b <strong>–</strong> Fungi <strong>of</strong> Laos I: Ascomycetes from Palms. Building<br />

Capacity in Biodiversity Information Sharing 2003. Ksukuba Japan, 174<strong>–</strong>183.<br />

Phengsintham P, Hyde KD and Braun U 2009 <strong>–</strong> Cercospora and allied genera from Laos 1. Notes<br />

on Zasmidium (Stenella s.lat.). Cryptologie, Mycologie, 30(2): 1<strong>–</strong>20.<br />

Phengsintham P, Chukeatirote E, Abdelsalam KA, Hyde KD & Braun U 2010 <strong>–</strong> Cercospora and<br />

allied genera from Laos 2. Cryptogamie, Mycologie 31(1): 1<strong>–</strong>21.<br />

Phengsintham P, Chukeatirote E, McKenzie EHC, Hyde KD, Braun U 2011 <strong>–</strong> Tropical<br />

phythopathogens 1: Pseudocercospora punicae. Plant Pathology & Quarantine 1(1), 1<strong>–</strong>6.


Saignaleut S 2011 <strong>–</strong> Report on <strong>the</strong> National University <strong>of</strong> Laos’ 15 years <strong>of</strong> Foundation (1996-<br />

2011). Vientiane Lao PDR.<br />

STEA 2003 <strong>–</strong> Biodiversity Country Report. Lao PDR.<br />

Thavatdy T, Sykham B and Saliyavong V 2008 <strong>–</strong> Report on Diversity <strong>of</strong> Mushrooms in<br />

Dongmakkhai Village, Xaythany District, Vientiane Municipality, and Mai village, Xay District,<br />

Oudomxay Province. BSc. Report, Faculty <strong>of</strong> Science, National University <strong>of</strong> Laos.<br />

Vidal J 1959 <strong>–</strong> Noms vernacularis de Plantes en usage au Laos. Ecole Francaise D’ Extreme-<br />

Orient. Paris.<br />

Vongphachanh P, Wolabout M, Phaviste M, Phengsintham P & Khounsouvanh F 2007 <strong>–</strong><br />

Taxonomic Study on Family Demataceae in Xaithany District. BSc. Report, National University <strong>of</strong><br />

Laos.


Studies <strong>of</strong> Fungal Biodiversity in Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Thailand<br />

In 2009, <strong>the</strong> University <strong>of</strong> Arkansas in <strong>the</strong> United States was awarded a grant from <strong>the</strong> National<br />

Science Foundation (NSF) for a project entitled “Studies <strong>of</strong> Fungal Biodiversity in Nor<strong>the</strong>rn<br />

Thailand.” The funding provided by NSF supports an international education program that<br />

provides <strong>the</strong> opportunity, during each <strong>of</strong> three summers, for four undergraduate and/or<br />

graduate students from <strong>the</strong> Unites States to spend a month carrying out biodiversity studies <strong>of</strong><br />

fungi and fungus-like organisms associated with tropical forests in nor<strong>the</strong>rn Thailand. Tropical<br />

forests are thought to be <strong>the</strong> terrestrial ecosystems characterized by <strong>the</strong> highest fungal<br />

biodiversity, but a major portion <strong>of</strong> this biodiversity has yet to be documented. While in<br />

Thailand, <strong>the</strong> four student participants from <strong>the</strong> United States interact with students from SE<br />

Asia who are enrolled at ei<strong>the</strong>r Mae Fah Luang University or Chiang Mai University. The<br />

majority <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> students are from Thailand, but participants also have included individuals from<br />

China, Laos, Sri Lanka and <strong>the</strong> Philippines.<br />

Dr. Steve Stephenson <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Department <strong>of</strong> Biological Sciences at <strong>the</strong> University <strong>of</strong> Arkansas is<br />

<strong>the</strong> program coordinator, with Dr. Dennis Desjardin <strong>of</strong> San Francisco State University and Dr.<br />

Steve Miller <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> University <strong>of</strong> Wyoming serving as co-directors. Mycologists in Thailand<br />

involved in <strong>the</strong> program are Dr. Kevin Hyde at Mae Fah Luang University and Dr. Saisamorn<br />

Lumyong at Chiang Mai University. O<strong>the</strong>r individuals who have been involved in <strong>the</strong> program<br />

are Dr. Adam Rollins <strong>of</strong> Lincoln Memorial University (United States), Dr. Carlos Rojas <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

University <strong>of</strong> Costa Rica, and Dr. Thida Win Ko Ko <strong>of</strong> Mae Fah University.<br />

The first <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> three summer programs was carried out during <strong>the</strong> period <strong>of</strong> mid-June to mid-<br />

July <strong>of</strong> 2010, with <strong>the</strong> second summer program taking place during <strong>the</strong> period <strong>of</strong> mid-June <strong>of</strong><br />

2011. The third summer program is scheduled for a comparable period <strong>of</strong> time in 2012.<br />

Participants from <strong>the</strong> United States flew to Bangkok and <strong>the</strong>n on to Chiang Mai, finally arriving<br />

at <strong>the</strong> Mushroom Research Centre (Fig. 1), which is serving as <strong>the</strong> base <strong>of</strong> operations for <strong>the</strong><br />

summer programs. The Mushroom Research Centre, located 64 km north <strong>of</strong> Chiang Mai, is<br />

situated on in a forested area that <strong>of</strong>fers excellent opportunities for collecting fungi. The Centre<br />

itself consists <strong>of</strong> a number <strong>of</strong> chalets (which provide “homes” for all participants in <strong>the</strong> month-


long summer program), a kitchen and meeting area and laboratory facilities. Meals (traditional<br />

Thai food) are prepared on site.<br />

Each summer program consists <strong>of</strong> an introductory session on fungi, workshops on particular<br />

groups <strong>of</strong> fungi and fungus-like organisms and trips to collecting sites in <strong>the</strong> Chiang Mai region<br />

<strong>of</strong> nor<strong>the</strong>rn India. Workshops held as part <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> 2011 summer program considered <strong>the</strong> family<br />

Russulaceae, pyrenomycetous fungi and myxomycetes. Collecting has been carried out in a<br />

variety <strong>of</strong> different forest types, including pine-dominated forests, dipterocarp forests and<br />

mixed forests (Fig. 2). Specimens collected in <strong>the</strong> field are brought back to <strong>the</strong> laboratory for<br />

detailed study. After <strong>the</strong>y have been photographed, described and worked up, specimens are<br />

deposited in <strong>the</strong> herbarium <strong>of</strong> Mae Fah Luang University.<br />

In addition to spending time toge<strong>the</strong>r on collecting trips and working in <strong>the</strong> laboratory, student<br />

participants share research interests and generally get to know one ano<strong>the</strong>r. Participants form<br />

<strong>the</strong> United States get to know Thai culture in addition to learning about <strong>the</strong> customs and way <strong>of</strong><br />

life in <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r countries (e.g., China and Laos) represented by participants from SE Asia. This<br />

aspect <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> program has been an extraordinary experience for all <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> students involved and<br />

undoubtedly will lead to future research collaborations as <strong>the</strong>se students embark upon <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

careers in mycology.<br />

Each <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> two summer programs completed thus far has yielded several hundred collections<br />

<strong>of</strong> fungi (including slime molds). In 2011, some emphasis was on <strong>the</strong> “little fungi” (mostly<br />

ascomycetes) that are <strong>of</strong>ten overlooked by mycologists whose interests are directed towards<br />

macr<strong>of</strong>ungi. Although most <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> specimens have yet to be identified, Dr. Larissa Vasilyeva<br />

(Vladivostok, Russia), who spent about 10 days at <strong>the</strong> Mushroom Research Centre during <strong>the</strong><br />

latter portion <strong>of</strong> June, discovered at least 15 species <strong>of</strong> pyrenomycetes that are new to science.<br />

It seems almost certain that additional new species in a number <strong>of</strong> groups <strong>of</strong> fungi are<br />

forthcoming.<br />

Images <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Mushroom Research Centre, student participants, fungi and nor<strong>the</strong>rn Thailand in<br />

general are available on .


Mushroom Research Centre<br />

Participants in <strong>the</strong> 2011 summer program


Mycology in Israel<br />

Mycology in Israel encompasses all aspects <strong>of</strong> interests in <strong>the</strong> fungal kingdom. This includes<br />

research, cultivation, <strong>the</strong> biotechnological industry and clinical mycology. A growing number <strong>of</strong><br />

Israelis are also interested in fungal forays and <strong>the</strong> culinary delights <strong>of</strong> fungi.<br />

The fungal research community <strong>of</strong> about 120 active members has representatives in all 7 Israeli<br />

universities as well as in additional institutes. Though not very large (given <strong>the</strong> size <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

country, with a population <strong>of</strong> about 7 million), it is an active research community and prides<br />

itself with high quality research output, mainly in fungal cell biology, genetics, fungal host<br />

interactions (human, animal and plant), biological control, fungal ecology (terrestrial and<br />

marine) and systematics. Some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> main fungal genera studied in Israel include Cochliobolus,<br />

Colletotrichum, Botrytis, Fusarium, Aspergillus, Candida, Pleurotus, Trichoderma and<br />

Neurospora.<br />

Most fungal researchers are associated with one or both <strong>of</strong> two major societies in Israel <strong>–</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

Israeli Phytopathological Society and <strong>the</strong> Israel Society for Microbiology. Both <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se active<br />

societies hold annual general meetings and workshops as well as field trips and special interest<br />

group meetings. In addition, non-formal meetings <strong>of</strong> a “molecular mycology club” convene<br />

twice yearly (each time hosted by a different university campus), where students present <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

progress in an “expanded group meeting” format.<br />

Fungal biology is also studied and applied in industry, ranging from production <strong>of</strong> biocontrol<br />

agents (e.g., Trichoderma, Ampelomyces) to <strong>the</strong> use <strong>of</strong> fungi for production <strong>of</strong> metabolites <strong>of</strong><br />

interest. Services for diagnosis are present in <strong>the</strong> major hospitals, <strong>the</strong> ministry <strong>of</strong> agriculture as<br />

well as by some private companies. In addition, <strong>the</strong>re is a constant expansion <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> edible<br />

mushroom industry (mainly Agaricus and Pleurotus but efforts are invested in <strong>the</strong> expansion <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>the</strong> range <strong>of</strong> species grown).<br />

It is currently <strong>the</strong> beginning <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> foray season in Israel (which can last as long as until April), in<br />

which mushrooms such as Agaricus, Pleurotus, Boletus, Lepiota, Tricholoma, and Volvarilla can


e found. In addition, one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> unique edible mushrooms collected during <strong>the</strong> spring time,<br />

mainly in dessert areas <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> country, is <strong>the</strong> desert "false Truffles" Terfezia and Tirmania.


Which has more diverse assemblages <strong>of</strong> myxomycetes: tropical forests or<br />

temperate forests?<br />

Particular groups <strong>of</strong> plants and animals become increasingly more diverse as one nears <strong>the</strong><br />

equator. Is this pattern also true for slime molds (or myxomycetes)? This is what Dr. Thomas<br />

Edison dela Cruz would like to answer. Dr dela Cruz, <strong>the</strong> Philippine representative to <strong>the</strong> Asia<br />

Mycology <strong>Committee</strong> and a faculty member in <strong>the</strong> Department <strong>of</strong> Biological Sciences,<br />

University <strong>of</strong> Santo Tomas in Manila, Philippines, is currently working on a project with Dr.<br />

Steve Stephenson at <strong>the</strong> University <strong>of</strong> Arkansas in <strong>the</strong> United States. Dr. dela Cruz was awarded<br />

a post-doctoral fellowship by <strong>the</strong> prestigious Fulbright Commission. He and Stephenson, who is<br />

a former Fulbright scholar (at Himachal Pradesh University in India) himself, are comparing <strong>the</strong><br />

myxomycete assemblages associated with three well-defined microhabitats in forests <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

tropics and temperate zones. Samples <strong>of</strong> aerial litter, ground litter and dead twigs were<br />

collected from three lowland dipterocarp forests in <strong>the</strong> Philippines. These were Mt. Palay-Palay<br />

National Park in Ternate, Cavite; <strong>the</strong> Subic Forest Reserve in Subic, Zambales; and Bataan<br />

National Park in Morong, Bataan. Comparable samples also were collected from three types <strong>of</strong><br />

temperate forests in Arkansas. The forests sampled were an oak-hickory forest in Devil’s Den<br />

State Park, a mixed oak forest in Pea Ridge National Historical Park, and a beech-dominated<br />

forest in <strong>the</strong> Lost Valley area <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Buffalo National River. With <strong>the</strong> assistance <strong>of</strong> Dr. Hanh Tran,<br />

a faculty member at Ho Chi Minh International University in Vietnam and also a Fulbright<br />

scholar at <strong>the</strong> University <strong>of</strong> Arkansas, sets <strong>of</strong> moist chamber cultures were prepared from <strong>the</strong><br />

samples and are being monitored to assess myxomycete species diversity. Preliminary data<br />

appear to show higher diversity for tropical forests than temperate forests. At least 43 species<br />

<strong>of</strong> myxomycetes belonging to 17 genera have been recorded thus far for substrates collected in<br />

<strong>the</strong> Philippines, whereas only 29 species representing 18 genera have appeared in moist<br />

chamber cultures prepared from substrates collected in Arkansas. Several <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> species from<br />

<strong>the</strong> Philippines are new records for <strong>the</strong> country. Twigs clearly have been <strong>the</strong> most productive<br />

substrate, regardless <strong>of</strong> where <strong>the</strong>y were collected. However, as <strong>the</strong> project continues, it


emains to be seen whe<strong>the</strong>r <strong>the</strong> patterns noted thus far will continue to hold true. This project<br />

is <strong>the</strong> largest study yet carried out to compare <strong>the</strong> assemblages <strong>of</strong> myxomycetes associated<br />

with <strong>the</strong> same types <strong>of</strong> substrates in tropical and temperate forests.<br />

Dr. Stephenson, Dr. Tran and Dr. dela Cruz at Devil’s Den State Park in Arkansas.

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!