
12-04-2015 21:50

Hello all, Back in the Nectria minefield but hopin

21-04-2015 20:27
Quijada LuisHi All, I am trying to obtain all the bibliograph

22-04-2015 14:02
Could someone help me with this paper on Trichodel

21-04-2015 18:18
Hi to everybody This enigmatic pyreno on Fagus sy

20-04-2015 22:14

Sur bourgeon de Rhododendron. Je suis pratiquement

19-04-2015 22:11

Bonsoir à tous,Trouvé il y a quelques jours ce c

19-04-2015 14:10
Steve ClementsHymenoscyphus? with mould on barkHi,This stalked d

19-04-2015 16:53
Alessandro FellinHiI am looking for the monograph of Donadini, spec
Gnomonia gnomon?
Steve Clements,
13-04-2015 18:13
this was found in the same place as the Orbilia, on the remains of a dead leaf by a stream. Oak, Sycamore and Hazel were present. The fruit bodies were on both sides of the leaf, and after soaking in water were up to 0.3 mm diameter. They were hardly immersed, rather attached by tiny "rhizoids", upo to 0.5 mmm long. The neck was between 0.25 and 0.35 long. What I assumed to be spores were in fact asci, containing very thin spores up to 25 x 1.5 um. I suspect this is Gnomonia gnomon, but my microscope is unable to show convincingly a central septum in the spores, nor appendages at the ends. Could this be anything else?
Many thanks if this find could be confirmed,
Steve
Paul Cannon,
13-04-2015 18:34
Re : Gnomonia gnomon?
This could well be right, ascospore septa are quite difficult to see in these fungi. But most are host-specific, so it's important to know which plant the leaf comes from. There's a short description of the species at http://fungi.myspecies.info/taxonomy/term/5135/descriptions and a comprehensive monograph by Sogonov et al. (2008) in the CBS Studies in Mycology series (free to download)
Chris Yeates,
13-04-2015 19:17

Re : Gnomonia gnomon?
It certainly looks like a Corylus leaf to me
Chris
Chris
Steve Clements,
13-04-2015 20:36
Re : Gnomonia gnomon?
Yes - I recorded Stereum rugosum (and failed to find Hypoxylon fuscum) on the nearby Hazel, so I think that's very likely what it is. It doesn't seem to have been recorded in the Sheffield area (FRDBI records to 2009). My collection of over 80K records (Sheffield at centre of a 70 km square) gives
Gnomonia alni-viridis 7
Gnomonia cerastis 6
Gnomonia leptostyla 2
Most of these are on Acer.
(Most of these are also yours Chris)
Many thanks Chris and Paul
Gnomonia alni-viridis 7
Gnomonia cerastis 6
Gnomonia leptostyla 2
Most of these are on Acer.
(Most of these are also yours Chris)
Many thanks Chris and Paul
Alain GARDIENNET,
14-04-2015 07:49
Re : Gnomonia gnomon?
Dear Steve,
As Paulm said, you'll have to go in Sogonov & al., and then in more recent works. The three taxa Gnomonia alni-viridis Gnomonia cerastis Gnomonia leptostyla aren't used yet today.
Alain
Steve Clements,
14-04-2015 09:33
Re : Gnomonia gnomon?
Thank you Alain,
It's hard to know what to do with all the "old" records - we don't really know what many of them would be named as nowadays.
Les petits champignons! Les noms, ils se change si vite!
Steve
It's hard to know what to do with all the "old" records - we don't really know what many of them would be named as nowadays.
Les petits champignons! Les noms, ils se change si vite!
Steve
Stoykov Dimitar,
22-04-2015 16:01

Re : Gnomonia gnomon?
Hi,
the leaf looks like of type of a hazel. Ascus's morphology (apical annulus is ca 1 micrometre), 27-31 x 4.6-6 micrones, spore 20 x 1.5 micr fits well in the description of Monod (1983: 85).
Important: Check the perithecia, if they collapse circular when the leaf is in dry condition, typical depression is noted by also by the author.
the leaf looks like of type of a hazel. Ascus's morphology (apical annulus is ca 1 micrometre), 27-31 x 4.6-6 micrones, spore 20 x 1.5 micr fits well in the description of Monod (1983: 85).
Important: Check the perithecia, if they collapse circular when the leaf is in dry condition, typical depression is noted by also by the author.