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Lulworthiaceae

Cladus: Eukaryota
Supergroup: Opisthokonta
Regnum: Fungi
Divisio: Ascomycota
Subdivisio: Pezizomycotina
Classis: Sordariomycetes
Subclassis: Ordines incertae sedis
Ordo: Lulworthiales
Familia: Lulworthiaceae
Genera: Haloguignardia - Kohlmeyeriella - Lindra - Lulwoana - Lulwoidea - Lulworthia

Name

Lulworthiaceae Kohlm., Spatafora & Volkm.-Kohlm., 2000

The Lulworthiaceae are a family of marine fungi in the Ascomycota, class Sordariomycetes.[1] Species in the family have a widespread distribution in both temperate and tropical oceans, and are typically found growing on submerged wood or on seaweed.[2] In 2000, Molecular analysis of several species of Lulworthia and Lindra led to the reassignment of their parent genera to the new order Lulworthiales in addition to the new family Lulworthiaceae.[3]
History and taxonomy

The type genus Lulworthia was originally described in 1916 by George Kenneth Sutherland to contain the species Lulworthia fucicola, a fungus found on the seaweed commonly known as the bladder wrack at Lulworth on the coast of Dorset, UK.[4] The fungus has since been collected several times from submerged wood, but never again from the original algal host; it was subsequently reported that specimens found on wood were morphologically different than those originally described growing on algae.[5] Since the original specimens had deteriorated beyond use, a holotype was designated, using submerged-wood specimens found in Chile in 1984.[6]

The genus Rostrupiella was created in 2007 to contain the species Rostrupiella danica, a Lulworthia-like species collected on driftwood found along the Danish coast and from the northwestern coast of the USA.[7]
Lulworthia fucicola was originally found on the algae Fucus vesiculosus
Description

The ascomata, roughly spherical to cylindrical in shape, may be either embedded in or on the material to which the fruit body is attached. Atop the ascomata is a small rounded process with an opening (an ostiole) through which ascospores may be released. The brown- to black-colored ascomata can be either leathery (coriaceous) or dark-colored and readily broken (carbonaceous). The internal structure of the ascomata, the centrum, is at first filled with a transparent pseudoparenchyma (a type of tissue made of hyphae that are twisted and matted together) dissolves upon reaching maturity. The Lulworthiaceae have ascospores that are both filamentous, and transparent.[3]
References

1. ^ Lumbsch TH, Huhndorf SM. (December 2007). "Outline of Ascomycota – 2007". Myconet (The Field Museum, Department of Botany, Chicago, USA) 13: 1–58. http://www.fieldmuseum.org/myconet/outline.asp.
2. ^ Cannon PF, Kirk PM. (2007). Fungal Families of the World. Wallingford: CABI. pp. 194–95. ISBN 0-85199-827-5.
3. ^ a b Kohlmeyer J, Spatafora JW, Volkmann-Kohlmeyer B. (2000). "Lulworthiales, a new order of marine Ascomycota". Mycologia 92 (3): 453–58. doi:10.2307/3761504. http://jstor.org/stable/3761504.
4. ^ Sutherland GK. (1916). "Additional notes on marine pyrenomycetes". Transactions of the British Mycological Society 5: 257–63. doi:10.1016/S0007-1536(14)80029-6.
5. ^ Kholmeyer J, Volkmann-Kohlmeyer B. (2000). "Illustrated key to the filamentous higher marine fungi". Botanic Marina 34: 1–61.
6. ^ Campbell J. (2005). "Neotypification of Lulworthia fucicola". Mycologia 97 (2): 549–51. doi:10.3852/mycologia.97.2.549. PMID 16396361.
7. ^ Koch J, Pang KL, Jones EBG. (2007). "Rostrupiella danica gen. et sp nov., a Lulworthia-like marine lignicolous species from Denmark and the USA". Botanic Marina 50 (5–6): 294–301. doi:10.1515/BOT.2007.034.

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