Thecaphora | |
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Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Fungi |
Division: | Basidiomycota |
Class: | Ustilaginomycetes |
Order: | Urocystidales |
Family: | Glomosporiaceae |
Genus: | Thecaphora Fingerh. (1836) |
Type species | |
Thecaphora hyalina Fingerh. (1836)
| |
Synonyms[1] | |
Angiosorus Thirum. & M.J.O'Brien (1974) |
Thecaphora is a genus of basidiomycote fungus which contains several species of plant pathogens. The widespread genus contained about 57 species in 2008.[2] and held 61 species in 2020.[3]
In 2008, genus Glomosporium and Kochmania were declared synonyms of Thecaphora.[4] Also Sorosporium mohgaoense Chitaley & Yawale became Thecaphora mohgaoensis (Chitaley & Yawale) R.K. Saxena, Wijayaw., D.Q. Dai, K.D. Hyde & P.M. Kirk.[3]
The genus Thecaphora contains plant-parasitic microfungi infecting hosts belonging to a range of dicotyledonous families. The species and their current nomenclature were summarised by Vánky et al. (2008),[4] and Vánky (2012).[5] Recently, three new species were described in Crous et al. (2018),[6] Kruse et al. (2018),[7] and Piątek et al. (2021).[8] Thecaphora species are characterised by having spores in balls (or rarely single), generally without sterile cells, and infections are found in a range of different organs of their host plants.[9]
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