Lophodermella sulcigena

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Lophodermella sulcigena
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Leotiomycetes
Order: Rhytismatales
Family: Rhytismataceae
Genus: Lophodermella
Species:
L. sulcigena
Binomial name
Lophodermella sulcigena
(Link) Höhn. (1917)
Synonyms [1]
List
  • Hypodermium sulcigenumLink (1825)
  • Uredinaria sulcigena(Link) Chevall. (1826)
  • Schizoderma sulcigenum(Link) Duby (1830)
  • Hypodermella sulcigena(Link) Tubeuf (1895)
  • Hypoderma sulcigenum Rostr. (1883)
  • Hypoderma pinicola Brunch. (1893)
  • Hypodermopsis pinicola(Brunch.) Kuntze (1898)

Lophodermella sulcigena is a species of fungus in the family Rhytismataceae. It is a plant pathogen that affects the needles of two-needle pine trees. [2]

Contents

Taxonomy

Originally described as a new species by Johann Heinrich Friedrich Link in 1825, [3] it was reclassified in genus Lophodermella by Franz Xaver Rudolf von Höhnel in 1917. [4]

Ecology

Lophodermella sulcigena is a needle-infecting pathogen that attacks two-needle pines, including Pinus mugo , P. nigra and P. sylvestris . In high-elevation P. mugo stands of the Polish Tatra Mountains (Chochołowska Valley), it was identified as the main cause of an endemic needle disease observed from 2015 to 2020: a few weeks after needles emerge, the tips die and discolour (often reddish-brown, later pale grey) while a short basal segment remains green, and in the following June–July the previous year's needles bear elongated black fruiting bodies (hysterothecia) that develop beneath the hypodermis (the strengthening tissue just below the needle surface) and open by a longitudinal slit before the needles finally drop. The species typically forms mostly eight-spored asci and hyaline, club-shaped ascospores about 35–64 × 4.5–6.0 micrometres surrounded by a gelatinous sheath, but the study observed atypical small spores and variation in spore number and shape that can complicate identification. DNA sequences from Polish material place L. sulcigena closest to the North American species Lophodermella montivaga . The authors also documented a range of "secondary" fungi growing on infected needles and even within hysterothecia, suggesting that co-colonisers may interfere with ascospore release and could influence outbreak severity. [5]

References

  1. "GSD Species Synonymy. Current Name: Lophodermella sulcigena (Link) Höhn., Ber. dt. bot. Ges. 35(3): 247 (1917)". Species Fungorum . Retrieved 21 December 2025.
  2. "Lophodermella sulcigena (Link) Höhn". Catalogue of Life . Species 2000: Leiden, the Netherlands. Retrieved 21 December 2025.
  3. Höhnel, F. von (1917). "Erste vorläufige Mitteilung mykologischer Ergebnisse. (Nr. 1-106)". Berichte der Deutschen Botanischen Gesellschaft (in German). 35: 246–256 [247].
  4. Kowalski, Tadeusz; Bartnik, Czesław; Bilański, Piotr (2024). "Involvement of Lophodermella sulcigena in endemic disease of Pinus mugo needles in the Polish Tatra Mountains". Forests. 15 (3): 422. doi: 10.3390/f15030422 .