CiteULike CiteULike
Delicious Delicious
Connotea Connotea

Citation for Study 280

About Citation title: "A reevaluation of Cunninghamellaceae (Mucorales).Sigmoideomycetaceae Fam. Nov. and Reticulocephalis Gen. Nov.; cladistic analysis and description of two new species.".
About This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S3x27x98c13c45c14 (Status: Published).

Citation

Benny G., Benjamin R., & Kirk P. 1992. A reevaluation of Cunninghamellaceae (Mucorales).Sigmoideomycetaceae Fam. Nov. and Reticulocephalis Gen. Nov.; cladistic analysis and description of two new species. Mycologia, 84: 615-641.

Authors

  • Benny G.
  • Benjamin R.
  • Kirk P.

Abstract

A new family, Sigmoideomycetaceae, is proposcd for Sigmoideomyces, Thamnocephalis, and a new genus Reticulocephalis. The family is characterized by sporophores having fertile heads composed of dichotomously branched, coiled hyphae in which the width of the coil is largest distally. Usually, each branch terminates in a sterile spine, which can either be free or adherent to other spines; modified spines may bear hyphal coils. All fruiting hyphae, including spines or modified spines, are irregularly septate at maturity. Cells formed at each branching point of a sporangiophore, except the final one or two, bear a pair of stalked fertile vesicles covered with pedicellate, unispored sporangiola. Reticulocephalis, Sigmoideomyces, and Thamnocephalis have similarly constructed fertile heads but differ in the habit of the sporophore. In Thamnocephalis the fruiting structure is stalked and the fertile head is elevated well above the substratum, whereas in Reticulocephalis and Sigmoideomyces the fruiting structure is sessile or procumbent. In Reticulocephalis the sterile spines have adherent tips and the sporangiola are smooth walled, whereas in Sigmoideomyces the sterile spines are free and the sporangiola have finely echinulate walls. Two new species are described: Reticulocephalis gyrosus, which produces coils of hyphae on the apices of modified sterile spines, and Thamnocephalis sphaerospora which forms smooth-walled to faintly spinose sporangiola and spherical to obovoid fertile vesicles. Sigmoideomyces divaricatus is emended to indicate that the sterile spines are nearly evanescent, leaving behind only a wispy remnant of the wall, which is not due to filamentous bacteria as suggested by the original author. Sigmoideomycetaceae are hypothesized to be monophyletic. Reticulocephalis, Sigmoideomyces, and Thamnocephalis, and all of their species, are monophyletic. All three genera are patristically equidistant from the hypothetical ancestor. Only Cunninghamella is retained in Cunninghamellaceae. Keys to the genera and species are provided. A revised family description is presented for Cunninghamellaceae.

About this resource

  • Canonical resource URI: http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S280
  • Other versions: Download Reconstructed NEXUS File Nexus Download NeXML File NeXML
  • Show BibTeX reference
  • Show RIS reference