Aleurodiscus_oakesii

<i>Aleurodiscus oakesii</i>

Aleurodiscus oakesii

Species of fungus


Aleurodiscus oakesii is a cluster of small, gray-white, irregular cup-shaped saprotrophic fungi that grows on decaying hardwood tree bark. This fungus may also be called hophornbeam discs,[1] and it causes smooth patch disease. A. oakesii is found year round in North America, Europe, and Asia and is commonly found on oak trees.

Quick Facts Aleurodiscus oakesii, Scientific classification ...
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Aleurodiscus oakesii on white oak bark, found in Illinois, US

Taxonomy

Aleurodiscus oakesii is a species of fungus in the family Stereaceae. The species was first described by Miles Joseph Berkeley and Moses Ashley Curtis in 1873 as Corticium oakesii.[2] Mordecai Cubitt Cooke first proposed the designation Aleurodiscus oakesii in 1875 as a nomen nudum, and the first accepted mention using the new designation was by Narcisse Théophile Patouillard in 1890.[3][4] The specific epithet both honors English botanist William Oakes and references the fungi's tendency to colonize oak trees.[5]

Description

Aleurodiscus oakesii produces clusters of gray or cream-colored, flat, crustlike, fruiting bodies, usually less than a centimeter in diameter, though larger sizes may result from the combination of adjacent bodies. The inner, fertile space of the cup-like fruiting bodies is darker in color in comparison to the sterile outer surface. The spore-bearing bodies are tough in texture and attached to the bark by a single point, but the fungi lacks a stipe. The edges of the fruiting bodies are raised and may be confused for cup-shaped Ascomycete fungus.[6] A. oakesii grows best on thinner sections of bark, with the stromata formed beneath the top bark layer and enlarging cracks in the bark with growth of fungal hyphae that then form the cup-like structure.[7] Microscopically, A. oakesii has septate hyphae and antler-like acanthophyses. Basidiospores are oval or egg-shaped and relatively small in comparison to species of the same genus,[8] and the spores of this species have spines and warts.[9]

Habitat and distribution

Found across North America, Europe, and Asia, most commonly in the North Eastern United States, most commonly found in spring and fall but grows year round.[10] It colonizes the outer bark of trees, especially white oaks, and eventually digests it, causing the "smooth patch disease" the fungus is most well known for. A. oakesii grows commonly on hardwood trees of the genus Ostrya and is less commonly found on leafier trees.[11]

Pathology

Aleurodiscus oakesii on tree bark

Aleurodiscus oakesii is the most common fungi to cause “smooth patch disease” on the nonliving outer bark of trees. This is not a parasite since the fungi only colonizes dead outer bark and not living tree material This fungal infection can lead to trees shedding and leaving smooth and lighter patches of bark on the tree,[12] giving “smooth patch” its meaning. Fungal infection usually occurs during the growing season of hardwood trees, mainly many species of oaks, but can grow year round. Other names for smooth patch disease include white patch, smooth bark, bark rot, and bark patch. This pathogen causes irregular shaped, lighter colored slightly sunken depressions in the tree bark, ranging in size from a few inches diameter to over a foot.[13]

Unlike wood-decay fungi, A. oakesii is not a parasite because does not saprotrophically colonize the tree itself, only the bark As a result, it does not directly harm the living tree.[6][14][15] However, due to a decrease of bark thickness, smooth patch disease may decrease protection of the bark against many factors such as wood decay fungi, dehydration, or injury.[16]


References

  1. "Maryland Biodiversity Project - Hophornbeam Disc (Aleurodiscus oakesii)". www.marylandbiodiversity.com. Retrieved 2023-05-06.
  2. Cooke, Mordecai Cubitt (1873). "Notices of North American Fungi". Grevillea. 1 (11): 166.
  3. Cooke, Mordecai Cubitt (1875). "On Corticium Oakesii". Grevillea. 3 (28): 172.
  4. Patouillard, Narcisse Théophile (1890). "Quelques champignons de la Chine récolté par M. l'abbé Delavay". Revue mycologique. 12: 133.
  5. "Aleurodiscus wakefieldiae". www.messiah.edu. Retrieved 2023-05-06.
  6. Stork, Harvey (1943). "Minnesota Species of Aleurodiscus". Journal of the Minnesota Academy of Science. 11 (1): 32–34.
  7. Wu, Sheng-Hua; Wei, Chia-Ling; Lin, Yu-Ting; Chang, Chiung-Chih; He, Shuang-Hui (2019-05-09). "Four new East Asian species of Aleurodiscus with echinulate basidiospores". MycoKeys. 52: 71–87. doi:10.3897/mycokeys.52.34066. ISSN 1314-4057. PMC 6522468. PMID 31139010.
  8. Fischer, Mark W. F.; Stolze-Rybczynski, Jessica L.; Cui, Yunluan; Money, Nicholas P. (2010-08-01). "How far and how fast can mushroom spores fly? Physical limits on ballistospore size and discharge distance in the Basidiomycota". Fungal Biology. 114 (8): 669–675. doi:10.1016/j.funbio.2010.06.002. ISSN 1878-6146. PMC 2936274. PMID 20835365.
  9. Stork, Harvey E. (1920). "Biology, Morphology, and Cytoplasmic Structure of Aleurodiscus". American Journal of Botany. 7 (10): 445–457. doi:10.2307/2440940. ISSN 0002-9122. JSTOR 2440940.
  10. "Smooth Patch". Purdue University - College of Agriculture. Retrieved 2023-05-06.
  11. R., Vann, S. (2012). Smooth patch of oak trees. Cooperative Extension Service, University of Arkansas, U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, and county governments cooperating. OCLC 824118978.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  12. Carter, James Cedric (1955). Illinois Trees: Their Diseases. Vol. 46. Urbana: Natural History Survey Division. p. 81.
  13. Tehon, Leo R.; Jacks, W.R. (1933). "Smooth Patch, a Bark Lesion of White Oak". Journal of Forestry. 31 (4): 430–433.
  14. Lair, Eugenie D. (1946). "Smooth Patch, A Bark Disease of Oak". Journal of the Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society. 62 (2): 212–220. ISSN 0013-6220. JSTOR 24333204.

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