Abstract

The genus Thyridium, previously known as a saprobic or hemibiotrophic ascomycete on various plants, was revised taxonomically and phylogenetically. Sequences of the following six regions, that is, the nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region, the large subunit (LSU) of rDNA, the second largest RNA polymerase II subunit (rpb2) gene, translation elongation factor 1-alpha (tef1) gene, the actin (act) gene, and the beta-tubulin (tub2) gene, were generated for molecular phylogenetic analyses of species of this genus. Phialemoniopsis, a genus encompassing medically important species, is synonymised with Thyridium based on molecular evidence and morphological similarities in their asexual characters. The generic concept for Thyridium is expanded to include species possessing both coelomycetous and hyphomycetous complex asexual morphs. In addition to type species of Thyridium, T.vestitum, nine species were accepted in Thyridium upon morphological comparison and molecular phylogenetic analyses in this study. All seven species of Phialemoniopsis were treated as members of the genus Thyridium and new combinations were proposed. A bambusicolous fungus, Pleosporapunctulata, was transferred to Thyridium, and an epitype is designated for this species. A new species, T.flavostromatum, was described from Phyllostachyspubescens. The family Phialemoniopsidaceae, proposed as a familial placement for Phialemoniopsis, was regarded as a synonym of Thyridiaceae. A new order, Thyridiales, was established to accommodate Thyridiaceae; it forms a well-supported, monophyletic clade in Sordariomycetes.

Highlights

  • Thyridium was originally established to accommodate species with cylindrical, uniseriate, 8-spored asci and muriform, dark-coloured, ascospores (Nitschke 1867)

  • We show that the asexual genus Phialemoniopsis is a synonym of the sexual genus Thyridium

  • We found a new species of Thyridium (T. flavostromatum), transferred Pleospora punctulata into Thyridium, and proposed seven new combinations in Thyridium for strains previously treated in Phialemoniopsis

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Summary

Introduction

Thyridium was originally established to accommodate species with cylindrical, uniseriate, 8-spored asci and muriform, dark-coloured, ascospores (Nitschke 1867). Species of this genus occur on various plants as saprobic or hemibiotrophic fungi (Eriksson and Yue 1989; Taylor et al 1997; Checa et al 2013). Molecular information on Thyridium species is available only for two non-type strains (CBS 113027, CBS 125582) of the type species T. vestitum (Lutzoni et al 2004; Spatafora et al 2006; Vu et al 2019); the phylogenetic relationships among species of this genus are unclear. A recent study on the phylogeny of Sordariomycetes has shown that T. vestitum is closely related to two Phialemoniopsis spp. (P. endophytica and P. ocularis), but their phylogenetic and taxonomic relationships have not been clarified (Dong et al 2021; Hyde et al 2021)

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