Geosmithia | |
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Geosmithia morbida on leaves of black walnut | |
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Genus: | Geosmithia Pitt (1979)
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Type species | |
Geosmithia lavendula (Raper & Fennell) Pitt (1979)
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Geosmithia is a genus of anamorphic fungi of uncertain familial placement in the order Hypocreales. The genus, circumscribed by Australian mycologist John Pitt in 1979,[1] is widely distributed. A 2008 estimate placed ten species in the genus,[2] but several new species have since been described. Thousand cankers disease, which affects economically important black walnut (Juglans nigra) populations in North America, is caused by Geosmithia morbida.[3]
Species in the genus are generally similar to those in Penicillium, but can be distinguished from them by forming cylindrical conidia from rough-walled phialides. Additionally, the conidia of Geosmithia do not have a green color, in contrast to the characteristic blue-grey or green-grey conidia of Penicillium. Some Geosmithia species have teleomorphic forms that are classified in the genus Talaromyces. However, Geosmithia is a polyphyletic taxon with evolutionary affinities to at least three groups of the euascomycete lineage within the Ascomycota.[4] The generic name Geosmithia honors British mycologist George Smith.[1]
Pitt 1979
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).Kirk 2008
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).Derickx 2013
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).Ogawa 1997
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).