63c, d and e) Anamorph: none reported Material examined: Jan 1

63c, d and e). Anamorph: none reported. Material examined: Jan. 1984, Herb. IMI 297770, slides 1–10 (holotype) and dried wood (isotype). Notes Morphology

Two Massarina sensu lato species described from the marine environment, viz. M. ramunculicola (Sacc.) O.E. Erikss. & J.Z. Yue Everolimus nmr and M. velataspora K.D. Hyde & Borse, form a robust clade, and a new genus Morosphaeria was established for them (Suetrong et al. 2009). Together with two Helicascus species, they belong to Morosphaeriaceae (another marine family) (Suetrong et al. 2009). Morphologically, Morosphaeria is characterized by solitary to gregarious, subglobose to lenticular, Gamma-secretase inhibitor immersed to superficial ascomata which are ostiolate and papillate, numerous, filliform pseudoparaphyses, 8-spored, clavate to cylindrical, bitunicate, fissitunicate asci, and hyaline, 1-3-septate, fusoid to ellipsoidal ascospores which

are surrounded with mucilaginous sheath. Phylogenetic Vadimezan study Species of Morosphaeria form a sister group with Helicascus and both of these genera were assigned to a new family, i.e. Morosphaeriaceae (Suetrong et al. 2009). In this study, a strain of Asteromassaria pulchra, occuring on dead twigs of Prunus spinosa, is basal to other species of Morosphaeriaceae, and gets well support. Thus here we tentatively assign Asteromassaria in Morosphaeriaceae. Concluding remarks The only morphological difference between M. velataspora and M. ramunculicola are their morphology of ascomata and size of ascospores (Hyde 1991b). But M. velataspora was reported staining the woody substrate (or agar in culture) purple (Hyde and Borse 1986; Hyde 1991b). Although this character could not be verified in the strain used by Suetrong et al. (2009), purple staining has been reported to have phylogenetic significance why at familial rank in freshwater fungi (Zhang et al. 2009a). Murispora Yin. Zhang, C.L. Schoch, J. Fourn., Crous & K.D. Hyde, Stud. Mycol. 64: 95 (2009b). (Amniculicolaceae) Generic description Habitat

freshwater, saprobic. Ascomata medium-sized, scattered to gregarious, immersed, lenticular, apex slightly protruding, opening through a small rounded pore, substrate stained purple. Peridium thin, composed of a few layers cells of textura angularis, thicker at the apex with pseudoparenchymatous cells. Hamathecium of narrowly cellular pseudoparaphyses, embedded in mucilage. Asci 8-spored, bitunicate, fissitunicate, biseriate, cylindro-clavate with short pedicels. Ascospores curved- fusoid with narrowly rounded ends, golden yellow turning brown when senescent, multi-septate, constricted at the septa, with one, rarely two longitudinal septa in all cells except end cells, smooth or finely verruculose, surrounded by a wide mucilaginous sheath. Anamorphs reported for genus: Phoma (Webster 1957). Literature: Zhang et al. 2009a, b. Type species Murispora rubicunda (Niessl) Yin. Zhang, J. Fourn.

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