Abstract
Sooty moulds on crape myrtle leaves were investigated using light and electron microscopy. The adaxial leaf surface was distinctly covered with soot-like masses of dark brown hyphae and conidia. The main characteristics of the sooty moulds included stauroconidia, conidial clusters, hyphal degeneration and extracellular melanin depositions. Some conidia were round, measured ~10 μm in diameter, and mostly one-septate; others were branched and multiseptate (stauroconidia). Based on their morphology, the sooty moulds were determined to consist of several component fungal species belonging to genera such as Antennaria, Metacapnodium and Tripospermum. Enclosed in electron-dense melanin layers, hyphae and conidial clusters had concentric bodies exhibiting electron-transparent cores and electron-dense shells with fibrillar sheaths. Concentric bodies are hypothesized to function as multilayer lipid-encapsulated nanobubbles or eukaryotic gas vesicles for cytoplasmic volume control. Intrahyphal hyphae possessed electron-dense cytoplasm and lipid globules. These results suggest that sooty moulds are equipped with melanized cell walls, multicelled resting structures, hyphal regeneration, intrahyphal growth and gas vesicles to adapt to their xeric phylloplane environment. Condensed and elongated starch granules in the chloroplasts of mesophyll tissues may indicate the acclimation of the sooty leaf regions to light reduction and temperature increase.
Original language | English |
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Article number | e12380 |
Journal | Forest Pathology |
Volume | 48 |
Issue number | 1 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - 1 Feb 2018 |
Keywords
- concentric body
- gas vesicle
- intrahyphal hypha
- melanin
- starch granule