Spirographa
Genus of fungi
title: "Spirographa" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["ostropales", "ostropales-genera", "taxa-described-in-1903", "taxa-named-by-alexander-zahlbruckner", "lichenicolous-fungi"] description: "Genus of fungi" topic_path: "general/ostropales" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spirographa" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0
::summary Genus of fungi ::
| image = | image_caption = | taxon = Spirographa | parent_authority = Flakus, Etayo & Miadlikowska (2019) | authority = Zahlbr. (1903) | type_species = Spirographa spiralis | type_species_authority = (Müll.Arg.) Zahlbr. (1923) | subdivision_ranks = Species | subdivision =
Spirographa is a genus of parasitic fungi. It is the sole genus in the monotypic family Spirographaceae, belonging to the order Ostropales. These obligate parasites live exclusively on lichens and produce distinctive fruiting bodies that develop within their host's tissue, characterised by ascospores arranged in a loose spiral pattern. The genus is distinguished by its unique spore features, including some species that produce spores with long, thread-like appendages, and unusual Y-shaped or geometric asexual reproductive structures.
Taxonomy
The genus was circumscribed by Alexander Zahlbruckner in 1903, with Spirographa spiralis later assigned as the type species in 1923. The family Spirographaceae was circumscribed by Adam Flakus, Javier Etayo and Jolanta Miadlikowska in 2019 on the basis of molecular phylogenetics analysis. They determined that genus Spirographa is an independent lineage in the Ostropales, sister to the clade containing the families Gomphillaceae and Graphidaceae.
Description
Spirographa species are obligate parasites of lichens and therefore form no independent thallus of their own. Their fruiting bodies develop within the host tissue as either small apothecia or perithecia. When young these structures lie completely immersed; at maturity they may remain flush with the surface or protrude slightly. The exposed is shallowly concave and ranges from orange-brown to almost black; it never turns blue in iodine stains. A yellow-brown to black of or elongate cells surrounds the disc and lacks any external hairs. The surface layer () carries a pigment that helps to distinguish the genus.
The hymenium (the fertile, spore-bearing surface) contains numerous paraphyses—mostly unbranched threads that thicken at their colourless tips. Between them stand club-shaped () to cylindrical asci that are not , have thin lateral walls, lack any iodine reaction, and typically contain 16 or 32 ascospores. The spores are packed in a loose spiral, narrowly ellipsoidal to spindle-shaped with rounded or pointed ends; some species produce markedly spores featuring long, thread-like appendages at each pole. All spores have a single septum, are colourless, smooth-walled and have no surrounding .
Asexual reproduction in Spirographa occurs in immersed, spherical to pear-shaped pycnidia. When mature the upper wall of the pycnidium breaks down irregularly to release conidia. These colourless propagules lack septa, truncate at the base and vary in shape: some resemble a "Y", with a central axis and two diverging arms, while others are triangular, tetrahedral or polyhedral. Thin-layer chromatography has not detected any secondary metabolites (lichen substances) in the genus.
Species
, Species Fungorum (in the Catalogue of Life) accept 24 species of Spirographa:
- Spirographa aggregata
- Spirographa arsenii
- Spirographa ascaridiella
- Spirographa ciliata
- Spirographa fusisporella
- Spirographa galligena
- Spirographa giselae
- Spirographa herteliana
- Spirographa hypotrachynae
- Spirographa intermedia
- Spirographa lichenicola
- Spirographa limaciformis
- Spirographa longispora
- Spirographa maroneae
- Spirographa ophiurospora
- Spirographa parmotrematis
- Spirographa pittii
- Spirographa pyramidalis
- Spirographa spiralis
- Spirographa triangularis
- Spirographa tricupulata
- Spirographa usneae
- Spirographa vermiformis
- Spirographa vinosa
References
References
- (2024). "Revisions of British and Irish Lichens".
- "''Spirographa''".
- (1903). "Die Natürlichen Pflanzenfamilien nebst ihren Gattungen und wichtigeren Arten".
- (2017). "Hongos liquenícolas de Ecuador". Opera Lilloana.
- (2012). "New species of lichenicolous fungi from Bolivia". The Lichenologist.
- (2019). "Biodiversity assessment of ascomycetes inhabiting ''Lobariella'' lichens in Andean cloud forests led to one new family, three new genera and 13 new species of lichenicolous fungi". Plant and Fungal Systematics.
- (1996). "''Spirographa vinosa'', a new odontotremoid fungus on ''Ochrolechia'' and ''Pertusaria''". The Lichenologist.
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