Hapalosphaeria

Species of fungus From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hapalosphaeria deformans is an ascomycete fungus. It is the causal organism of stamen blight of blackberries and raspberries.[1]:25

Quick facts Scientific classification, Binomial name ...
Hapalosphaeria
Rubus flower infected with Hapalosphaeria deformans. White spores are visible on the anthers.
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: incertae sedis
Order: incertae sedis
Family: incertae sedis
Genus: Hapalosphaeria
Syd.
Species:
H. deformans
Binomial name
Hapalosphaeria deformans
(Syd.) Syd. (1908)
Synonyms

Paepalopsis deformans Syd. (1907)

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Symptoms

Hapalosphaeria affects the growth and development of the vegetative and reproductive structures of its host. A minority of infected flowers have enlarged petals, with a crumpled appearance relative to uninfected ones. These flowers also show partial flower doubling, with extra petal tissue growing from the base of the petals. White tendrils of spores are visible on the surface of the anthers, which never dehisce.[2]

Hosts

The hosts are Rubus species.[1]:25 Among Rubus species, known domesticated hosts are blackberry, boysenberry, cascadeberry, evergreen blackberry, loganberry, raspberry, and youngberry, and nine wild Rubus including wild raspberries R. idaeus.[1]:25

Distribution

Hapalosphaeria is a common disease in the Pacific Northwest of North America (especially west of the Cascades, especially in Oregon), elsewhere in Canada, Denmark, Germany, Great Britain, Ireland, and Spain.[1]:25 It affects the commercial harvest of Oregon dewberries, and boysenberries and cascadeberries in British Columbia.[1]:25 It is not commercially significant in raspberry in Scotland.[1]:25

See also

References

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