Fungalpedia – Note 2071, Halotthiaceae

 

Halotthiaceae. Ying Zhang, J. Fourn. & K.D. Hyde.

Citation when using this data: Hongsanan S et al. 2020  – Fungalpedia, Ascomycota.

Index Fungorum, Facesoffungi, MycoBank, GenBank

Classification: PleosporalesPleosporomycetidaeDothideomycetesPezizomycotinaAscomycotaFungi

 

Saprobic or pathogenic on terrestrial, freshwater and marine hosts. Sexual morph: Ascomata medium to large in size, immersed, semi-immersed, erumpent or superficial, sometimes present under a pseudoclypeus, mostly ostiolate. Peridium multi-layered, outer layer of small, irregular brown to dark brown, thick walled, pseudoparanchymatous cells, inner layer black to dark brown, sometimes with large lumina or pseudoparenchymatous cells arranged in textura angularis, sometimes textura prismatica. Hamathecium comprising dense or narrowly cellular, septate, simple or branched pseudoparaphyses. Asci 8-spored, bitunicate, fissitunicate, cylindrical, clavate, sub-clavate to fusiform, long or short pedicellate, with or withour ocular chamber. Ascospores 1–3-seriate, fusiform, clavate, ellipsoid or subellipsoid, sometimes initially hyaline becoming pale brown, dark brown to blackish brown at maturity, 1-septate, phragmosporous, distoseptate or dictyosporous, constricted or not at the septum, with or without gelatinous sheath, without appendages. Asexual morph: in Halotthia pycnidial. Conidiophores simple obclavate. Conidia (or spermatia) subglobose, ovoid or ellipsoidal, hyaline.

Notes – Halotthiaceae was introduced by Zhang et al. (2013c) with the type species Halotthia, and comprised the genera Mauritiana, Phaeoseptum and Pontoporeia (Hyde et al. 2013, Wijayawardene et al. 2014b). Ariyawansa et al. (2015a) introduced three new genera in to this family, Brunneoclavispora, Neolophiostoma and Sulcosporium. Hyde et al. (2018) removed Phaeoseptum from Halotthiaceae and introduced it to a new family Phaeoseptaceae. Prominent and thick septa in the ascospores can be observed in all members of Halotthiaceae, and can be used as a diagnostic characteristic for this family (Zhang et al. 2013c). All the genera included in this family except Pontoporeia are monotypic. Most of the previously introduced genera were identified in freshwater and marine habitats (Suetrong et al. 2009, Zhang et al. 2013c) but Brunneoclavispora and Sulcosporium were identified from terrestrial habitats (Ariyawansa et al. 2015a). Based on multi-gene phylogenetic analyses, the family formed a monophyletic clade close to Sporormiaceae, Roussoellaceae, Lophiostomataceae and Phaeoseptaceae in Pleosporales (Suetrong et al. 2009, Zhang et al. 2013c, Ariyawansa et al. 2015a, Hyde et al. 2018).

 

Type genus: Halotthia Kohlm

Other accepted species: Species Fungorum – search Halotthiaceae.

 

References

Ariyawansa HA, Hyde KD, Jayasiri SC, Buyck B et al. 2015a – Fungal diversity notes 111–252—taxonomic and phylogenetic contributions to fungal taxa. Fungal Diversity 75, 27–274.

Hyde KD, Chaiwan N, Norphanphoun C et al. 2018 – Mycosphere notes 169–224. Mycosphere 9, 71–430.

Hyde KD, Jones EBG, Liu J-K, Ariyawansa H et al. 2013 – Families of Dothideomycetes. Fungal Diversity 63, 1–313.

Suetrong S, Schoch CL, Spatafora JW, Kohlmeyer J et al. 2009 – Molecular systematics of the marine Dothideomycetes. Studies in Mycology 64, 155–173.

Wijayawardene NN, Crous PW, Kirk PM, Hawksworth DL et al. 2014b – Naming and outline of Dothideomycetes–2014 including proposals for the protection or suppression of generic names. Fungal Diversity 69, 1–55.

Zhang Y, Fournier J, Phookamsak R, Bahkali Ali H, Hyde KD. 2013c – Halotthiaceae fam. nov. (Pleosporales) accommodates the new genus Phaeoseptum and several other aquatic genera. Mycologia 105, 603–609.

 

Entry by

Sinang Hongsanan, Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory for Plant Epigenetics, Shenzhen Key Laboratory of Microbial Genetic Engineering, College of Life Science and Oceanography, Shenzhen University, Shenzhen 518060, People’s Republic of China, Center of Excellence in Fungal Research, Mae Fah Luang University, Chiang Rai 57100, Thailand, Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology, Faculty of Agriculture, Chiang Mai University, Chiang Mai 50002, Thailand

 

Published online 23 March 2026