Fungalpedia – Note 2036, Metacapnodiaceae

 

Metacapnodiaceae. S. Hughes & Corlett.

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

Index Fungorum, Facesoffungi, MycoBank, GenBank

Classification: CapnodialesDothideomycetidaeDothideomycetesPezizomycotinaAscomycotaFungi

 

Foliar epiphytes on leaves and stems. Mycelium superficial, subiculum spongy, friable, thick-walled, moniliform, anastomosing, branched, sometimes lobed or in the form of hemisphaerical lumps, hyphae, brown to dark brown, septate, with deeply constricted at the septa, smooth or coarsely roughened. Sexual morph: Ascomata basally immersed in the subiculum, globose or broadly ellipsoidal, with numerous hypha-like, septate, appendages. Peridium comprises brown to dark brown of cells of textura angularis. Hamathecium comprising pseudoparaphyses, with numerous asci. Asci 8-spored, bitunicate, ellipsoidal with pedicel, lacking ocular chamber. Ascospores 2–3-seriate, ellipsoidal, or with conical end cells, brown to dark brown, 3-septate, occasionally slightly constricted at the septa, thick-walled, dark at the septa. Asexual morph: Hyphomycetous. Capnocybe: slimy heads phragmoconidia. Capnophialophora phialides state: plump, ampulliform phialides on the moniliform conidiophores, small ameroconidia. Capnosporium: solitary, dry phragmoconidia, produce phialides and microconidia. Hormiokrypsis: solitary, dry stauroconidia (Batista & Nascimento 1957, Hughes 1966, Hughes & Seifert 2012, Hyde et al. 2013, photoplates of asexual can be seen in Hughes 1981). 

Notes – Metacapnodiaceae is a sooty mould family which produces a hyphomycetous conidial state (Hughes 1972). This family has distinctive hyphae recognized by superficial, glossy, moniliform, widely branched, dark brown walls, strong constrictions at the septa, except for the cells of synnematous asexual morphs, which are progressively narrower and longer, usually tapered towards the apex at the ends (Hughes et al. 2012, Hyde et al. 2013). Some species in this family were discovered in fossil ambers, and were used as a representative from Dothideomycetes in divergence time estimates (Beimforde et al. 2014, Hongsanan et al. 2016a, Liu et al. 2017a). Capnocybe, Capnophialophora, Capnosporium, Hormiokrypsis and Hyphosoma were reported as asexual morph genera in Metacapnodiaceae (Hughes 1966, 1981b, Seifert et al. 2011, Wijayawardene et al. 2012). Hyde et al. (2013) reviewed this family and synonymized Capnocybe under Metacapnodium, thus the family contained six genera, Capnobotrys, Capnophialophora, Capnosporium, Hormiokrypsis, Hyphosoma and Metacapnodium. Capnophialophora, Capnosporium and Hormiokrypsis were synonymized under Metacapnodium (Rossman et al. 2016). We accept only three genera in Metacapnodiaceae (Capnobotrys, Hyphosoma and Metacapnodium). No cultures or sequence data are available for this family.

 

Type genus: Metacapnodium Speg.

Other accepted species: Species Fungorum – search Metacapnodiaceae.

 

References

Batista AC, Costa CAA, Ciferri R. 1957 – Orgânogênese e sistemática dos fungos Trichopeltinaceae (Theiss.) emend. nobis. Publicações do Instituto de Micologia da Universidade do Recife 90, 1–24.

Beimforde C, Feldberg K, Nylinder S, Rikkinen J et al. 2014 – Estimating the Phanerozoic history of the Ascomycota lineages: combining fossil and molecular data. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution78, 386–398.

Hongsanan S, Sánchez-Ramírez S, Crous PW, Ariyawansa HA, Zhao RL, Hyde KD. 2016a – The evolution of fungal epiphytes. Mycosphere 7, 1690–1712.

Hughes SJ, Atkinson TJ, Seifert KA. 2012 – New Zealand fungi 37. Two new species of the sooty mould genus Metacapnodium with dictyoseptate ascospores. New Zealand Journal of Botany 50, 381–387.

Hughes SJ, Atkinson TJ, Seifert KA. 2012 – New Zealand fungi 37. Two new species of the sooty mould genus Metacapnodium with dictyoseptate ascospores. New Zealand Journal of Botany 50, 381–387.

Hughes SJ. 1966 – New Zealand fungi 7. Capnocybe and Capnophialophora, new form genera of sooty moulds. New Zealand Journal of Botany 4, 333–353.

Hughes SJ. 1972 – New Zealand fungi 17. Pleomorphism in Euantennariaceae and Metacapnodiaceae, two new families of sooty moulds. New Zealand Journal of Botany 10, 225–242.

Hughes SJ. 1981 – New Zealand fungi 31. Capnobotrys, an anamorph of Metacapnodiaceae. New Zealand Journal of Botany 19, 193–226.

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

Rossman AY, Allen WC, Braun U, Castlebury LA et al. 2016 – Overlooked competing asexual and sexually typified generic names of Ascomycota with recommendations for their use or protection. IMA Fungus 7, 285–304.

Seifert K, Morgan-Jones G, Gams W, Kendrick B. 2011 – The genera of hyphomycetes. CBS Biodiversity Series no. 9: 1–997. CBS-KNAW Fungal Biodiversity Centre, Utrecht, Netherlands.

Wijayawardene DNN, McKenzie EHC, Hyde KD. 2012 – Towards incorporating anamorphic fungi in a natural classification–checklist and notes for 2011. Mycosphere 3, 157–228.

 

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