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27-04-2026 20:52

Lothar Krieglsteiner Lothar Krieglsteiner

Found on hanging tiwg of Olea europaea in dried-ou

27-04-2026 18:48

Tony Moverley

Collected 23rd April 2026, Norfolk, EnglandSwarms

27-04-2026 17:41

Lothar Krieglsteiner Lothar Krieglsteiner

.. Algarve, same leaf than the last post. The con

27-04-2026 18:05

Lothar Krieglsteiner Lothar Krieglsteiner

... still attached at standing tree. The green con

27-04-2026 17:16

Lothar Krieglsteiner Lothar Krieglsteiner

.. Algarve, moist lying.The conidiomata look like

27-04-2026 12:54

Steve Clements

Bonjour. Ce petit champignon blanc résupiné et

27-04-2026 09:59

Pauline. Penna

Bonjour Can anyone advise me on these pycnidia fo

26-04-2026 21:08

William Slosse William Slosse

Several species of Ramularia occur on Rumex that I

22-04-2026 20:54

Enrique Rubio Enrique Rubio

Hi to everybody.This Pyrenopeziza grew in moist le

25-04-2026 11:34

Louis DENY

Bonjour forumdans la clé de Zotto, L. pudicellum

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Eutypella on Hibiscus syracus
Björn Wergen, 09-03-2011 13:50
Björn WergenHi,

I'm sorry to ask so many things here but there is one more problem. There was no much work to find more pyrenomycetes, and so i find something strange on a Hibiscus syracus, a Malvaceae in my garden. I think it should be Eutypella spec., but I am not sure. Perhaps you can look at the photos and help me with determination ;)

Ascomata is a stroma embedded into the wood with a few scattered perithecia, with a 0,5 mm long neck (see photos, resembling some Diaporthe-species).
Spores 4-6,5x1-2µm, allantoid, pale brown, smooth. Asci with a long stalk, with 8 spores, 35-45x4-5µm.

The strange thing is the substrate: Hibiscus syracus. Did someone know about a Diatrypaceae on Hibiscus?

regards and thanks again,
Kazuya
  • message #14632
Björn Wergen, 09-03-2011 13:50
Björn Wergen
Re:Eutypella on Hibiscus syracus
macro
  • message #14633
Björn Wergen, 09-03-2011 13:51
Björn Wergen
Re:Eutypella on Hibiscus syracus
macro, outer surface with ostiolus
  • message #14634
Björn Wergen, 09-03-2011 13:51
Björn Wergen
Re:Eutypella on Hibiscus syracus
macro, vertical cut
  • message #14635
Björn Wergen, 09-03-2011 13:51
Björn Wergen
Re:Eutypella on Hibiscus syracus
micro
  • message #14636
Alain GARDIENNET, 09-03-2011 13:57
Alain GARDIENNET
Re:Eutypella on Hibiscus syracus
Perhaps E. scoparia ?
Peter Welt, 09-03-2011 14:43
Peter Welt
Re:Eutypella on Hibiscus syracus
Hallo Kazuya,

Look here:
http://www.ascofrance.com/index.php?r=forum&page=viewtopic&id=14457

With the little spores, it should E. scoparia be.

Peter
Björn Wergen, 09-03-2011 14:54
Björn Wergen
Re:Eutypella on Hibiscus syracus
arrrr I also thought about scoparia but what about the long necks?^^

ok it seems as if E. scoparia has a high macroscopic variability...i didn't find this Eutypella before.

thanks and regards,
Kazuya
Alain GARDIENNET, 09-03-2011 15:49
Alain GARDIENNET
Re:Eutypella on Hibiscus syracus
E. scoparia has a well-known macroscopic variability. Robinia is a good substrate to find it (generally with long necks on it). But it has already been found on Hibiscus syriacus in Italy (dixit Rappaz).
@lain