Meristacrum Asterospermum
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''Meristacrum'' is a fungal genus in the monotypic family (biology), family Meristacraceae, of the order Entomophthorales. They are parasites of soil invertebrates, they typically infect nematodes, and tardigrades.P. F. Cannon and P. M. Kirk (Editors) David J. McLaughlin and Joseph W. Spatafora (Editors) Fungi strains such as ''Meristacrum asterospermum'' and ''Zygnemomyces echinulatus'' have been identified as potential sources of biological control against parasitic nematodes. Although, they have yet to be raised within laboratory or Axenic conditions.


History

The family Meristacraceae was specifically erected to hold the genus ''Meristacrum'' in 1940. The genus ''Meristacrum'' gets its name from the Greek language, Greek word ''meristos'' which means 'divided'. Three genera that were formerly included in Ancylistaceae family; ''Ballocephala'', ''Meristacrum'', and ''Zygnemomyces'', were transferred to Meristacraceae by American mycologist Richard A. Humber in 1989, because these fungi all produce a simple, upright conidiophore bearing several conidia. Genera ''Ballocephala'' and ''Zygnemomyces'' were later then transferred to subdivision Kickxellomycotina, based on the bifurcate, plugged septa in their vegetative hyphae, this was also confirmed by Humber (in 2012).


Life cycle

In general, the various fungal species of Meristacraceae, find a host using a germ hyphae produced by adhesive spores that were actively (ballistically) discharged and airborne.Carl A. Batt and Pradip Patel (Editors) They use conidial propulsion, or by 'papillar eversion', which is by fluid discharge by a swollen subtending cell, or passively released from a short pedicel. Conidia then adhere to the integument (skin) of a live nematode, then either penetrate directly by a germ tube or germinate externally and produce secondary conidia. Resting spores germinate and produce a single erect conidiophore similar to those produced by thallodic segments The fungus then invades the abdomen of the host and a systemic infection develops. Once the host has died, sporophores are produced, typically between the individual segments of the abdomen, where a new generation of actively discharged spores are produced. Resting spores are often formed within the host, and the primary conidia also have the ability to produce typically smaller secondary conidia.Frank Matthews Dugan


Description

They have vegetative growth which is mycelial at first, then forming hyphal bodies. These are usually spherical to rounded. The Sporophores (conidiophores) are simple, unbranched,D.H. Howard (Editor) solitary cylindrical or slightly clavate, bearing terminal conidiogenous cells. The spores (conidia) are terminal, spherical, single celled, unitunicate (single walled), and forcibly by papillar eversion or passively discharged. The secondary spores are present or absent, either similar to primary spores and are also forcibly discharged or passively discharged from strongly narrowed and elongate sporophores. The nucleus is small, (about 3-5 μm (micron, or micrometre)) not clearly visible during mitosis and interphase, the nucleolus is prominent, and central. The resting spores (zygospores) are formed by hyphal conjugation (conjugation of neighbouring hyphal cells or scalariform conjugations between adjacent hyphae), the zygosporangium (episore) is hyaline (glass-like or transparent) or slightly pigmented and smooth or ornamented. The zygospore (endospore) is ovoid and smooth or globose to sub-globose and roughened, germinating directly to produce secondary spores or a sporophore.


Species

As accepted by Species Fungorum; * ''Meristacrum asterospermum'' * ''Meristacrum milkoi'' (syn. ''Tabanomyces milkoi'' ) Former species; ''M. pendulatum'' is now ''Zygnemomyces pendulatus'', Mucoromycota


References

{{Taxonbar, from1=Q4290939, from2=Q10581854 Entomophthorales Zygomycota genera