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Genus: | Jobellisia |
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Jobellisia luteola [2] (Ellis & Everh.) M.E. Barr 1993
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Jobellisia is a genus of fungi in the monotypic family Jobellisiaceae and the monotypic order Jobellisiales and also the subclass Hypocreomycetidae.[3] They are saprobic (processing of decayed (dead or waste) organic matter) on wood in terrestrial and freshwater habitats.[2]
Jobellisia M.E. Barr, Mycotaxon 46: 60 (1993)
Type species: Jobellisia luteola (Ellis & Everh.) M.E. Barr 1993 Jobellisiaceae Réblová, 2008- Réblová, M. 2008. Bellojisia, a new sordariaceous genus for Jobellisia rhynchostoma and a description of Jobellisiaceae fam. nov.. Mycologia. 100(6):893-901 Jobellisiales M.J.D'souza & K.D.Hyde in Maharachch. et al., Fungal Diversity 72: 219 (2015).
Jobellisiaceae Réblová, Mycologia 100(6): 899 (2008)
MycoBank number: MB 508692; Index Fungorum number: IF 508692; Facesoffungi number: FoF 03334; 8 species.
Jobellisia was originally introduced by Margaret Elizabeth Barr in 1993, with two new combinations, Jobellisia luteola (type species) and Jobellisia nicaraguensis.[1]
Family Jobellisiaceae was then introduced by Réblová (2008) to accommodate the single genus Jobellisia based on LSU sequence data in the Sordariomycetes incertae sedis.[4] In the phylogenetic analysis, Maharachchikumbura et al. (2015) introduced a new order Jobellisiales to accommodate this family, which was accepted by Maharachchikumbura et al. (2016b).[5] With the use of molecular clock evidence, Jobellisiales fell in the ordinal time frame (146 MYA) (Hyde et al. 2017a).[6] However, Hongsanan et al. (2017) stated that the placement of this order is unstable as sometimes it clustered with Pleurostomataceae.[7][2]
Sequences of three species are available in GenBank (Jobellisia fraterna, Jobellisia guangdongensis and Jobellisia luteola), and have been used in phylogenetic analyses (Maharachchikumbura et al. 2015, 2016b,[5] Hongsanan et al. 2017,[7]).[2]
Sexual morph: Ascomata perithecial, basally immersed to superficial, astromatic, globose to subglobose, lageniform to obpyriform, brown to black or yellowish, glabrous or slightly rugose, with a papilla or with upright neck. Peridium three-layered, comprising cells of textura angularis or textura prismatica or textura intricata, some with an orange, middle wall layer. Paraphyses numerous, septate. Asci 8-spored, unitunicate, cylindrical to clavate, short pedicellate, with a J-, distinct, refractive, apical ring. Ascospores uniseriate or overlapping uniseriate, oblong to ellipsoidal, fusoid to fusiform, straight or slightly curved, reddish-brown or greenish-brown to brown, darker at the median septum, 1-septate, with germ pores at one or both ends. Asexual morph: Undetermined (adapted from Réblová 2008 and Maharachchikumbura et al.).[4][2][5]
It is has a scattered distribution, found in America (North, Central and South), parts of Europe, parts of Africa and parts of eastern Asia.[8] Including places such as
8 species have accepted by Species Fungorum and GBIF;[8][9]
Former species;