Diplodia

 

Background

Species of Diplodia (Botryosphaeriaceae) are endophytes, pathogens, or saprobes associated with cankers, dieback and fruit rot (Crous et al. 2006; Slippers and Wingfield 2007) in a wide range of hosts of agricultural and forestry importance (Farr and Rossman 2014). Cryptic speciation is common in the genus Diplodia, which makes species identification difficult if only based on morphological characters (Phillips et al. 2012, 2013). Denman et al. (2000) suggested that Lasiodiplodia could be a synonym of Diplodia, however recent studies accepted them as distinct genera (Pavlic et al. 2004; Burgess et al. 2006; Damm et al. 2007; Alves et al. 2008).

The genus Diplodia was introduced by Montagne (1834) with concepts altering over the years and has been regarded as including species with dark brown, 1-septate conidia (Phillips et al. 2005). Diplodia is defined by having uni or multilocular conidiomata lined with conidiogenous cells that form hyaline, aseptate, thick-walled conidia at their tips (Phillips et al. 2005). Diplodia mutila is the type species of Diplodia (Montagne 1834; Fries 1849), however, there are no living cultures linked to the holotype. As this has severely hampered studies on taxonomy and phylogeny of Diplodia, Alves et al. (2004) provided a detailed description of this species based on one isolate from grapevines in Portugal (CBS 112553).

 

Species identification and numbers

Diplodia is a large genus and a search in MycoBank (2014) revealed 1,317 names. Species in Diplodia were described, often based on host association, which later resulted in a proliferation of species names. According to Slippers et al. (2004d), the host is not of primary importance in species differentiation, thus, many of the names in Diplodia are likely to be synonyms.

Based on DNA sequence data (single or multimarker) and minor differences in conidial morphology, there are currently about 20 Diplodia species (de Wet et al. 2003; Alves et al. 2004, 2006; Gure et al. 2005; Damm et al. 2007; Lazzizera et al. 2008; Pérez et al. 2010; Jami et al. 2012; Phillips et al. 2012, 2013; Linaldeddu et al. 2013; Lynch et al. 2013). The phylogenetic analysis was performed based on up to date holotype or ex-epitype sequence data available in GenBank (Table).