Waitea circinata was originally described from Australia in 1962, where it was found growing on the undersides of clods of earth in a wheat field. The new genusWaitea, named after the Waite Agricultural Research Institute in Adelaide, was created to accommodate the species.[1] Because of its morphological similarity to species of Rhizoctonia, Waitea circinata was presumed to belong within the Ceratobasidiaceae, but phylogenetic analysis of DNA sequences has shown that it actually belongs in the Corticiaceae and is close to species of Laetisaria (which are also grass pathogens).[2]
Molecular research has also shown that Waitea circinata is part of a complex of at least four genetically distinct taxa, each causing visibly different diseases.[3] These taxa were initially treated as varieties of W. circinata, but have now been described as separate species.[4] Older references to W. circinata may refer to any or all of these species.
Description
Basidiocarps are effused, thin, web-like, smooth, white to pale ochre. Hyphae are multinucleate, colourless, often irregular, 2.5-11 μm wide, without clamp connections. Basidia are often constricted about the middle, with four short sterigmata. Basidiospores are smooth, oblong to cylindrical, 8-12 by 3.5-5 μm, colourless to pale ochre. Sclerotia are pinkish orange to brown, 0.5–3 mm wide.[5]
Habitat and distribution
The species appears to be a soil saprotroph, principally associated with grasses, possibly always as a pathogen. Though first described from Australia, it has a cosmopolitan distribution and has been recorded from Europe,[6] North America,[7] Asia,[8] and New Zealand.[9]
^Warcup JH, Talbot PH (1962). "Ecology and identity of mycelia isolated from soil". Transactions of the British Mycological Society. 45 (4): 495–518. doi:10.1016/S0007-1536(62)80010-2.
^Lawrey JD, Diederich P, Sikaroodi M, Gillevet GM (2008). "Remarkable nutritional diversity of basidiomycetes in the Corticiales". American Journal of Botany. 95 (7): 816–823. doi:10.3732/ajb.0800078. PMID21632407.
^Roberts P. (1999). Rhizoctonia-forming fungi. Kew: Royal Botanic Gardens. pp. 104–105. ISBN1-900347-69-5.
^de Barrada DG, de Luca V, Ramón-Albalat A, Leon M, Armengol J (2019). "First report of Dollar Spot caused by Clarireedia jacksonii and Brown Ring Patch caused by Waitea circinata var. circinata on Agrostis stolonifera in Spain". Plant Disease. 103 (7): 1771. doi:10.1094/PDIS-10-18-1816-PDN. S2CID91284546.
^de la Cerda, Karla A.; Douhan, Greg W.; Wong, Francis P. (July 2007). "Discovery and Characterization of Waitea circinata var. circinata Affecting Annual Bluegrass from the Western United States". Plant Disease. 91 (7): 791–797. doi:10.1094/PDIS-91-7-0791. PMID30780386.
^Ni, X. X.; Li, B. T.; Cai, M.; Liu, X. L. (December 2012). "First Report of Brown Ring Patch Caused by Waitea circinata var. circinata on Agrostis stolonifera and Poa pratensis in China". Plant Disease. 96 (12): 1821. doi:10.1094/PDIS-04-12-0406-PDN. PMID30727275.
^ abCushnahan MZ, Hannan B (2010). "Waitea Patch (Waitea circinata var. circinata) in New Zealand golf greens". NZ Turf Management Journal. 25 (2): 8-9.