Monday, September 7, 2009

Well-Travelled Fungus

Groundsel cluster cup fungus, looking like minute tarts, on an infected groundsel leaf surface. The spores are produced in vast numbers in the centre of each cup. Each cluster cup is about as large as a full stop (period) on your monitor screen. A minute larva of a fly is crawling across the leaf surface, just to the right of the open cups, and may have been feeding on the fungal spores. In the bottom right corner (below) cluster cups are just forcing their way to the leaf surface, ready to open.

Cluster cups erupting from an infected, swollen stem. Infected stems often develop purple pigmentation and become distorted. Heavy infestations can be fatal.
 
Above: A vertical section through a cluster cup on a leaf surface, x100, showing the chains of spores that are formed in the centre of each cup.  
Below: Although apparently heathy, this plant is infected with the fungus, just visible on the surface of the bottom leaf on the left in the middle of the picture 



Take a look at the weed groundsel Senecio vulgaris stems and leaves in autumn and you’ll often find that they’re swollen and distorted, with a patches of a yellow fungus erupting from their surface. The infection is a fungus called groundsel clustercup Puccinia lagonophorae, which has an interesting history, having travelled more than half-way round the world since the mid-20th. century. Migratory people tend to take weeds, as well as their crops, with them and groundsel was accidentally taken to Australia by early settlers from Britain, where it became infected with this fungus which is native to Australia. Some clustercup-infected groundsel made the return journey and the fungus arrived in Europe in 1961, where it has been spreading ever since. More recently, within the last decade, the fungus crossed the Atlantic and has begun infecting groundsel that had been taken there by early European settlers. The Americans are not altogether sorry that the fungus has arrived, because it weakens groundsel and might offer a means of biological control of this invasive weed. In the photographs you can see the flower-like spore cups, called aecia, that produce the infective golden yellow spores. In the vertical section through one of these cups (second photo from bottom) you can see the chains of spores budding off from the fungal hyphae.

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