2009a, b. Type species Massarina eburnea (Tul. & C. Tul.) Sacc., Syll. fung. (Abellini) 2: 153 (1883). (Fig. 55) Fig. 55 Massarina eburnea (from IFRD 2006). a Ascomata on the host surface. b Section of an ascoma. c Ascus with a short pedicel. d Cellular pseudoparaphyses. e Section of the peridium comprising a few layers of compressed cells. f Asci in pseudoparaphyses. g Three-septate ascospores. Scale bars: a = 0.5 mm, b = 100 μm, c–g = 20 μm ≡ Massaria eburnea Tul. & C. Tul., Sel. Fung. Carp. 2: 239 (1863). Ascomata to 250 μm high × 500–700 μm diam., solitary or in small
clusters, forming under raised dome-shaped areas, with blackened centres, with a central ostiole, immersed within the cortex of thin dead branches, ellipsoidal, rounded from above, ON-01910 datasheet clypeate, neck central, short and barely noticeable on host surface (Fig. 55a). Clypeus ca. 250 μm diam., 60 μm thick, brown, comprising compact brown-walled cells of textura angularis to globulosa beneath host epidermal cells (Fig. 55b). Peridium ca. 20 μm thick comprising 3–5 layers of hyaline compressed cells, fusing at the outside with the host (Fig. 55e). Hamathecium Mocetinostat chemical structure filamentous, cellular pseudoparaphyses, ca. 2 μm broad, septate, embedded in mucilage, without anastomosing (Fig. 55d). Asci 108–170 × 18–22 μm
(\( \barx = 144.5 \times 18.8\mu m \), n = 10), 8-spored, cylindro-clavate, pedunculate, bitunicate, fissitunicate, (1-)2-seriate, apically rounded, with an ocular chamber and faint ring (J-) (Fig. 55c and f). Ascospores 30–38 × 8–12 μm (\( \barx = 32.4 \times 8.6\mu m Anacetrapib \), n = 10), fusoid to Poziotinib solubility dmso ellipsoid, 4-celled, constricted at the septa, hyaline, with acute rounded ends and surrounded by (5–8 μm diam.) mucilaginous sheath (Fig. 55g). Anamorph: Ceratophoma sp. (Sivanesan 1984). Material examined: FRANCE, on twig of Fagus sp., (Desmazières 1764. P, holotype of Sphaeria pupula var minor), (Mycotheca universalis no. 1951 lectotype). AUSTRIA, Silesia, Karlsbrunn, on dead twigs of Fagus sylvatica L., Aug. and Sept. 1890, Niessl., De Thümen, sub. Massarina
eburnea, ETH. Saxonia, Königsbrunn, on twigs of Fagus sylvatica, Apr. 1882, W. Krieger, Rabenhorst & Winter, Fungi europaei no. 2767, ETH; FRANCE, on a dead twig of Fagus sylvatica, Deux Sèvres, Villiers en Bois, Forêt de Chizé, Rimbaud, 14 Apr. 2008, leg. det. Paul Leroy (IFRD 2006). Notes Morphology Massarina was introduced by Saccardo (1883) for species of pyrenocarpous ascomycetes that had previously been placed in Massaria, but typically had hyaline ascospores (Bose 1961). The family Massarinaceae was described by Munk (1956) to accommodate Massarina. This family was not commonly used and Massarina was later placed within the Lophiostomataceae in the Pleosporales (Barr 1990a; Bose 1961; Eriksson and Yue 1986). Of the 160 epithets listed in his monograph, Aptroot accepted only 43 species (Aptroot 1998).