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Chondrostereum purpureum

Chondrostereum purpureum
Chondrostereum purpureum 051120A.jpg
Fruiting bodies of C. purpureum in a garden near Paris, France
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Polyporales
Family: Meruliaceae
Genus: Chondrostereum
Species: C. purpureum
Binomial name
Chondrostereum purpureum
(Pers.) Pouzar (1959)
Synonyms

Auricularia persistens
Corticium nyssae
Phylacteria micheneri
Stereum ardoisiacum
Stereum argentinum
Stereum atrozonatum
Stereum lilacinum var. vorticosum
Stereum micheneri
Stereum nipponicum
Stereum pergameneum
Stereum purpureum
Stereum rugosiusculum
Stereum vorticosum
Terana nyssae
Thelephora purpurea


Auricularia persistens
Corticium nyssae
Phylacteria micheneri
Stereum ardoisiacum
Stereum argentinum
Stereum atrozonatum
Stereum lilacinum var. vorticosum
Stereum micheneri
Stereum nipponicum
Stereum pergameneum
Stereum purpureum
Stereum rugosiusculum
Stereum vorticosum
Terana nyssae
Thelephora purpurea

Silver leaf is a fungal disease of trees caused by the fungus plant pathogen Chondrostereum purpureum. It attacks most species of the rose family Rosaceae, particularly the genus Prunus. The disease is progressive and often fatal. The common name is taken from the progressive silvering of leaves on affected branches. It is spread by airborne spores landing on freshly exposed sapwood. For this reason cherries and plums are pruned in summer, when spores are least likely to be present and when disease is visible. Silver Leaf can also happen on poming fruits like apples and pears. Plums are especially vulnerable.

In the past the name Stereum purpureum Pers. was widely used for this fungus, but according to modern taxonomy it is only distantly related to Stereum, actually belonging to order Polyporales whereas Stereum is in order Russulales.

After starting as just a crust on the wood, the fruiting structure develops undulating intergrowing brackets up to about 3 cm broad, which have a tough rubbery texture. The edges and fertile lower surfaces show a fairly vivid violet colour while the fungus is growing, and the upper surfaces have a grey aspect (sometimes with zonation) and are covered with whitish hairs. After a week or two the fructification dries out, becomes brittle, and turns a drab brown or beige. Infected wood can be recognized because it is stained a darker tint.

The spores are rounded cylinders approximately 5-8 µm x 3-4 µm in size. The hyphal structure is monomitic with clamp connections.


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