Venturia inaequalis

Venturia inaequalis

''Venturia inaequalis'' is an ascomycete fungus that causes the apple scab disease.
Apple Scab - Venturia inaequalis When young fruit become infected with this fungus, they grow to be distorted.

Habitat: Cultivated apple trees Geotagged,Malus,Summer,United States,Venturia,Venturia  inaequalis,Venturia inaequalis,apple,apple scab,diseased apple,fungus

Appearance

The fruiting bodies, ascocarps appear in the form of pseudothecia. They are solitary and embedded into the host plant tissue. A pseudothecium has small dark hairs around its opening, and contains pseudoparaphyses along with asci. The asci contain eight haploid ascospores. The haploid chromosome number of ''V. inaequalis'' is seven.

Behavior

The infection cycle begins in the springtime, when suitable temperatures and moisture promote the release of ''V. inaequalis'' ascospores.
These spores rise into the air and land on the surface of a susceptible tree, where they germinate and form a germ tube that can directly penetrate the plant's waxy cuticle. A fungal mycelium forms between the cuticle and underlying epidermal tissue, developing asexually the conidia, that germinate on fresh areas of the host tree, which in turn produce another generation of conidial spores. This cycle of secondary infections continues throughout the summer, until the leaves and fruit fall from the tree at the onset of winter.
''V. inaequalis'' overwinters mostly as immature Perithecia, where sexual reproduction takes place, producing a new generation of ascospores that are released the following spring. Scab lesions located on the woody tissues may also overwinter in place, but will not undergo a sexual reproduction cycle; these lesions can still produce ineffective conidial spores in the spring.

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Taxonomy
KingdomFungi
DivisionAscomycota
ClassDothideomycetes
OrderPleosporales
FamilyVenturiaceae
GenusVenturia
SpeciesV. inaequalis