Phyllactinia corni is a species of powdery mildew in the family Erysiphaceae. It is found in North America and Eurasia where it infects plants in the genus Cornus (dogwoods).
The fungus forms mycelium on the undersides of the leaves of its hosts. As with most Erysiphaceae, Phyllactinia corni is highly host-specific, infecting only plants in the genus Cornus. Furthermore, both its geographical and host range may be significantly smaller than that given by Braun and Cook (2012), as records from North America and Europe may both pertain to different, undescribed species. Phyllactinia corni can be found in any habitats where its host species occur, including urban and suburban gardens and parks. Its reported host range includes Cornus alba, alternifolia, amomum, asperifolia, canadensis, florida, foemina, glabrata, mas, nuttallii, obliqua, officinalis, racemosa, rugosa, sanguinea, sericea. Many other species of powdery mildew also occur on Cornus, including one other species of Phyllactinia: Phyllactinia cornicola, known solely from Pakistan.
Phyllactinia corni was first described by H.D. Shin and M.J. Park in 1988, but it was not effectively published. The species was formally described in the Taxonomic Manual of the Erysiphales in 2012. The type specimen was collected in South Korea on Cornus officinalis, and only a specimen from Japan has been sequenced, which proved distant from a single sequence of Phyllactinia on Cornus in Germany, suggesting that P. corni is actually multiple species. The specific epithet derives from the host genus.
The mycelium is hypophyllous (found on leaf undersides) and sometimes covers the entire surface. The hyphal appressoria are nipple-shaped, rod-shaped or lobed and occur both solitarily and in opposite pairs. Conidophores arise centrally from their mother cell. They have very long foot cells that are straight with a basal septum generally not elevated. The conidiophores produce single conidia. Conidia are clavate with a rounded apex, and can be faintly pigmented. The chasmothecia (fruiting bodies) have 5âÂÂ16 straight, pointed appendages around the equator, which have a bulbous basal swelling. The peridium of the chasmothecia has cells of irregular shape. Phyllactinia corni has two spores per ascus which are roughly ellipsoid and at first faintly olive-coloured, becoming colourless. The asci are typically clavate or saccate and are stalked.
Hyphal cells measure 10âÂÂ110 à3âÂÂ8 üm. Conidiophores are up to 50âÂÂ325 üm long and 5âÂÂ8 üm wide, with foot cells that measure 70âÂÂ200 üm long. Conidia are 50âÂÂ95 à14âÂÂ30 üm. The chasmothecia are 150âÂÂ265 üm in diameter with peridium cells 5âÂÂ25(âÂÂ30) üm in diameter. Appendages are 0.8âÂÂ2àthe diameter of the chasmothecia and 6âÂÂ12.5 üm wide near the base. Asci generally number 10âÂÂ25 and are 50âÂÂ90 à25âÂÂ40 üm with ascospores measuring 20âÂÂ55 à15âÂÂ23 üm.