Chapter XXIV 

 CHECK LIST OF SPECIES AND GENERA 



GENERIC NAMES FOUND APPLIED 

 TO ASPERGILLI 



Alliospora G. Pirn, in Proc. R. I. 

 Acad. 1883, and Jour. Bot. 1883, 

 p. 234; also Sacc. Syll. 18, No. 

 5216. 1906. A. Sapucaya rep- 

 resents a monotypic genus found 

 upon putrifying Lecythis Sapu- 

 cajo. From the description it 

 was some member of the A. niger 

 group. Saccardo's diagnosis 

 only seen 9 



Ascophora. Ascophora nigrans was 

 vaguely assigned mostly to 

 Mucors but appears to have been 

 used by Raulin's group studying 

 the tannic acid fermentation 

 until Van Tieghem described 

 A. niger 9 



Aspergillopsis Sopp, in Videnskaps- 

 selskapets Skr. I Mat.-Na- 

 turv. Kl. No. 11 , pp. 201-204, Taf . 

 XX, fig. 149. 1912. Sopp 

 probably had some members of 

 the A . ust us group 9 



Aspergillopsis Spegazzini, in An. 

 Mus. Nat. Buenos Aires Ser. 

 3, 13: 434. 1911. The black 

 spored Aspergilli (essentially the 

 A. niger group) were regarded 

 as dematiaceous and assigned 

 to a new genus in that group. 

 Spegazzini 's genus has not been 

 accepted 8 



Aspergillus Micheli, in Nova Plan- 

 tarumGenerap. 212, PI. 91. 1729. 

 Compare Link, in Obs. p. 16, 

 1809, and Corda in Icones 

 Fungorum 4: 31, Tab. VII, fig. 



94. 1840 6 



Subgenus — Microaspergillus Weh- 

 mer, in Monogr. 1901. (Mem- 

 oires de la Societe de Physique 



et d'Histoire Naturelle de 

 Geneve, Tome XXXIII, Seconde 

 Parte, pp. 1-157. 1899- 



1901) 16 



Subgenus — Macroaspergillus Weh- 

 mer in Monogr. 1901. The 

 subgenera are not accepted 

 here 16 



Cladosarum Yuill and Yuill, in 

 Trans. Brit. Myc. Soc. 22: 194- 

 200, Pis. 11-13. 1938. Re- 

 garded as a laboratory mutant 

 not encountered in nature. In 

 A. niger group. See 73 



Dimargaris van Tieghem, in Ann. 

 Sci. Nat. 6 Ser. 1: 54. 1875. 

 The name Dimargaris sp. has 

 been seen upon living cultures in 

 one of the great laboratory col- 

 lections. These cultures were 

 obtained from dog and squirrel 

 dung. The organism so labeled 

 belonged to the Aspergillus 

 candidus group. The genus 

 Dimargaris (type D. crystalli- 

 gena v. Tieghem) is regarded by 

 Fitzpatrick as closely related to 

 Dispira and as a synonym of 

 Dispira by Zycha (Krypto- 

 gamenflora der Mark Branden- 

 burg. Pilze II. Mucorineae. 

 Band Via: 1-264, 114 figs. 

 1935). In any case, it is only 

 reported as a parasite of the 

 mycelia of the Mucorineae, 

 hence certainly was not an As- 

 pergillus 9 



Diplostephanus Langeron, in Compt. 

 Rend. Soc. Biol. Paris 87: 343- 

 345. 1922. This genus is pro- 

 posed by Langeron to include 

 ascosporic Aspergilli (Sterig- 

 matocystis) with two series of 



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