This issue of Mycological Research News features altruism within Dictyostelium colonies, and questions whether lichens protect or
damage stonework.
This month's Mycological Research includes 16 papers. The first is a major contribution to knowledge of the diversity and ecology
of coprophilous fungi, the most detailed to have appeared since 1972. Molecular studies focus on the Auriculariales and related
orders, family and generic concepts in the Georgefischeriales, the Galerina marginata complex, Serpula lacrymans and S. himantioides, and
lichenicolous fungi referred to Hobsonia and Marchandiomyces. A hydroxynaphthalene reductase gene from Ophiostoma floccosum has
been cloned which complements a phenotype of Magnaporthe grisea, and chitin synthase sequences are reported in different
arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi.
Fungi able to grow on toluene have been investigated, the potential of Rhynchosporium alismatis chlamydospores in weed
biocontrol explored, and the behaviour of the conidia of the entomopathogen Erynia neoaphidis in air studied.
Systematic papers concern Leptographium species on pines, novel fungi on Juncus roemerianus, a new homothallic Mortierella, and
Sphaerella species described from filmy ferns.
The following new scientific names are introduced: Eballistraceae fam. nov.; Eballistra, Hobsoniopsis, Illosporiopsis, Phragmotaenium,
and Pycnodallia gens. nov.; Hymenopsis chlorothrix, Leptographium alethinum, L. euphyes, L. pityophilum, Mortierella tsukubaensis, and
Pycnodallia dupla spp. nov.; Eballistra brachiariae (syn. Entyloma brachyariae), E. lineata (syn. Melanotaenium lineata), E. oryzae (syn.
Entyloma oryzae), Hobsoniopsis santessonii (syn. Hobsonia santessonii), Illosporiopsis christiansenii (syn. Hobsonia christiansenii), Jamesdicksonia
dactylis (syn. Thecaphora dactylidis), J. eleochartis (syn. Ustilago eleochartis), J. irregularis (syn. Entyloma irregulare), J. ischaemianum (syn.
Melanotaenium ischaemianum), J. scirpicola (syn. E. scirpicola), Phragmotaenium indicum (syn. Melanotaenium indicum), and Trichothelium
assurgens (syn. Sphaerella assurgens) combs. nov.