Arboricolonus simplex gen. et sp. nov. and novelties in Cadophora, Minutiella and Proliferodiscus from Prunus wood in Germany

Abstract During a survey on fungi associated with wood necroses of Prunus trees in Germany, strains belonging to the Leotiomycetes and Eurotiomycetes were detected by preliminary analyses of ITS sequences. Multi-locus phylogenetic analyses (LSU, ITS, TUB, EF-1α, depending on genus) of 31 of the 45 strains from Prunus and reference strains revealed several new taxa, including Arboricolonusgen. nov., a new genus in the Helotiales (Leotiomycetes) with a collophorina-like asexual morph. Seven Cadophora species (Helotiales, Leotiomycetes) were treated. The 29 strains from Prunus belonged to five species, of which C. luteo-olivacea and C. novi-eboraci were dominating; C. africanasp. nov., C. prunicolasp. nov. and C. ramosasp. nov. were revealed as new species. The genus Cadophora was reported from Prunus for the first time. Phialophora bubakii was combined in Cadophora and differentiated from C. obscura, which was resurrected. Asexual morphs of two Proliferodiscus species (Helotiales, Leotiomycetes) were described, including one new species, Pr. ingenssp. nov. Two Minutiella species (Phaeomoniellales, Eurotiomycetes) were detected, including the new species M. pruni-aviumsp. nov. Prunus avium and P. domestica are reported as host plants of Minutiella.


Introduction
In order to study the mycobiome of wood necroses of economically important Prunus species in Germany, a survey has been conducted using isolation techniques. Based on preliminary analyses of generated ITS sequences, several strains belonging to the Leotiomycetes and Eurotiomycetes were detected. Some of them were recently identified as species of Collophorina and related genera (Bien et al. 2020). Further strains showed morphological or genetical affiliation to the genera Cadophora, Proliferodiscus (Leotiomycetes) and Minutiella (Eurotiomycetes).
Leotiomycetes and Eurotiomycetes are both ecologically and morphologically highly diverse classes (Geiser et al. 2006(Geiser et al. , 2015Wang et al. 2006b; LoBuglio and Pfister 2010; Johnston et al. 2019). Members of the Leotiomycetes have been described as plant pathogens, especially wood rot fungi, endophytes, nematode-trapping and mycorrhiza-forming fungi, as well as terrestrial and aquatic saprobes (Wang et al. 2006a;Hustad and Miller 2011). Eurotiomycetes are commonly known as saprotrophs and parasites of plants and animals; however, the number of pathogens is relatively low, compared to Sordariomycetes or Dothideomycetes (Geiser et al. 2006(Geiser et al. , 2015. The genus Cadophora (Ploettnerulaceae, Helotiales, Leotiomycetes) was established in 1927 based on C. fastigiata (Lagerberg et al. 1927). Melin and Nannfeldt (1934) added five new species to Cadophora, while Davidson (1935) described two additional species that were isolated from stained wood or pulpwood products. Subsequently, Conant (1937) determined that Phialophora and Cadophora were congeneric and transferred the eight species of Cadophora to Phialophora. In the monograph of Phialophora, Schol-Schwarz (1970) included C. fastigiata and C. malorum, as well as Margarinomyces bubakii in Phialophora. Gams (2000) reinstated the genus Cadophora for phialophora-like species with more or less pigmented hyphae and pale phialides (C. fastigiata, C. melinii, C. malorum, C. repens). For some of these, a relationship with sexual morphs in some discomycete genera, such as Mollisia and Pyrenopeziza, has been demonstrated (Le Mangenot 1960, 1961). This connection was confirmed by LSU sequence analysis by Harrington and McNew (2003). However, to date, the type species of none of the genera has been epitypified. Currently, the genus Cadophora comprises 17 species. Species of Cadophora have been isolated from plants (e.g. Di Marco et al. 2004;Gramaje et al. 2011;Crous et al. 2015;Travadon et al. 2015;Walsh et al. 2018), soil (Kerry 1990;Hujslová et al. 2010;Agustí-Brisach et al. 2013) and decaying wood (Nilsson 1973;Blanchette et al. 2004Blanchette et al. , 2010. Haines and Dumont (1983) compared specimens of Dasyscyphus inspersus (syn. Peziza inspersa) with the type species of the genera Dasyscyphus and Lachnum and revealed this species not to be congeneric with either of them. Based on spore, hair, paraphysis and subiculum morphology, they erected the new genus Proliferodiscus within the family Hyaloscyphaceae (Helotiales, Leotiomycetes). Today, the genus Proliferodiscus comprises eight species and is known from woody hosts in tropical and temperate regions worldwide (Haines and Dumont 1983;Spooner 1987;Cantrell and Hanlin 1997;McKenzie et al. 2000;Hofton et al. 2009;Han et al. 2014a;Haelewaters et al. 2018;Ekanayaka et al. 2019). Crous and Gams (2000) described the genus Phaeomoniella (Celotheliaceae, Phaeomoniellales, Eurotiomycetes) based on Pa. chlamydospora, the causal agent of Esca disease of grapevine wood (Bertsch et al. 2013;Fontaine et al. 2016;Gramaje et al. 2018). Damm et al. (2010) discovered several new Phaeomoniella species from Prunus wood in South Africa that were combined in new genera by Crous et al. (2015). One of them, Minutiella tardicola (syn. Pa. tardicola), was characterised by the very slow growth of the cultures and minute pycnidia (Damm et al. 2010). Most members of Celotheliaceae have been found on Prunus (Damm et al. 2010) or other woody hosts from angiosperms and gymnosperms (Crous and Gams 2000;Nordén et al. 2005;Lee et al. 2006;Crous et al. 2008Crous et al. , 2009Crous et al. , 2015Crous et al. , 2016Zhang et al. 2012;Úrbez-Torres et al. 2013;Yurkewich et al. 2017).
In this study, we aim to (1) systematically place strains isolated from necrotic wood of Prunus trees in Germany, as well as some additional strains tentatively identified as Cadophora within Leotiomycetes and Eurotiomycetes and (2) formally describe new taxa.

Sampling and fungal isolation
Branches with wood symptoms (e.g. canker, necroses, wood streaking, gummosis) were sampled from plum (Prunus domestica), sour cherry (P. cerasus) and sweet cherry (P. avium) orchards in Saxony, Lower Saxony and Baden-Württemberg, Germany, in 2015 and 2016. Additionally, a wood sample from a sour cherry tree located in a garden in Bavaria, as well as three strains previously isolated from wood of P. salicina in South Africa and two Phialophora bubakii strains, all tentatively identified as Cadophora spp. in preliminary analyses, were included. Wood pieces (5 × 5 × 5 mm) from the transition zone of symptomatic to non-symptomatic wood tissue, as well as pieces of the same size from non-symptomatic wood of the same branch, were surface sterilised (30 s in 70% ethanol, 1 min in 3.5% NaOCl, 30 s in 70% ethanol), washed for 1 min in sterilised water and placed on synthetic nutrient-poor agar medium (SNA; Nirenberg 1976), as well as oatmeal agar medium (OA; Crous et al. 2019), both supplemented with 100 mg/l penicillin, 50 mg/l streptomycin sulphate and 1 mg/l chloramphenicol. After incubation for several days at 25 °C, hyphal tips of developing fungi were transferred to SNA medium with a sterilised needle. Single-conidial isolates were obtained from the strains for further study. Sampling and isolation of the strains from South Africa was similar (Damm et al. 2007).
The strains are maintained in the culture collections of the Senckenberg Museum of Natural History Görlitz, Germany (GLMC), the Westerdijk Fungal Biodiversity Institute, Utrecht, The Netherlands (CBS) and the German Collection of Microorganisms and Cell Cultures, Braunschweig, Germany (DSMZ). Specimens (dried cultures), including type specimens were deposited in the fungarium of the Senckenberg Museum of Natural History Görlitz (GLMC).

Morphological analysis
To enhance sporulation, autoclaved filter paper and double-autoclaved pine needles were placed on the surface of the SNA medium. The cultures were incubated in the dark at 25 °C. Colony growth and characters on SNA and OA, for some strains additionally on potato dextrose agar (PDA; Crous et al. 2019) and malt extract agar (MEA; Oxoid Ltd., England; 1.5% agar, Difco, USA), were noted after 2 and 4 wk. Colony colours were rated according to Rayner (1970). After 2 or 4 wk, microscopic preparations were made in clear lactic acid and observations and measurements (30 measurements per structure) were made with a Nikon SMZ18 stereomicroscope (SM) or with a Nikon Eclipse Ni-U light microscope with differential interference contrast (LM). Photographic images were captured with Nikon Digital Sight DS-Fi2 cameras installed on the above-mentioned microscopes, making use of the Nikon NIS-Elements software (v.4.30).

DNA extraction, PCR amplification and sequencing
Of the forty-two strains isolated from Prunus wood in Germany, three strains from Prunus wood in South Africa, as well as two strains of Phialophora bubakii that were included in this study, 34, 4 and 8 strains had been identified as species of Cadophora, Minutiella and Proliferodiscus, respectively, in preliminary analyses based on ITS sequences. Twentytwo Cadophora strains, six Proliferodiscus strains, all Minutiella strains as well as an unidentified Leotiomycete strain were selected for phylogenetic analyses (Table 1).
Genomic DNA of the isolates was extracted using the method of Damm et al. (2008). A partial sequence of the 28S nrDNA (LSU) and the 5.8S nuclear ribosomal gene with the two flanking internal transcribed spacers ITS1 and ITS2 (ITS) were amplified and sequenced using the primer pairs LR0R (Rehner and Samuels 1994) + LR5 (Vilgalys and Hester 1990) and ITS1F (Gardens and Bruns 1993) + ITS-4 (White et al. 1990), respectively. Additionally, partial sequence of the β-tubulin gene (TUB) and the translation elongation factor 1α (EF-1α) of strains belonging to the genus Cadophora were generated using the primer pairs BTCadF + BTCadR (Travadon et al. 2015) and EF1-688F + EF1-1251R (Alves et al. 2008), respectively. The β-tubulin gene of the genus Minutiella was sequenced using the primer pair Bt2a + Bt2b (Glass and Donaldson 1995).
The PCR reaction mixture contained 1 μl of 1:10 DNA template, 2.5 μl 10X buffer (Peqlab, Erlangen, Germany), 1 μl of each primer (10mM), 2.5 μl MgCl 2 (25mM), 0.1 μl Taq polymerase (0.5 U, Peqlab, Erlangen, Germany) and 2.5 μl of 2mM dNTPs. Each reaction was made up to a final volume of 20 μl with sterile water. DNA amplifications were carried out in a Mastercycler pro S (Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany). The amplification conditions for ITS and EF-1α were: initial denaturation at 95 °C for 5 min; followed by 30 cycles of denaturation at 94 °C for 30 s, annealing at 51 °C for 30 s and extension at 72 °C for 60 s; and a final extension step at 72 °C for 3 min. The amplification conditions for the primer pair Bt2a + Bt2b were: initial denaturation at 94 °C for 4 min; followed by 38 cycles of denaturation at 94 °C for 60 s, annealing at 61 °C for 60 s and extension at 72 °C for 45 s; and a final extension step of 5 min at 72 °C. For amplifications of LSU and TUB with the primer pair BTCadF + BTCadR, the PCR conditions were set according to Paulin and Harrington (2000) and Travadon et al. (2015), respectively.
The PCR products were visualised on a 1% agarose gel and sequenced using the same primers by the Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre (BiK-F) laboratory (Frankfurt, Germany). The forward and reverse sequences were assembled by using BioEdit Sequence Alignment Editor (v. 7.2.5;Hall 1999).

Phylogenetic analysis
For the phylogenetic analyses, sequences, especially those of ex-type strains, were downloaded from GenBank and added to the sequences generated in this study and those of the appropriate outgroup sequences in four datasets. In order to determine the generic placement of strain GLMC 459, sequences of close matches from blastn searches with its LSU and ITS sequences were combined with sequences of the phylogenetic reassessment of Hyaloscyphaceae by Han et al. (2014b) (dataset 1). Three datasets were generated to determine the systematic position of strains of the genera Cadophora (ITS, TUB, EF-1α; dataset 2), Minutiella (LSU, ITS, TUB; dataset 3) and Proliferodiscus (LSU, ITS; dataset 4). The datasets were aligned automatically using MAFFT v. 7.308 (Katoh et al. 2002, Katoh andStandley 2013) and manually adjusted where necessary.
The phylogenetical analyses were conducted using Bayesian Inference (BI), Maximum Likelihood (ML) and Maximum Parsimony (MP). For BI analyses, the best fit model of evolution for each partition was estimated by MEGA7 (Kumar et al. 2016). Posterior probabilities were determined by Markov Chain Monte Carlo sampling (MCMC) in MrBayes v. 3.2.6 (Huelsenbeck and Ronquist 2001;Ronquist and Huelsenbeck 2003) as implemented in Geneious v. 10.2.2 (Kearse et al. 2012), using the estimated models of evolution. For each dataset, four simultaneous Markov chains were run for 1 million generations and trees were sampled every 100 th generation. The first 2000 trees, which represent the burn-in phase of the analyses, were discarded and the remaining 8000 trees were used to calculate posterior probabilities in the majority rule consensus trees. The ML analyses were performed by RAxML v. 8.2.11 (Stamatakis 2006, 2014 as implemented in Geneious v. 10.2.2 (Kearse et al. 2012), using the GTRGAMMA model with the rapid bootstrapping and search for best scoring ML tree algorithm, including 1000 bootstrap replicates. The MP analyses were performed with MEGA7 (Kumar et al. 2016) using tree-bisection-reconnection (TBR) as the branch-swapping algorithm. The robustness of the trees was evaluated by 1000 bootstrap replicates and 10 random sequence additions. Tree length, consistency index, retention index and composite index of the resulting trees were calculated. The DNA sequences generated in this study were deposited in GenBank (Table 1), the alignments in TreeBASE (http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S24703).

Phylogenetic analyses
The combined sequence dataset 1 consisted of 59 isolates including the outgroup Geoglossum nigritum strain AFTOL-ID 56 and comprised 1540 characters, of which 436 characters were parsimony-informative, 578 variable and 885 constant. The gene boundaries on the LSU-ITS multi-locus alignment were as follows: LSU: 1-890 and ITS: 891-1540. The final ML optimisation likelihood of ML analysis was: lnL = -15669.074659. One most parsimonious tree was generated by MP analysis with tree length: 693 steps, consistency index: 0.298780, retention index: 0.555126 and composite index: 0.186644 and 0.165861 for all sites and parsimony informative sites, respectively. The BI phylogeny, including BI posterior probability values as well as ML and MP bootstrap support values, is shown in Fig. 1.
The clades in Fig. 1 represent all clades of the multi-locus phylogeny of the "Hyaloscyphaceae" by Han et al. (2014b) as well as clades formed by sequences of the closest matches from blastn searches with the ITS and LSU sequences of strain GLMC 459 in GenBank. Strain GLMC 459 from P. domestica in Germany forms a long single-strain clade that does not belong to any of the above-mentioned clades and is located close to Polydesmia pruinosa TNS-F-12764, strains belonging to Clade 9 in Han et al. (2014b) and a clade formed by three strains of Polyphilus. The clade, formed by GLMC 459 and these taxa, is not supported.
The combined sequence dataset 2 of Cadophora consisted of 70 isolates including the outgroup Hyaloscypha finlandica CBS 444.86 and comprised 1594 characters, of which 498 characters were parsimony-informative, 692 variable and 859 constant. The gene boundaries in the multi-locus alignment were as follows: ITS: 1-575, TUB: 576-1133 and EF-1α: 1134-1594. Five most parsimonious trees were generated by MP analysis with tree length: 205 steps, consistency index: 0.536145, retention index: 0.931189 and composite index: 0.581425 and 0.499252 for all sites and parsimony informative sites, respectively. The BI phylogeny, including BI posterior probability values as well as ML (lnL = -9335.686864) and MP bootstrap support values, is shown in Fig. 2.
The phylogeny consists of two main clades belonging to 21 clades representing different Cadophora species. The two main clades are formed by BI and ML analyses; both are supported by BI (100%); however, only the second clade is supported by ML and MP analyses (100% and 74%, respectively). In the first main clade, six strains isolated from P. cerasus in Saxony and Bavaria form a well-supported clade (100/100/83% BI posterior probability, ML and MP bootstrap support values, respectively) with strains of C. novi-eboraci including its ex-type strain. A further five strains from P. cerasus and P. domestica in Saxony and Baden-Württemberg and two strains from P. salicina in South Africa form a well-supported clade (100/99/78%) that does not include any previously described species. One strain isolated from P. salicina in South Africa (CBS 120890) and a strain referred to as C. "novi-eboraci" (CBS 101359) form single-strain clades and belong to a well-supported clade with C. novieboraci and C. prunicola (100/81/99%). One strain isolated from P. cerasus in Saxony (GLMC 377) forms a well-supported clade (100/100/94%) with four strains referred to as C. "spadicis". Within the second main clade, five strains isolated from P. domestica in all three sampling areas in Germany form a well-supported clade (100/94/-%) with 16 strains of C. luteo-olivacea including its ex-type strain. Two strains of Phialophora bubakii CBS 198.30 and CBS 837.69, both originating from margarine, form a well-supported clade (100/100/99%) sister to a third strain (CBS 269.33) from fresh water in Sweden that forms a single-strain clade. The clade formed by all three strains is well-supported (100/93/-%) as well.
The combined sequence dataset 3 consisted of 29 isolates of the Celotheliaceae and the outgroup Capronia fungicola CBS 614.96 and comprised 1904 characters, of which 486 characters were parsimony-informative, 685 variable and 1182 constant. The gene boundaries in the multi-locus alignment were as follows: LSU: 1-840 and ITS: 841-1482, TUB: 1483-1904. One most parsimonious tree was generated by MP analysis with tree length: 384 steps, consistency index: 0.558989, retention in-   dex: 0.779804 and composite index: 0.458467 and 0.435901 for all sites and parsimony informative sites, respectively. The BI phylogeny, including BI posterior probability values as well as ML (lnL = -9719.124620) and MP bootstrap support values, is shown in Fig. 3.
The 12 main clades of the phylogeny represent genera of the Celotheliaceae; all species for which sequences are available, are included. Four isolates from this study group in a well-supported clade (100/100/100%) with Minutiella tardicola. Two of the strains isolated from P. domestica form a well-supported sister clade (98/99/77 %) to the single-strain clade formed by the ex-type strain of M. tardicola. A further two strains isolated from P. avium form a well-supported clade (100/100/-%), sister to the clade consisting of M. tardicola and Minutiella sp. The combined sequence dataset 4 consisted of 29 isolates of Proliferodiscus and closely related genera including the outgroup Perrotia flammea JHH4497 and comprised 1385 characters, of which 152 characters were parsimony-informative, 204 variable and 1174 constant. The gene boundaries in the multi-locus alignment were as follows: LSU: 1-854 and ITS: 855-1385. Seven most parsimonious trees were generated by MP analysis with tree length: 263 steps, consistency index: 0.651341, retention index: 0.807611 and composite index: 0.526030 and 0.482422 for all sites and parsimony informative sites, respectively. The BI phylogeny obtained by Bayesian Inference, including BI posterior probability values as well as ML (lnL = -4019.800817) and MP bootstrap support values, is shown in Fig. 4.
The main clades represent closely related genera. Six strains from Prunus wood in Germany group in the Proliferodiscus clade. Five of them, from P. avium and P. domestica, cluster with seven ambiguously identified strains and the type strain of Pr. chiangraiensis in a well-supported clade (100/100/99%). Strain GLMC 1751 forms a single-strain clade sister to "Hyaloscyphaceae sp. 2" ICMP 18979.

Taxonomy
Based on DNA sequence data and morphology, the 33 strains studied (Table 1) are assigned to four genera, of which seven species belong to Cadophora, two species to Minutiella and two species to Proliferodiscus, including 5 species that proved to be new to science and are described. Two strains, referred to as Phialophora bubakii, proved to belong to two distinct species within Cadophora. Strain GLMC 459 could not be assigned to any known genus and is therefore described as new genus. All species studied in culture are characterised below.

Arboricolonus simplex
Culture characteristics. Colonies on OA flat to slightly raised with an entire to undulate margin, hyaline, whitish to buff, lacking aerial mycelium, reverse same colours, 2-4 mm diam. in 2 wk, 6-10 mm diam. in 4 wk; on SNA flat to slightly raised with an entire to undulate margin, hyaline to whitish, lacking aerial mycelium, reverse same colours, 1-2 mm diam. in 2 wk, 3-6 mm diam. in 4 wk.
Notes. The morphology of Arboricolonus simplex is reminiscent of collophorinalike species regarding the colonies that are slow growing, the lack of aerial mycelium and the conidiogenous cells that are mostly reduced to short necks or openings with collarettes on hyphae (Damm et al. 2010;Bien et al. 2020). In contrast to these genera, microcyclic conidiation has not been observed in Arboricolonus. This genus belongs to the Leotiomycetes as well; however, it is not closely related to Collophorina and collophorina-like genera (Phacidiales) treated by Bien et al. (2020). A class-wide phylogenetic analysis of LSU-ITS places it within the order Helotiales (data not shown).
Culture characteristics. Colonies on SNA flat with an entire to undulate margin, white to buff, sometimes grey olivaceous to olivaceous, lacking aerial mycelium, reverse same colours, 6-14 mm diam. in 2 wk (25 °C in the dark); Colonies on OA flat with an entire to undulate margin, primrose to amber, grey olivaceous to olivaceous black, often with a white margin, partly covered by floccose white aerial mycelium, reverse buff to grey olivaceous, 22-30 mm diam. in 2 wk (25 °C in the dark); Colonies on PDA flat to raised, entire edge, short aerial mycelium, pale buff, after > 2 wk with pale olivaceous to pale olivaceous grey patches or sectors, reverse same colours, 30 mm diam. in 2 wk (20 °C). Colonies on MEA flat to low umbonate, with entire edge, abundant velvety aerial mycelium, mycelium and surface white to very pale smoke-grey; reverse very pale luteous, ochreous to buff, in diffuse daylight with concentric oliveceous-grey rings, 30 mm diam. in 2 wk (20 °C).
Notes. Cadophora africana was isolated once from P. salicina in South Africa. Cadophora africana, as well as C. bubakii and C. ramosa, form subglobose conidia. However, conidia of C. africana are mostly globose to subglobose, sometimes even tear-shaped, while those of C. ramosa are often ellipsoidal, elongate-ellipsoidal to cylindrical and the portion of subglobose conidia in C. bubakii is comparatively low. Therefore, conidia of both species are on average longer (4.9 μm and 3.6 μm, respectively) than those of C. africana (3 μm) and with a larger L/W ratio (2.2 and 2.1, respectively; C. africana: 1.4).

Culture characteristics.
Colonies on SNA flat with an entire to undulate margin, white, lacking aerial mycelium, reverse same colour, 36-56 mm diam. in 2 wk (25 °C in the dark); Colonies on OA flat with an entire to undulate margin, olivaceous to olivaceous black, sometimes covered by floccose aerial mycelium, olivaceous grey, reverse same colours, 24-27 mm diam. in 2 wk (25 °C in the dark).
Notes. The genus Margarinomyces was described 1930 with Ma. bubakii as type species after causing problems in a margarine factory in Czech Republic by forming greenish-black spots on and in margarine cubes that smelled like bitter-almond (benzaldehyde) (Laxa 1930). The fungus was shown to survive 20 min at 60 °C and to be resistant to organic preservatives such as sodium benzoate that was, however, only tolerated in margarine up to a concentration of 0.2% (Laxa 1930). According to the CBS website, strain CBS 198.30 is ex-isotype of Ma. bubakii. Schol-Schwarz (1970) included Ma. bubakii in Phialophora and considered C. obscura as a synonym. The genus Margarinomyces had been included in Phialophora by Gams and McGinnis (1983), though excluded by Cole and Kendrick (1973), but Ma. bubakii has never been considered as a species of Cadophora before. All nine Margarinomyces species had been combined in other genera, most of them in Coniochaeta (http:// www.indexfungorum.org).
Cadophora bubakii (strain CBS 198.30) differs from C. obscura (strain CBS 269.33) by forming conidiogenous cells that are often slightly inflated and therefore flask-shaped, while those of CBS 269.33 are mostly narrow cylindrical. Conidia of strain CBS 198.30 are sometimes subglobose and, on average, distinctly shorter than the ellipsoidal to cylindrical conidia of CBS 269.33. Moreover, colonies of CBS 198.30 grow faster. Van Beyma (1943) compared Ma. bubakii and Ph. obscura and mentioned flask-shaped conidiogenous cells and a faster colony growth rate of Ma. bubakii and narrow phialides of Ph. obscura as well. However, the conidia shape of both species was described and illustrated as rod-shaped. The ITS sequences of the two C. bubakii strains included in the phylogeny of this study, CBS 198.30 and CBS 837.69, are identical but differ both in 19 nucleotides from that of the C. obscura strain CBS 269.33. The EF-1α sequence of the two species differs in 31 nucleotides. The TUB sequences of CBS 198.30 and CBS 269.33 were not able to be aligned with each other and the rest of the dataset and therefore excluded from the phylogeny.
Notes. In total, 12 strains of C. luteo-olivacea were isolated from Prunus domestica in Baden-Württemberg (3), Lower Saxony (8) and Saxony (1). Two strains from Baden-Württemberg, two strains from Lower Saxony and the strain from Saxony had been selected for the phylogenetic analyses. The complete sequence dataset of C. luteo-olivacea, including reference strains, exhibits a variation of up to five nucleotides within ITS, up to nine nucleotides within TUB and up to 16 nucleotides within EF-1α sequences. The ITS sequences of the strains from this study are identical with those of the ex-type strain, except for GLMC 1517, which differs in five nucleotides, while all TUB sequences of our isolates differ in eight to nine nucleotides from the ex-type strain. The EF-1α sequence of all strains from this study differs in five nucleotides from the ex-type strain, except for GLMC 1264 with no differences.
Culture characteristics. Colonies on SNA flat with an entire to undulate margin, hyaline to pale smoke grey, filter paper partly pale luteous to very pale smoke grey, lacking aerial mycelium, reverse same colours, 5-7 mm diam. in 2 wk (25 °C in the dark); Colonies on OA flat with an entire to undulate margin, fawn to umber with a pale luteous to luteous margin, partly covered by floccose white aerial mycelium, reverse fawn, pale olivaceous to pale luteous, 18 mm diam. in 2 wk (25 °C in the dark).
Notes. In total, eight strains of C. novi-eboraci were isolated from Prunus cerasus in Saxony (7) and Bavaria (1). Five of the strains from Saxony and the strain from Bavaria had been selected for the phylogenetic analyses. The complete sequence dataset of C. novi-eboraci exhibits a certain amount of variation in the loci analysed. The ITS and EF-1α sequences exhibited a maximum of one and two nucleotide differences to those of the ex-type strain NYC14, respectively. The TUB sequences were more variable; the TUB sequence of strain NYC13 differs in 15 nucleotides from that of NYC14. The TUB sequences of the strains from this study only differ with a maximum of two nucleotides from the ex-type strain.
Culture characteristics. Colonies on SNA flat with an entire to fimbriate margin, white to cinnamon, filter paper buff to olivaceous, lacking aerial mycelium, reverse same colours, 14-16 mm diam. in 2 wk (25 °C in the dark); Colonies on OA flat with an entire margin, olivaceous black to greenish-black, with honey to white margin, sometimes covered by floccose, olivaceous grey aerial mycelium, reverse same colours, 14-20 mm diam. in 2 wk (25 °C in the dark).
Notes. Cadophora obscura was originally described by Melin and Nannfeldt (1934) from freshwater in Sweden. According to the CBS website, strain CBS 269.33 is an "ex-isotype" culture. However, as Melin and Nannfeldt (1934) only isolated this species once and stated that they handed the strains from their study over to the Centraalbureau voor Schimmelcultures in Baarn now Westerdijk Fungal Biodiversity Institute, this can only be the ex-holotype strain. However, we were not able to allocate this strain to the holotype without doubt.
This species had previously been regarded as belonging to the genus Phialophora (Medlar 1915) and as a synonym of Phialophora bubakii (Schol-Schwarz 1970). However, based on the phylogeny of this study, both species are distinct species of the genus Cadophora. Cadophora obscura (CBS 269.33) differs from C. bubakii (CBS 198.30) by forming conidiogenous cells that are mostly narrow cylindrical, while those of CBS 198.30 are often flask-shaped. Conidia of C. obscura are distinctly longer than those of C. bubakii; subglobose-shaped conidia were not observed. Colony growth is slower compared to C. bubakii.
The ITS and EF-1α sequences of the ex-type strains of C. bubakii and C. obscura differ in 19 and 31 nucleotides, respectively. The TUB sequences of the two species were excluded from the analyses (see Notes of C. bubakii).

Cadophora prunicola
Culture characteristics. Colonies on SNA (strains GLMC 735, GLMC 1574 and GLMC 1633) flat with an entire to undulate margin, whitish, lacking aerial mycelium, reverse same colours, 18-27 mm diam. in 2 wk (25 °C in the dark). Colonies on OA (strains GLMC 735, GLMC 1574 and GLMC 1633) flat with an entire margin to undulate margin, buff, very pale luteus to cinnamon, lacking aerial mycelium, except for strain GLMC 1574 that was partly covered by white woolly aerial mycelium, reverse buff to fawn, 20-27 mm diam. in 2 wk (25 °C in the dark). Colonies on PDA (CBS 120891) flat to raised, entire margin, mycelium and surface white to very pale smokegrey, with age turning isabelline to olivaceous in the centre, abundant velvety aerial mycelium, reverse straw to pure yellow, 18 mm diam. in 2 wk (25 °C). Colonies on MEA (CBS 120891) raised with entire margin, mycelium and surface white to very pale luteous, with age turning isabelline, abundant velvety aerial mycelium, reverse buff, honey to salmon, in diffuse daylight with a concentric apricot ring between centre and margin, 24 mm diam. in 2 wk (25 °C).
Notes. Cadophora prunicola was isolated from Prunus salicina (2) in the Western Cape Province of South Africa, from P. cerasus (3) and P. domestica (2) in Saxony and P. domestica (3) in Baden-Württemberg, Germany. The strains from South Africa, as well as three strains from both hosts from Saxony and two strains from Baden-Württemberg, were selected for the phylogenetic analyses. This species is similar to C. novieboraci and C. africana, but differs by forming conidiophores of up to 50 μm length and conidiogenous cells that are often inflated. Subglobose or tear-shaped conidia as in C. africana have not been observed. The ITS, TUB and EF-1α sequences of C. prunicola differ in 8, 29 and 9 nucleotides, respectively, from C. novi-eboraci and in 11, 30 and 20 nucleotides, respectively, from C. africana. A blastn search with the ITS sequence of C. prunicola in GenBank showed a 100% identity with an uncultured Cadophora from dead wood of Fagus sylvatica in Germany (LC015696, Floren et al. 2015).
Culture characteristics. Colonies on SNA flat with an entire margin, hyaline, filter paper partly pale olivaceous to olivaceous, lacking aerial mycelium, reverse same col-ours, 32-40 mm diam. in 2 wk (25 °C in the dark). Colonies on OA flat with an entire margin, pale cinnamon, with an umber inner and pale luteous outer margin, partly covered by woolly white to grey aerial mycelium, reverse pale cinnamon, with a citrine inner and pale luteous outer margin, 24-28 mm diam. in 2 wk (25 °C in the dark).
Notes. Cadophora ramosa was previously described from grapevine in North America as C. spadicis (Travadon et al. 2015). Although Travadon et al. (2015) indicated C. spadicis as a new species, they listed a basionym and added the authorities of that basionym in brackets with the new name, as if they would combine an already existing species in a new genus, which was not the case. As Travadon et al. (2015) described C. spadicis as a new species, they should have listed a holotype (Art. 40.6, Art. 9.1, Turland et al. 2018); however, they listed a neotype, although original material was available (Art. 9.8). Therefore, the name C. spadicis is invalid. Moreover, the "neotype" listed is a living strain and not a (metabolically inactive) specimen. The species listed as "basionym" of C. spadicis by Travadon et al. (2015), C. melinii, was based on a wrong identification of strain CBS 111743 by Prodi et al. (2008), the strain that was listed as "neotype" of C. spadicis. However, the ex-type strain of C. melinii, CBS 268.33, was included in the study of Travadon et al. (2015) and belonged to a different clade in the phylogeny of that publication. Moreover, the authors listed as authorities of the "basionym" are the authors of the publication in which strain CBS 111743 was wrongly identified (Prodi et al. 2008) and not the authorities of C. melinii. Finally, although probably not intended as the whole name, prior to the authorities and "sp. nov.", Travadon et al. (2015) listed "Cadophora spadicis CBS 111743", which could be interpreted as not being a binary combination consisting of the name of the genus followed by a single specific epithet (Art. 23.1).
Notes. Two strains of Minutiella pruni-avium were isolated from wood of Prunus avium. The LSU sequences of these strains differ in three and one nucleotides from those of M. tardicola and Minutiella sp., respectively. The ITS region shows 11 differences to M. tardicola and 9 differences to Minutiella sp. The TUB sequence of M. tardicola and Minutiella sp. differ in one nucleotide, however, in 35 and 33 nucleotides compared to M. pruni-avium. Minutiella pruni-avium differs from Minutiella tardicola and the strains of Minutiella sp. by forming larger conidiomata, longer discrete phialides and flaring collarettes of up to 3 μm.
The closest match in a blastn search with the ITS sequence of strain GLMC 1624 is the type strain of Minutiella tardicola CBS 121757 with 97.9% identity (NR132006, Damm et al. 2010).
Culture characteristics. Colonies on OA raised with entire to crenated margin, buff to pale olivaceous grey, white at the margin, with umber to black spots due to conidiomata, aerial mycelium sparse, white, reverse buff to cinnamon, 1-2 mm diam. in 2 wk, 2-3 mm diam. in 4 wk. Colonies on SNA flat to very low convex with entire to fimbriate margin, white, lacking aerial mycelium, reverse same colour; 1-2 mm diam. in 2 wk, 2-3 mm diam. in 4 wk.
Notes. Strain GLMC 1751, described here as Proliferodiscus ingens, was isolated from Prunus avium in Baden-Württemberg. Only the asexual morph of this fungus was observed. Asexual morphs have previously rarely been observed in the genus Proliferodiscus and no complete description is available. However, Baral and Kriegelsteiner (1985) and Dennis (1949) mention an asexual morph of Pr. pulveraceus. Dennis (1949) observed multilocular pycnidia with slender conidiophores (10-12 μm long) and spherical conidia (1 μm diam.), whereas Baral and Krieglsteiner (1985) described oval conidia, measuring 1.5-1.7 × 1.2-1.4 μm, produced on verticillately branched conidiophores. In contrast to the description of Dennis (1949), the strains observed here produce unilocular pycnidia. Conidia of Pr. ingens are larger than conidia of Pr. pulveraceus in both descriptions. The asexual morph of Pr. ingens differs from that of the other Proliferodiscus strains observed in this study by producing larger, darker conidiomata, a different conidial shape and a lower growth rate.
Culture characteristics. Colonies on OA flat to effuse with entire to fimbriate margin, white to buff, cinnamon to sienna at the margin, aerial mycelium sparse, white, reverse buff, cinnamon to sienna; 6-14 mm diam. in 2 wk, 16-32 mm diam. in 4 wk. Colonies on SNA flat to effuse with entire to fimbriate margin, white, lacking aerial mycelium, reverse same colour; 6-18 mm diam. in 2 wk, 20-34 mm diam. in 4 wk.
Notes. In total, five strains of Proliferodiscus sp. have been isolated from wood of Prunus domestica in Saxony (3) and Lower Saxony (1) as well as P. avium in Baden-Württemberg (1). Two subclades are formed by these strains, which differ in one and four nucleotides in the LSU and ITS sequences, respectively. No morphological differences were noticed between strains of the two subclades. They form a well-supported clade (100/100/99%) with eight strains retrieved from GenBank, including the ex-type strain of the recently described Pr. chiangraiensis. The conidial shape of these strains is similar to that of the asexual morph of Pr. pulveraceus observed by Baral and Krieglsteiner (1985); the conidia are slightly larger, but the measurements overlap. However, we cannot link these strains to Pr. pulveraceus on this basis, because the species was described based on its sexual morph and no sequences of type material are available. Moreover, a recently published sequence, designated as Pr. pulveraceus (MN066320, G Marson unpubl.), belongs to a different clade in our phylogeny.
One striking feature was observed in our collections: new conidiogenous cells grow out of conidiogenous openings (Fig. 16H-J). This feature has previously been observed in species of other genera, for example, Fusarium graminearum (Domsch et al. 2007) and several Colletotrichum species (Damm et al. 2012(Damm et al. , 2019. The anamorphic states of the observed strains of Proliferodiscus sp. differ from Pr. ingens (strain GLMC 1751, this study) by the colour and the smaller size of conidiomata, faster culture growth rate on OA and SNA and the shape of the conidia.

Discussion
The new genus Arboricolonus is described, based on one strain, GLMC 459, that could not be assigned to any known genus. Closest matches of ITS (90% identity) and LSU (97% identity) sequences of this fungus with strains identified at least to the genus level were strains of Glutinomyces vulgaris, Chalara aurea, Hyalodendriella betulae and Polyphilus sieberi; (Ashrafi et al. 2018;Crous et al. 2007;Nakamura et al. 2018;Vu et al. 2019). The asexual morph of Arboricolonus simplex clearly differs from these genera. The monotypic genus Hyalodendriella forms pigmented micro-and macroconidiophores directly on hyphae as well as pigmented limoniform to ellipsoid and prominently apiculate conidia ), while Chalara is characterised by forming sessile or stalked phialides with basal ventres, long collarettes and deep-seated conidiogenous loci; conidia are cylindrical and often produced in basipetal chains (Holubová-Jechová 1984;Kowalski 2006). However, Chalara, is highly polyphyletic; species have been placed in different classes of Ascomycota (Paulin and Harrington 2000;Koukol 2011). As the type species belongs to the Sordariomycetes (Chalara fusidioides), strain CBS 880.73 probably does not even belong in Chalara s. str. The genera Polyphilus and Glutinomyces were described, based on sequence data and colony morphology only (Ashrafi et al. 2018;Crous et al. 2017;Nakamura et al. 2018); no asexual morphs are available that could be compared to Arboricolonus.
For systematic placement of the genus on order level, we conducted a class-wide phylogenetic analysis of LSU-ITS with reference sequences of Leotiomycetes which clearly places it in the order Helotiales (data not shown). The closest matches from LSU and ITS blastn searches indicate the relationship of this new genus to the Hyaloscyphaceae, the largest family of the Helotiales that is mainly circumscribed by features of sexual morphs (Jaklitsch et al. 2016). Han et al. (2014b) and Johnston et al. (2019) demonstrated the polyphyly of the family. For the placement of the new genus on family level, we included LSU and ITS sequences of selected sequences from all clades of Hyaloscyphaceae and closely related families recognised by Han et al. (2014b) in their multi-locus ML analyses, as well as the closest matches from the blastn searches. The clades in our phylogeny are mostly well-supported and in agreement with the clades in Han et al. (2014b). However, most of these clades are placed on a polytomous branch. Due to the lack of a stable backbone, the exact placement of clades in relation to each other shown by the ML analyses of Han et al. (2014b) could not be confirmed and remains inconclusive. Furthermore, as shown in Fig. 1, family designation of the included strains according to Han et al. (2014b), Johnston et al. (2019) and Ekanayaka et al. (2019) is highly problematic.
The new genus Arboricolonus clusters in our phylogeny with sequences of Polyphilus, Cistella, Rodwayella and Polydesmia, however, on short branches, they lack posterior probability or bootstrap support. Therefore, we consider the placement of the genus as of uncertain taxonomic position on family level (Helotiales, incertae sedis). We did not find any record of asexual morphs of Cistella and Rodwayella for morphological comparison with the new genus. In contrast to Arboricolonus simplex, Polydesmia pruinosa (asexual morph: Brefeldochium pruinosum) produces septate falcate conidia in sporodochia (Verkley 2005).
Except for the lack of microcyclic conidiation, the genus Arboricolonus morphologically resembles Collophorina and related genera by forming slow growing cultures, conidiophores that are reduced to short phialides or openings on hyphae with minute to flaring collarettes and cylindrical to ellipsoid conidia with obtuse ends (Bien et al. 2020). A similar morphological appearance could be explained with a similar lifestyle within plant wood and is therefore regarded as a result of convergent evolution. The possibility of morphological adaptation of collophorina-like species to the habitat within the woody plant body has previously been discussed by Bien et al. (2020).
In total, 29 strains of Cadophora have been isolated from wood in Germany, all from Prunus cerasus and P. domestica, of which 17 were included our phylogeny. A further three strains included in the analyses originated from wood of P. salicina in South Africa.
The strains of C. novi-eboraci from this study were all isolated from wood of P. cerasus in Saxony and Bavaria, Germany. Cadophora novi-eboraci was described from decaying wood of Vitis spp. in the USA (Travadon et al. 2015) and recently reported from necrotic wood of Malus domestica in Germany (Gierl and Fischer 2017). To our knowledge, this is the first report of C. novi-eboraci from Prunus wood worldwide.
Strain CBS 101359 from stained wood of Actinidia chinensis in Italy had been referred to as C. malorum by Di Marco et al. (2004) and Prodi et al. (2008). Travadon et al. (2015) identified it as C. novi-eboraci. In our phylogeny, it is placed distantly from both species. We therefore regard this strain as a different taxon.
Cadophora luteo-olivacea was originally isolated from wastewater in Sweden (Van Beyma 1940). This species has been reported mostly from Vitis vinifera and several other woody hosts worldwide (Farr and Rossman 2019), but not from Prunus. Fischer et al. (2016) isolated this species from grapevine nurseries and vineyards in Germany. In this study, C. luteo-olivacea was isolated from Prunus domestica in all three sampling areas. Therefore, this is the first report of C. luteo-olivacea from Prunus wood worldwide. Cadophora luteo-olivacea seems to be not only widely distributed, but also very variable. Gramaje et al. (2011) observed a high variability of colony pigmentation within C. luteo-olivacea, which was also observed by Harrington and McNew (2003), not only in this, but also in other species of the genus. We noticed that the TUB and EF-1α sequences of the ex-type strain CBS 141.41 and strain A42, identified as C. luteo-olivacea by Travadon et al. (2015), differed in 8 and 16 nucleotides, respectively. Strains, isolated from Prunus wood in this study, show up to nine and five nucleotide differences in the TUB and EF-1α sequences, respectively. In the resulting single-locus trees (not shown), subgroups are formed that are, however, not concordant and therefore do not represent independent evolutionary lineages. This phenomenon was previously studied in the highly variable species Colletotrichum siamense (Liu et al. 2016), that had been regarded as species complex, based on single-locus analyses. Except for a small cluster formed by two strains from the study of Travadon et al. (2015), no subgroups are formed in the multi-locus phylogeny.
Three of the Cadophora species we isolated from Prunus wood, namely C. luteo-olivacea, C. novi-eboraci and the newly described C. ramosa (syn. C. spadicis), were previously associated with wood diseases like cankers or Petri disease of Vitis spp., (e.g. Casieri et al. 2009;Halleen et al. 2007;Fischer et al. 2016;Travadon et al. 2015;Pintos et al. 2018). Several other fungal species are reported both from Vitis and fruit trees as well, for example, several species belonging to the Botryosphaeriaceae, Diatrypaceae and the genus Phaeoacremonium (Damm et al. 2007(Damm et al. , 2008Moyo et al. 2018); fruit trees were referred to as alternative hosts of grapevine trunk disease pathogens. Similar to these fungi, Cadophora species could be transferred to grapevine plants from Prunus trees grown in close vicinity to vineyards. To our knowledge, the genus Cadophora has never been reported from Prunus before (Farr and Rossman 2019 as well as all references listed in this study). Moreover, we found new species on this host genus. One of them, C. prunicola, was isolated from three different Prunus species, P. cerasus, P. domestica and P. salicina, both in Germany and South Africa. A second new species, C. africana, is so far only known from P. salicina in South Africa. Based on a blastn search with its ITS sequence, C. prunicola was detected as an uncultured Cadophora in dead wood of Fagus sylvatica in Germany (Floren et al. 2015), but so far, there is no report of any of these two species in Vitis wood.
In addition to the strains isolated from Prunus trees in Germany and South Africa, we included strains of Phialophora bubakii, because we noticed a close affinity to the genus Cadophora by preliminary sequence comparisons (not shown). Phialophora bubakii that was originally described from margarine as Margarinomyces bubakii (Laxa 1930) and combined in Cadophora in this study, had previously been reported from wood of Pinus strobus and Populus sp. (Ellis 1976), where it caused blue stain on timber, from Betula pendula in Poland (Mulenko et al. 2008), further from subcutaneous infections (Porto 1979) and from corneal ulcers (Eiferman et al. 1983), both in humans and dogs in several countries (Hoog et al. 2000). An ITS sequence of a strain from wood pulp of Populus tremula, identical to that of the ex-isotype strain, is available in GenBank (Vu et al. 2019), confirming the occurrence of Ph. bubakii on Populus wood. The remaining reports lack sequence data and are therefore doubtful. Some of the reports could actually refer to other species that could have been confused due to similar morphology. None of the C. bubakii and C. obscura strains, included in this study, originated directly from wood or infections of mammals. However, the ex-isotype strain of C. obscura apparently originates from water in a "trämassefabrik" (trämassa = wood pulp) and therefore possibly from the processed wood itself. An identical ITS sequence from archaeological wood in Greenland (NB Pedersen et al., unpubl. data) suggests the occurrence of C. obscura in wood as well.
The TUB sequences of C. bubakii, C. obscura and C. viticola were excluded from the phylogenetic analyses, because all of them differed tremendously from each other and from the rest of the dataset. Furthermore, sequencing TUB of C. obscura (CBS 269.33), using either the forward or the reverse primer, generated two vastly differing sequences (data not shown). Sequencing TUB of Aspergillus spp. by Peterson (2008) and Hubka and Kolarik (2012) also resulted in different sequences from the same species, which were regarded as possible paralogous gene fragments. Based on the data in this study, we assume a similar situation in Cadophora.
All Cadophora species treated in this study can be distinguished by all single loci analysed (data not shown). Due to the high genetic variation within some of them, the use of more than one locus is recommended for further studies on this genus.
The genus Minutiella was isolated for the first time from wood of Prunus armeniaca in South Africa and described as Phaeomoniella tardicola (= M. tardicola) (Damm et al. 2010). This is the first report of the genus Minutiella and the Phaeomoniellales, in general, from P. avium and P. domestica worldwide. The genus Minutiella is, so far, only known from wood of Prunus trees. More specifically, M. tardicola is known from P. armeniaca in South Africa, the new species M. pruni-avium from P. avium in Germany and Minutiella sp. from P. domestica in Germany (Damm et al. 2010;this study). This genus also forms reduced conidiogenous cells; probably an adaption to the living conditions inside wood like Collophorina and related species and Arboricolonus (Bien et al. 2020; this study).
The two Minutiella strains GLMC 1636 and GLMC 1687 are morphologically indistinguishable from M. tardicola, however, differ in LSU, ITS and TUB sequences from this species. The description of this further new species is in preparation (C. Kraus, pers. comm.).
The LSU-ITS-TUB phylogeny of the Celotheliaceae shows a high similarity to the previously compiled LSU phylogeny in Chen et al. (2015). In this study, we provide the first multi-locus phylogeny of the family. For a conclusive placement of genera within this family, more data is needed, since all phylogenies lack a deep node support (Chen et al. 2015;this study). "Phaeomoniella" pinifoliorum apparently represents a separate genus. A new genus was, however, not described, as no strain and only ITS sequence data were available for characterisation of this genus.
Proliferodiscus has been reported from wood and bark of several woody hosts worldwide (Albertini and Schweinitz 1805;Dennis 1949;Baral and Krieglsteiner 1985;Spooner 1987;Weber and Bresinsky 1992;Haelewaters et al. 2018;Farr and Rossman 2019). Dennis (1949) lists Prunus insititia as one of the hosts of Proliferodiscus pulveraceus. In this study, two Proliferodiscus species have been collected from wood of P. avium and P. domestica.
The species delimitation in the genus Proliferodiscus was previously based on the morphology of the sexual morphs only (e.g. Haines and Dumont 1983;Baral and Krieglsteiner 1985;Spooner 1987;Hofton et al. 2009). Six of the species had been described even before 1900 in other genera and were transferred to this genus later. Only few morphological treatments of Proliferodiscus species contained information on asexual morphs (Dennis 1949;Baral and Krieglsteiner 1985). The genus has not been treated in modern terms yet.
There are sequences of ten strains/specimens identified as Proliferodiscus in Gen-Bank, none of them is ex-type, except for the recently described Pr. chiangraiensis. The available sequences of Proliferodiscus belong to three main clades in our phylogeny. One well-supported clade in our phylogeny contains several apparently closely related strains/specimens, for which different names have been applied.
Most of our strains from Prunus, belonging to two subclades of the same main clade, did not show any morphological differences of the asexual morph and only differed in few nucleotides from each other and from the remaining specimens/sequences within this clade. Therefore, we refrained from describing two new species in this clade and refer to the strains as Proliferodiscus sp. In order to allow comparison with asexual morphs in this genus in the future, we provided a description of this species, as well as of the newly described species Pr. ingens. In order to provide a solid basis for identifications and detections of new species, Proliferodiscus species need to be epitypified and data of both sexual and asexual morphs, as well as sequence data, need to be provided.

Conclusion
The isolation of fungal strains from necrotic wood of Prunus species in Germany and South Africa revealed several unknown taxa within Leotiomycetes and Eurotiomycetes. Based on morphology and multi-locus molecular analyses, we described one new genus and six new species in four genera. Although previously unknown from wood of Prunus trees, the genus Cadophora was revealed to be a common wood inhabitant of P. cerasus and P. domestica in Germany, but apparently not of P. avium. The genus Minutiella, originally described from P. armeniaca in South Africa, also occurs in Prunus wood in Germany and, thus, belongs to the common genera in Prunus wood as well. Our analyses of the genus Proliferodiscus also contributes to the knowledge of this genus by the first detailed descriptions of asexual morphs of this genus. The results underline the sparse knowledge of several fungal genera from wood and of the wood mycobiome of the economically important host genus Prunus. The morphological data presented here and the up-to date molecular frameworks will provide a basis for further studies on these genera and on wood diseases of Prunus trees.