Rhizoctonia noxia
Rhizoctonia noxia is a species of fungus in the order Cantharellales. Basidiocarps are thin, effused, and web-like. The species is tropical to sub-tropical and is mainly known as a plant pathogen, the causative agent of "kole-roga" or black rot of coffee and various blights of citrus and other trees.
Taxonomy
The fungus responsible for kole-roga of coffee was sent from India to Mordecai Cubitt Cooke at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew who named it Pellicularia koleroga in 1876. Cooke, however, described only hyphae and some small warted spores, later presumed to be from a contaminating mould. As a result Donk, when reviewing Pellicularia in 1954, dismissed both the genus and P. koleroga as "nomina confusa", later substituting the new name Koleroga noxia for the species. Based on a re-examination of specimens, Roberts considered Koleroga to be a synonym of Ceratobasidium.Molecular research, based on cladistic analysis of DNA sequences, has, however, now placed Ceratobasidium species in synonymy with Rhizoctonia.
means "rot disease" in the Kannada language of Karnataka.