Curvularia


Curvularia is a genus of hyphomycete fungi which can be pathogens but also act as beneficial partners of many plant species. They are common in soil. Most Curvularia species are found in tropical regions, though a few are found in temperate zones.
Curvularia is defined by the type species C. lunata Boedijn.
Curvularia lunata appears as shiny velvety-black, fluffy growth. These fluffy 'hairs', which really are branching, fine filamentous structures called hyphae, are divided inside by cell walls named septae. The walls of these hyphae contain dark pigments, which makes for their black appearance and which is called 'dematiaceous'. The hyphae produce brown spore bearing organs, 'conidiophores', which are distinguished by their 'geniculate' shape, meaning they have bends of abrupt kneelike angles. The immobile, asexual fungal spores born on those conidiophores, the proconidia, have a slightly to distinctly curved shape; they are divided inside by horizontally spreading cell walls, and have one expanded cell at one end.
Curvularia can be distinguished from the species Bipolaris and Drechslera by the way walls divide the inner structure of their spores.
The name of the Teleomorph, [anamorph and holomorph|teleomorphic] state of the type species Curvularia lunata is Cochliobolus lunatus.

Heat-tolerance symbiote

One species of Curvularia, Curvularia protuberata, is an endosymbiote of the panic grass Dichanthelium lanuginosum that can enable the grass to thrive near hot springs in soil temperatures of up to 149 °F. The fungus confers this protective effect only when itself infected by the Curvularia thermal tolerance virus. Plants unrelated to panic grass also experience this protective effect when inoculated with the virus-infected fungus.

Species

, the GBIF lists up to 164 species, while Species Fungorum lists about 196 species.
Primary species of Curvularia commonly found in soils and on plant tissues are shown here: