Stachybotrys
Stachybotrys is a genus of molds, hyphomycetes or asexually reproducing, filamentous fungi, now placed in the family Stachybotryaceae. The genus was erected by August Carl Joseph Corda in 1837. Historically, it was considered closely related to the genus Memnoniella, because the spores are produced in slimy heads rather than in dry chains. Recently, the synonymy of the two genera is generally accepted. Most Stachybotrys species inhabit materials rich in cellulose. The genus has a widespread distribution and contained about 50 species in 2008. There are 88 records of Stachybotrys on Species Fungorum, of which 33 species have DNA sequence data in GenBank. Species in the genus are commonly found in soil, plant litter and air and a few species have been found from damp paper, cotton, linen, cellulose-based building materials water-damaged indoor buildings, and air ducts from both aquatic and terrestrial habitats.
The name of Stachybotrys is derived from the Greek words σταχυς stakhus and βότρυς botrus.
The most infamous species, Stachybotrys chartarum and Stachybotrys chlorohalonata, are known as black mold or toxic black mold in the U.S., and are frequently associated with poor indoor air quality that arises after fungal growth on water-damaged building materials. Stachybotrys chemotypes are toxic, with one producing trichothecene mycotoxins including satratoxins, and another that produces atranones. However, the association of Stachybotrys mold with specific health conditions is not well proven and there exists a debate within the scientific community.
Conidia are in slimy masses, smooth to coarsely rough, dark olivaceous to brownish black, obovoid, later becoming ellipsoid with age, 10–13 × 5–7 mm. Phialides are obovate or ellipsoidal, colorless early then turning to olivaceous with maturity, smooth, 12–14 × 5–7 mm, in clusters of 5 to 9 phialides. Conidiophores are simple, erect, smooth to rough, colorless to olivaceous, slightly enlarged apically, mostly unbranched but occasionally branched. Conidia of Stachybotrys are very characteristic and can be confidently identified in spore count samples. This genus is closely related to Memnoniella. Species of Memnoniella may occasionally develop Stachybotrys-like conidia, and vice versa.
Detection
Four distinctive microbial volatile organic compounds – 1-butanol, 3-methyl-1-butanol, 3-methyl-2-butanol, and thujopsene – were detected on rice cultures, and only one was detected on gypsum board cultures.
Pathogenicity
Symptoms of ''Stachybotrys'' exposure in humans
A controversy began in the early 1990s after analysis of two infant deaths and multiple cases in children from impoverished areas of Cleveland, Ohio, United States, due to pulmonary hemorrhage were initially linked to exposure to large amounts of Stachybotrys chartarum. Subsequent and extensive reanalysis of the cases by the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have failed to find any link between the deaths and the mold exposure.
Species
As accepted by Species Fungorum ;Stachybotrys aksuensis Stachybotrys aloicola L. Lombard & Crous Stachybotrys alternans Bonord. Stachybotrys aurantius Stachybotrys bambusicola Stachybotrys biformis Stachybotrys bisbyi Stachybotrys breviuscula McKenzie Stachybotrys chartarum S. Hughes Stachybotrys chlorohalonatus B. Andersen & Thrane Stachybotrys clitoriae Stachybotrys cordylines Stachybotrys cylindrospora C.N. Jensen Stachybotrys dakotensis Stachybotrys dolichophialis L. Lombard & Crous Stachybotrys echinatus Stachybotrys elasticae Stachybotrys freycinetiae McKenzie Stachybotrys frondicola Yong Wang bis, K.D. Hyde, McKenzie, Y.L. Jiang & D.W. Li Stachybotrys gamsii Yong Wang bis, K.D. Hyde, McKenzie, Y.L. Jiang & D.W. Li Stachybotrys globosus Stachybotrys guttulisporus Stachybotrys havanensis Stachybotrys humilis Stachybotrys indicoides Stachybotrys indicus Stachybotrys jiangziensis Stachybotrys kampalensis Hansf. Stachybotrys kapiti Whitton, McKenzie & K.D. Hyde Stachybotrys klebahnii Stachybotrys leprosus Stachybotrys levisporus Stachybotrys limonisporus Stachybotrys littoralis Stachybotrys longistipitatus D.W. Li, Chin S. Yang, Vesper & Haugland Stachybotrys lunzinensis Stachybotrys mangiferae P.C. Misra & S.K. Srivast. Stachybotrys mexicanus J. Mena & Heredia ; StachybotryaceaeStachybotrys microspora S.C. Jong & E.E. Davis Stachybotrys mohanramii Stachybotrys musae Stachybotrys nepalensis Stachybotrys nephrodes McKenzie Stachybotrys nephrospora Hansf. Stachybotrys nielamuensis Y.M. Wu & T.Y. Zhang Stachybotrys oenanthes M.B. Ellis Stachybotrys pallescens Stachybotrys pallidus Stachybotrys palmae Stachybotrys palmicola Stachybotrys palmijunci Stachybotrys parvisporus S. Hughes Stachybotrys parvus Stachybotrys proliferatus Stachybotrys punctatus Stachybotrys queenslandicus Stachybotrys ramosus Stachybotrys reniformis Stachybotrys renisporoides Stachybotrys renisporus Stachybotrys reniverrucosus Stachybotrys ruwenzoriensis Matsush. Stachybotrys sacchari Stachybotrys sansevieriae G.P. Agarwal & N.D. Sharma Stachybotrys sinuatophorus Matsush. Stachybotrys socia Stachybotrys sphaerosporus Stachybotrys stilboideus Stachybotrys subcylindrosporus Stachybotrys subreniformis Stachybotrys subsylvaticus Stachybotrys suthepensis Photita, P. Lumyong, K.D. Hyde & McKenzie Stachybotrys taiwanensis Stachybotrys terrestris Stachybotrys thaxteri Stachybotrys theobromae Hansf. Stachybotrys variabilis Stachybotrys verrucisporus Stachybotrys verrucosus Stachybotrys virgatus Stachybotrys voglinoi Stachybotrys waitakere Whitton, McKenzie & K.D. Hyde Stachybotrys xanthosomatis Stachybotrys xigazenensis Stachybotrys yunnanensis Stachybotrys yushuensis Stachybotrys zeae Stachybotrys zhangmuensis Stachybotrys zingiberis