Waitea circinata
Waitea circinata is a species of fungus in the family Corticiaceae. Basidiocarps are corticioid, thin, effused, and web-like, but the fungus is more frequently encountered in its similar but sterile anamorphic state. Waitea circinata is best known as a plant pathogen, causing commercially significant damage to amenity turf grass.
Taxonomy
Waitea circinata was originally described from Australia in 1962, where it was found growing on the undersides of clods of earth in a wheat field. The new genus Waitea, named after the Waite [Agricultural Research Institute] in Adelaide, was created to accommodate the species. Because of its morphological similarity to species of Rhizoctonia, Waitea circinata was presumed to belong within the Ceratobasidiaceae, but phylogenetic analysis of DNA sequences has shown that it actually belongs in the Corticiaceae and is close to species of Laetisaria.Molecular research has also shown that Waitea circinata is part of a complex of at least four genetically distinct taxa, each causing visibly different diseases. These taxa were initially treated as varieties of W. circinata, but have now been described as separate species. Older references to W. circinata may refer to any or all of these species.