Silveira and co-workers (in Crous et al. 1994) erected the new anamorph genus
Falcocladium , with
Falcocladium multivesiculatum , which was isolated from Eucalyptus leaf litter collected in Brazil, as the type species. It was later compared to other Brazilian found genera;
Cylindrodendrum,
Pulvinotrichum and
Unicegra which also had similar characteristics but due to the falcate (sickle-shaped) conidia. It was declared as a new genera. Etymology; it was named as
Falcocladium, after its falcate shaped conidia. The
Falcocladium genus was characterized by having thick-walled, non septate (non-walled) stipe extensions that terminate in thin-walled vesicles and appendaged, falcate
conidia. Other outstanding characters such as sporodochial (small, compact, slightly raised circles) or synnematous (spores lining the outside of the structure)
conidiomata (fruiting structures) and
stromata composed of thick-walled, red-brown
chlamydospores were also described. In
Falcocladium multivesiculatum, the
vesicles are ellipsoidal and the conidia are more or less septate.
Falcocladium species can be distinguished based on their setal vesicle shape (which are ellipsoidal, sphaeropedunculate (shaped like a sphere on a stalk) or turbinate (shaped like a top or an inverted cone) ) and their conidial dimensions. The
type species;
Falcocladium multivesiculatum has a wide host range and mainly occurs on leaves, including those from
Eucalyptus grandis and
Eucalyptus camaldulensis. The species fits well within the genus concept of
Falcocladium with white sporodochia, bearing thick-walled aseptate, stipe extensions and hyaline, 0–1-septate, a falcate shaped conidia, with short apical and basal appendages. ==List of species==