In Sir
William Jackson Hooker's book, 'British Flora' (1836), English
cryptogamist,
Miles Joseph Berkeley (1803–1889), had described a fungal parasite (Savin leaf spot) on the leaves of
Juniperus sabina and it was later identified as
Podisoma foliicola. It was found in the
spring time, on living leaves, as a small sub-elliptic black excrescences (outgrowths) and it is not larger than the head of a pin. When Cooke re-examined the specimens in 1871, he found them to be different to other
Podisoma genus species and so re-named and published it as
Sarcostroma berkeleyi in Berkeley's honour. reduced
Sarcostroma to
synonymy with the
Seimatosporium genus (another Sporocadaceae family genus) that had accommodated species having 2–5-septate conidia with only a basal appendage, or without any appendages. He acknowledged the
heterogeneity of the genus, and thought that
Seimatosporium would or could later be subdivided. to accommodate some of the species classified under
Seimatosporium. He still retained the genus
Seimatosporium for species having a mixture of conidia with and without appendages in a single isolate, and
Sarcostroma for species having multi-septate, fusiform conidia with attenuated centric apical and excentric basal appendages. Three collections treated in this study had 4-septate conidia with single centric apical and excentric basal appendages. Guba 1961, Sutton 1980, Nag Raj 1993, Later published studies which used
rDNA sequence data have, however, clarified the confusion, and provided a more complete understanding of the
phylogeny and the genetic breakdown for each pestalotioid fungi genus (Jeewon et al. 2002, 2004,). ==Description==