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Baudoinia compniacensis (Richon) J. A. Scott & Unter. 2007

Baudoinia compniacensis ( anglais )

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Baudoinia compniacensis is a sac fungus which has been observed on a variety of substrates in the vicinity of distilleries, spirits maturation facilities, bonded warehouses, and bakeries. The fungus is a habitat colonist with a preference for airborne alcohol, earning it the nickname whiskey fungus.[1][2]

Description

Baudoinia compniacensis can be identified by its black, effused mycelium that can be velvety or crust-like. It features hyphae which are vegetative, dark brown, thick-walled, and often moniliform; although it lacks distinctive conidiophores. Conidiogenous cells can be found integrated within vegetative hyphae. Its conidia are dry, nonseptate or uniseptate, at the median. The conidia are thick-walled, globose to barrel-shaped, brown to black, and typically found with coarse surface ornamentation, dehiscing by schizolysis. Ramoconidia are absent. Colonies on modified Leonian's agar grow slowly and are dark in pigmentation. Synanamorphs are absent during its asexual reproduction stages. The presence of teleomorphs is unknown.[1]

Nutrition

Baudoinia species use ethanol for their carbon nutrition, however growth rates suggest that this is not their only source of calories. Ethanol in vapour form also accelerates the growth of the fungus and stimulates spore germination. The ability to withstand high temperatures and therefore colonize habitats such as roofing, may be explained by the observation that ethanol vapour stimulates the formation of special heat-protective proteins that prevent cells from being killed under these relatively extreme conditions.[3]

Ecology

Baudoinia compniacensis is black in colour and is partly responsible for the frequently observed phenomenon of 'Warehouse Staining', reported originally from the walls of buildings near brandy maturation warehouses in Cognac, France. Baudoinia compniacensis is a cosmopolitan colonist of outdoor surfaces subjected to extreme daily temperature shifts, elevated high relative humidity, periodic wetting, and ambient airborne ethanol.[3] It is known from a wide range of substrates. For example, the UAMH Centre for Global Microfungal Biodiversity[4] lists isolates recovered from tree bark,[a] concrete,[b] PVC plastic,[c] galvanized roofing,[d] masonry,[e] and stone.[f]

Baudoinia compniacensis is not uniquely associated with spirit maturation and manufacture as one sample that was examined came from a commercial bakery, although the fermentation byproducts of yeast include ethanol and its vapors. Ethanol vapor appears to be important in habitat determinant and Baudoinia species may occur in association with natural fermentative processes, such as seasonal fruit drops, bogs, natural composts, etc.[1] B. compniacensis may also occur around places where automotive fuel is stored or transferred, as ethanol is required to be blended with gasoline in most countries.

It has been recorded as a food source of snails and slugs through the radula marks left following grazing.[1]

Distribution

B. compniacensis was first investigated in 1872 when Michel Charles Durieu de Maisonneuve and Casimir Roumeguère examined a black, sooty growth found on the walls and roof tiles of buildings near distilleries in Cognac, France, at the instigation of the French pharmacist, Antonin Baudoin.[1] It has been widely recorded in Asia, Europe, and the Americas.[1] During the process of aging whiskey and certain other liquors, a portion evaporates, colloquially called the "Angel's Share"; this airborne alcohol near barrelhouses can lead to growth of Baudoinia compniacensis in the area, hence the term "whiskey fungus."[5]

B. compniacensis on buildings and plants

The fungus often forms a black coating layer on tree bark and leaves. However, this does not seem to harm the plants by blocking the lenticels or significantly reduce their growth rates. Deciduous species also develop new leaves annually, rendering it less important when older leaves are covered by the growths.

The fungus can be removed from buildings using high pressure water jets, bleach, etc. According to a report from the Kentucky government, it has not been shown to cause anything other than cosmetic effects thanks to its mode of nutrition via the carboniferous atmosphere, rather than the decay of building materials in general.[2] Mosses, lichens and algae also grow on solid vertical surfaces, and slopes in the same fashion as the Angel's Share fungus and do not damage the infrastructure of built structures. However, there have been harsher reports as well. James A. Scott, the researcher at the University of Toronto who has studied the fungus and named the genus, said that the fungus is destructive and can damage property. He wrote "It wrecks patio furniture, house siding, almost any outdoor surface. I've seen trees choked to death by it. It is a small mercy that it does not also appear to have a negative impact on human health."[5]

Genome sequence

The genome of B. panamericana was completed by the United States Department of Energy's Joint Genome Institute in 2011, using Roche (454), Sanger fosmid, and Illumina sequence data. The completed assembly is 21.88 Mb in size.[6]

Related fungi

The most closely related ascomycetes to Baudoinia spp. appear to be members of the genera Friedmanniomyces and Trimmatostroma. Friedmanniomyces species are rock-inhabiting species known only from the Antarctic.[1] This fits in well with the observed fact that the species favours surfaces that are subjected to great environmental exposure, as in roofing materials that experience extreme diurnal fluctuations in ambient conditions.[1]

Notes

  1. ^ Bark: UAMH 10762, UAMH 10808, UAMH 10811, UAMH 10815[4]
  2. ^ Concrete: UAMH 10764[4]
  3. ^ PVC plastic: UAMH 11557, UAMH 10810[4]
  4. ^ Galvanized roofing: UAMH 11556[4]
  5. ^ Masonry: UAMH 11553, UAMH 11554, UAMH 10812[4]
  6. ^ Stone: UAMH 10763, UAMH 10813[4]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Scott, J. A.; Untereiner, W. A.; Ewaze, J. O.; Wong, B.; Doyle, D. (July 1, 2007). "Baudoinia, a new genus to accommodate Torula compniacensis". Mycologia. 99 (4): 592–601. doi:10.3852/mycologia.99.4.592. PMID 18065010. Archived from the original on September 30, 2015. Retrieved November 14, 2016.
  2. ^ a b Byland, Hannah (September 4, 2012). "Whiskey Aging Warehouses and the Effects to Surrounding Residential Neighborhoods in Louisville, Ky" (PDF). Louisville, Kentucky: Louisville, Kentucky government. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 25, 2014. Retrieved July 30, 2014.
  3. ^ a b Scott, James. "Baudoinia compniacensis". University of Toronto, Dalla Lana School of Public Health. Archived from the original on November 2, 2016. Retrieved November 14, 2016.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Sigler, L. "UAMH Culture Collection Catalogue". UAMH Centre for Global Microfungal Biodiversity. University of Toronto. Archived from the original on 2022-02-04. Retrieved 2022-10-06.
  5. ^ a b Levenson, Michael (March 1, 2023). "Whiskey Fungus Fed by Jack Daniel's Encrusts a Tennessee Town". The New York Times. Retrieved March 2, 2023.
  6. ^ Ohm, RA; Feau, N; Henrissat, B; Schoch, CL; Horwitz, BA; Barry, KW; Condon, BJ; Copeland, AC; Dhillon, B; Glaser, F; Hesse, CN; Kosti, I; LaButti, K; Lindquist, EA; Lucas, S; Salamov, AA; Bradshaw, RE; Ciuffetti, L; Hamelin, RC; Kema, GH; Lawrence, C; Scott, JA; Spatafora, JW; Turgeon, BG; de Wit, PJ; Zhong, S; Goodwin, SB; Grigoriev, IV (2012). "Diverse lifestyles and strategies of plant pathogenesis encoded in the genomes of eighteen Dothideomycetes fungi". PLOS Pathogens. 8 (12): e1003037. doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.1003037. PMC 3516569. PMID 23236275.

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Baudoinia compniacensis: Brief Summary ( anglais )

fourni par wikipedia EN

Baudoinia compniacensis is a sac fungus which has been observed on a variety of substrates in the vicinity of distilleries, spirits maturation facilities, bonded warehouses, and bakeries. The fungus is a habitat colonist with a preference for airborne alcohol, earning it the nickname whiskey fungus.

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Baudoinia compniacensis

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Baudoinia compniacensis est une espèce de champignons ascomycètes microscopiques. Autre nom du Torula cognasensis (voir "vocabulaire technique du vin & du vignoble) C'est la seule espèce actuellement acceptée du genre Baudoinia. Sa famille étant encore incertaine, elle est parfois placée parmi les Teratosphaeriaceae. Il est dû à l'évaporation des alcools que l'on nomme poétiquement "part des anges" dans le cognaçais

 src=
Baudoinia compniacensis sur branche d' Acer pseudoplatanus
 src=
Distillerie d'alcool d'Heaven Hill (Bardstown, Kentucky, USA)

Habitat

Cette espèce épiphyte semble relativement ubiquiste, à condition de trouver des conditions atmosphériques lui convenant, atmosphères riches en vapeur d'alcool par exemple, autour des chais, distilleries, dans des quartiers ou villes entières, comme à Cognac.
On la retrouve également aux alentours des grosses boulangeries. Ce sont des champignons qui recouvrent les murs extérieurs, en donnant une couleur noirâtre à ceux-ci. Les murs ont alors l'air d'être couverts de suie.
Elle vit aussi sur les troncs des arbres, les toitures (de tuiles ou métalliques). Elle se dépose presque partout où elle peut avoir de l'humidité et une atmosphère riche en vapeur d'alcool.

On retrouve cette espèce typiquement près des distilleries de whisky et des distilleries d'eaux-de-vie comme le cognac.

Classification

C'est la seule espèce actuellement acceptée du genre Baudoinia. Sa famille étant encore incertaine, elle est parfois placée parmi les Teratosphaeriaceae[réf. nécessaire].

Cette espèce a été décrite pour la première fois au XIXe siècle (dans les années 1880) par Charles Édouard Richon 1820-1893 ,, ((((James Alexander Scott()))

Wendy Untereiner a peut-être récemment complété cette description. L'épithète scientifique « compniacensis » signifie « de Compniac », Compniac étant l'un des anciens noms de la ville française de Cognac.(mais pas le plus connu). 

Synonymes

  • Torula compniacensis Richon
  • on retrouve également le nom Torula cognacensis, nom obscur dont l'autorité taxinomique est inconnue, nom qui n'est pas référencé dans la littérature scientifique mais bien présent dans les textes vantant la région cognaçaise[1]. On peut donc supposer que ce nom est un synonyme de la présente espèce. La traduction littérale de Torula cognacensis est par ailleurs la même que Torula compniacensis.
 src=
Baudoinia compniacensis sur mur et volets de chai, Jarnac, France

Référence

  1. Par exemple pour la Vallée de l'Antenne

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Baudoinia compniacensis: Brief Summary

fourni par wikipedia FR

Baudoinia compniacensis est une espèce de champignons ascomycètes microscopiques. Autre nom du Torula cognasensis (voir "vocabulaire technique du vin & du vignoble) C'est la seule espèce actuellement acceptée du genre Baudoinia. Sa famille étant encore incertaine, elle est parfois placée parmi les Teratosphaeriaceae. Il est dû à l'évaporation des alcools que l'on nomme poétiquement "part des anges" dans le cognaçais

 src= Baudoinia compniacensis sur branche d' Acer pseudoplatanus  src= Distillerie d'alcool d'Heaven Hill (Bardstown, Kentucky, USA)
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Baudoinia compniacensis ( italien )

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Baudoinia compniacensis (Richon) J.A. Scott & Unter. è un fungo che si nutre di alcool. Esso è tipico dei locali in cui vi è alcool diffuso nell'aria come i locali adibiti all'invecchiamento di vini ed alcolici in genere.

Si evidenzia sotto forma di patina nera su pareti e soffitti. Il nome deriva dalla cittadina francese di Cognac dove annerisce anche pareti esterne e coperture di edifici civili a causa della forte dispersione di alcol nell'aria dovuta ai grandi stoccaggi del distillato omonimo.

Tassonomia

Un tempo classificata come Torula compniacensis è stata poi rinominata in Baudoinia compniacensis. [2] [3]

Note

  1. ^ Scheda tassonomica su UniProt, su uniprot.org. URL consultato il 24 agosto 2011.
  2. ^ The role of VOCs in microfungal colonization biology, su individual.utoronto.ca. URL consultato il 24 agosto 2011.
  3. ^ Baudoinia, a new genus to accommodate Torula compniacensis, Mycologia, 99(4), 2007, pp. 592-601., su mycologia.org. URL consultato il 24 agosto 2011.

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Baudoinia compniacensis: Brief Summary ( italien )

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Baudoinia compniacensis (Richon) J.A. Scott & Unter. è un fungo che si nutre di alcool. Esso è tipico dei locali in cui vi è alcool diffuso nell'aria come i locali adibiti all'invecchiamento di vini ed alcolici in genere.

Si evidenzia sotto forma di patina nera su pareti e soffitti. Il nome deriva dalla cittadina francese di Cognac dove annerisce anche pareti esterne e coperture di edifici civili a causa della forte dispersione di alcol nell'aria dovuta ai grandi stoccaggi del distillato omonimo.

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Baudoinia compniacensis ( latin )

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Baudoinia compniacensis est species fungorum phyli Ascomycotorum quae viret super fenestras et in culminibus cellarum, ubi cupae spiritus vinosi iacent, caliditate meridiana frigoribusque nocturnis necnon emanationibus huius spiritus nutrita. Primum recognita est Condate in oppido Franciae ubi spiritus vini Cognacensis paratur: nomen igitur speciale "compniacensis" ex orthographia vetusta derivatur appellationis huius oppidi (hodie Francogallice Cognac).

Species primum a pharmacologo Antonino Baudoin observata, a C. Roumeguère anno 1881 relata, ab M. M. Richon et P. Petit eodem anno rite descripta est.

Bibliographia

 src=
Muri in castello Condatensi a Baudoinia compniacensi tincti
  • M. M. Richon, P. Petit, "Note sur la plante cryptogame des murs de Cognac (Torula compniacensis sp. n.)" in Brebissonia vol. 3 (1881) pp. 113-116
  • C. Roumeguère, "La plante cryptogame des murs de Cognac" in Revue de mycologie vol. 3 (1881) pp. 16-17
  • James A. Scott et al., "Baudoinia, a new genus to accommodate Torula compniacensis" in Mycologia vol. 99 (2007) 592-601

Nexus externi

Commons-logo.svg Vicimedia Communia plura habent quae ad Baudoinia compniacensis spectant.
Wikidata-logo.svg Situs scientifici:NCBIBiodiversity
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Baudoinia compniacensis: Brief Summary ( latin )

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Baudoinia compniacensis est species fungorum phyli Ascomycotorum quae viret super fenestras et in culminibus cellarum, ubi cupae spiritus vinosi iacent, caliditate meridiana frigoribusque nocturnis necnon emanationibus huius spiritus nutrita. Primum recognita est Condate in oppido Franciae ubi spiritus vini Cognacensis paratur: nomen igitur speciale "compniacensis" ex orthographia vetusta derivatur appellationis huius oppidi (hodie Francogallice Cognac).

Species primum a pharmacologo Antonino Baudoin observata, a C. Roumeguère anno 1881 relata, ab M. M. Richon et P. Petit eodem anno rite descripta est.

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Baudoinia compniacensis ( Szl )

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Baudoinia compniacensis je grzib[2], co go nojprzōd ôpisoł Richon, a terŏźnõ nazwã doł mu J.A. Scott & Unter. 2007. Baudoinia compniacensis nŏleży do zorty Baudoinia, rzyndu Capnodiales, klasy Dothideomycetes, grōmady Ascomycota i krōlestwa grzibōw.[3][4] Żŏdne podgatōnki niy sōm wymianowane we Catalogue of Life.[3]

Przipisy

  1. CABI databases. [dostymp 24 stycznia 2013].
  2. Scott, J.A.; Untereiner, W.A.; Ewaze, J.O.; Wong, B.; Doyle, D. (2007) Baudoinia, a new genus to accommodate Torula compniacensis, In: Mycologia 99(4):592–601
  3. 3,0 3,1 Bisby F.A., Roskov Y.R., Orrell T.M., Nicolson D., Paglinawan L.E., Bailly N., Kirk P.M., Bourgoin T., Baillargeon G., Ouvrard D. (red.): Species 2000 & ITIS Catalogue of Life: 2019 Annual Checklist.. Species 2000: Naturalis, Leiden, the Netherlands., 2019. [dostymp 2019-09-20].
  4. Species Fungorum. Kirk P.M., 2010-11-23
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Baudoinia compniacensis: Brief Summary ( Szl )

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Baudoinia compniacensis je grzib, co go nojprzōd ôpisoł Richon, a terŏźnõ nazwã doł mu J.A. Scott & Unter. 2007. Baudoinia compniacensis nŏleży do zorty Baudoinia, rzyndu Capnodiales, klasy Dothideomycetes, grōmady Ascomycota i krōlestwa grzibōw. Żŏdne podgatōnki niy sōm wymianowane we Catalogue of Life.

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