Synchytrium taraxaci de Bary & Woronin, 1863
on Taraxacum

Taraxacum officinale, Amstelveen, Schinkelbos, 6.ix.2007

detail; upper side of the leaf
Taraxacum officinale, Belgium, prov. Flemish Brabant, Drieslinter, 7.v.2021 © Carina Van Steenwinkel
in some host plant cells orange sporangia sori are formed, in others grey resting spores.
the sporangia sori disintegrate, the sporangia are extruded. They soon germinate, releasing zoospores that may reinfect a host plant
extruded sporangia, next to a host cell with two resting spores
the resting spores germinate only after hibernation and disintegration of the host material. The zoospores that are then released infect a new generation oh host plants.
Taraxacum officinale, Belgium, prov. Antwerp, Geel, Gemeentelijke visvijver, 15.vi.2018 © Carina Van Steenwinkel
horizontal section through a sorus
stronger magnification
vertical section through a sorus
release of sporangia
stronger magnification
sporangia

Taraxacum officinale, Flevoland, Reve-Abbertbos, 23.ix.2016 © Hans Jonkman: upperside of the disfigured tip of the leaf
gall
leaves with tiny warts, less than half a mm, golden yellow orange to blood-red, usually a large number together.
host plants
Asteraceae, oligophagous
Centaurea jacea; Crepis alpestris, biennis, vesicaria subsp. taraxacifolia; Taraxacum officinale.
references
Brandenburger (1985a: 695), Buhr (1964b, 1965a), Dauphin & Aniotsbehere (1997a), Jage, Scholler & Klenke (2010a), Karling (1964a), Klenke & Scholler (2015a), Kruse (2014a, 2019a), Negrean (1996b), Redfern & Shirley (2011a), Roskam (2009a).