These are the club-shaped ascospores of Buergenerula
spartinae, an ascomycete of the smooth-cordgrass leaf-
decomposition system. The patches of leaf blades where this
ascomycete resides are easily recognizable, because this species
produces
dark blackening of the leaf tissue above
its ascomata. Its ascomata are three times larger than those of
Phaeosphaeria spartinicola, filling
the leaf blade from abaxial to adaxial surface. It may be that the
blackening produced by B. spartinae is a competitive
response to P. spartinicola; i.e., it may be fighting
against invasion of its territory by producing defense chemicals.
One hint that this might be true is that the blackened patches are
avoided by
grazing snails. Also, B.
spartinae is an occupier of leaf sheaths, where P.
spartinicola is never found, and in the leaf sheaths, B.
spartinae does not produce black patches. B. spartinae
produces identifiable structures (hyphopodia) on living grass
parts, and so may be an endophyte in the living-grass tissue. It
also produces tiny, bacterial-sized, vibrioid conidia (spermatia?),
and may have a highly complex life history. It is very difficult to
induce its ascospores to germinate, as opposed to the easily
germinable ascospores of
P. spartinicola and Mycosphaerella
sp. 2. Lots of room for fun natural-history research here. See
Newell SY, Wasowski J. 1995. Estuaries 18:241-249; Newell SY, Porter D.
1999. in Weinstein & Kreeger, Concepts and Controversies in
Tidal Marsh Ecology, Kluwer.