Cytospora rhizophorae 

Cytospora rhizophorae is a fungal species belonging to the genus Cytospora, which is known to include many plant pathogenic fungi. Here’s a detailed overview:


Taxonomy

  • Kingdom: Fungi
  • Phylum: Ascomycota
  • Class: Sordariomycetes
  • Order: Diaporthales
  • Family: Valsaceae
  • Genus: Cytospora
  • Species: Cytospora rhizophorae

Host and Habitat

  • Primarily associated with mangrove species, especially Rhizophora spp. (hence the name rhizophorae).
  • Found in tropical coastal areas, where it colonizes stems, branches, and roots of mangrove trees.

1. Natural role in agarwood formation

  • Agarwood resin (the fragrant, dark heartwood) is primarily produced in response to stress or injury, which can be mechanical (wounds) or biological (pathogen/fungal infection).
  • Cytospora rhizophorae can infect the xylem and cambium of Aquilaria trees, causing localized cell death and tissue stress.
  • The tree responds to this infection by producing secondary metabolites, mainly sesquiterpenes and chromones, which accumulate as resin around the infected site.
  • Therefore, in agarwood, C. rhizophorae acts as a biological trigger for resin production, though uncontrolled infection can also harm tree health.

2. Mechanism of resin induction

  1. Fungal invasion – The fungus enters through wounds or weak spots in the tree.
  2. Host response – Aquilaria recognizes the infection and activates its defense pathways, producing resin as a protective barrier.
  3. Resin accumulation – Over months to years, the infected xylem accumulates dark, aromatic resin—the part harvested as agarwood.
  4. Resin composition – Research shows that fungal infection, including Cytospora spp., can influence the specific sesquiterpene profile, affecting fragrance quality.

3. Practical relevance

  • In agarwood cultivation, fungi like Cytospora rhizophorae are sometimes used in artificial inoculation techniquesto stimulate resin formation in a controlled manner.
  • Controlled inoculation ensures:
    • Faster resin production than natural formation.
    • Higher-quality resin if the infection is localized and managed.
  • However, over-aggressive infection can lead to tree mortality, so selection of fungal strains and inoculation technique is critical.

4. Summary

  • Cytospora rhizophorae is not the resin itself, but a biological agent that triggers agarwood formation.
  • It plays a resin induction role by stressing the tree, activating defense mechanisms, and stimulating aromatic compound accumulation in the wood.
  • Its use is relevant in sustainable and artificial agarwood production systems, as part of fungal inoculation protocols.