“…The distribution of this genus has extended to all continents. Neoscytalidium genus can influence the different parts of plants by causing diseases that show various symptoms on aerial and underground parts of hosts, including shoot blight canker and gummosis (Polizzi et al, 2009), dieback (Ray et al, 2010), collar and root rot (Machado et al, 2012), brown spot (Lan et al, 2012), death of graft (Chen et al, 2013), internal black rot (Ezea et al, 2013), shoot and needle blight (Türkölmez et al, 2019a), tuber rot (Derviş et al, 2020a), root and stem rot (Oksal and Ozer, 2021;Kuruppu et al, 2021), stem-end rot (Li et al, 2021), sooty canker (Yeganeh and Mohammadi, 2022), and leaf scorch (Table 1). Members in the genus Neoscytalidium have been reported as pathogenic agents on various crops and trees, such as almond (Prunus dulcis), Avicennia marina Forssk., baobab (Adansonia gibbosa), bardi bush (Acacia synchronica), blue grevillea (Grevillia agrifolia), rattlepod (Crotalaria medicaginea), olive (Olea europaea L.), etc.…”