“…Over the course of exploration of endophytic fungal resources, a total of 21 Muscodor species were recorded to date: M. albus (Worapong et al., ), M. roseus (Worapong, Strobel, Daisy, & Castillo, ), M. vitigenus (Daisy et al., ), M. crispans (Mitchel, Strobel, Hess, Vargas, & Ezra, ), M. yucatanensis (Gonzalez et al., ), M. fengyangensis (Zhang et al., ), M. cinnamomi (Suwannarach, Bussaban, Hyde, & Lumyong, ), M. sutura (Kudalkar, Strobel, Riyaz‐Ul‐Hassan, Geary, & Sears, ), M. equiseti , M. musae , M. oryzae , and M. suthepensis (Suwannaracha et al., ), M. kashayum (Meshram, Kapoor, & Saxena, ), M. darjeelingensis (Saxena, Meshram, & Kapoor, ), M. strobelii (Meshram, Saxena, & Kapoor, ), M. heveae (Siri‐udom, Suwannarach, & Lumyong, ), M. indicus and M. ghoomensis (Meshram, Gupta, & Saxena, ), M. tigerii (Meshram, Gupta, & Saxena, ), M. coffeanum (Hongsanan et al., ), and M. camphorae (Meshram, Kapoor, Chopra, & Saxena, ). In a previous study of endophytic fungi from Oryza granulata collected from Xishuangbanna, southwest China, which is an area known to contain rich fungal biodiversity, we isolated two Muscodor strains (Yuan et al., ).…”