Epichloë species and their close relatives, the
Neotyphodium species, are systemic and constitutive symbionts of cool-season grasses (
Poaceae subfamily
Pooideae), and belong to the fungal family
Clavicipitaceae. Among the
Clavicipitaceae, many species are specialized to form and maintain systemic, constitutive (long-term)
symbioses with plants, often with limited or no disease incurred on the host. The best-studied of these symbionts are associated with the
grasses and
sedges, in which they infect the leaves and other aerial tissues by growing between the plant cells (
endophytic growth) or on the surface above or beneath the cuticle (
epiphytic growth). An individual infected plant will generally bear only a single genetic individual clavicipitaceous symbiont, so the plant-fungus system constitutes a genetic unit called a symbiotum (pl. symbiota).