Melanogaster diqingensis T. J. Yuan, Shu H. Li, & Raspé, 2024

Yuan, Tian-Jun, Luo, Hong-Mei, Su, Kai-Mei, Li, Shu-Hong & Raspé, Olivier, 2024, Three new Melanogaster species (Boletales, Paxillaceae) from southwestern China based on morphological and molecular evidence, MycoKeys 107, pp. 141-160 : 141-160

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3897/mycokeys.107.123565

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12938669

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/17864080-6B99-5FAF-84B1-6F4D8EEA6420

treatment provided by

MycoKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Melanogaster diqingensis T. J. Yuan, Shu H. Li, & Raspé
status

sp. nov.

Melanogaster diqingensis T. J. Yuan, Shu H. Li, & Raspé sp. nov.

Fig. 3 e – h View Figure 3

Diagnosis.

Melanogaster diqingensis is diagnosed by the combination of medium-sized, pale-yellow to orange or brown-yellow basidiomata with scaled, lobed or concave surface, pale yellow gleba, and obovate to subglobose, smooth basidiospores (3.0–5.1 × 2.0–4.0 μm, Q = 1.0–1.8).

Etymology.

The epithet diqingensis refers to the prefecture of the type locality.

Holotype.

China. Yunnan Province: Diqing Autonomous Prefecture, Shangri-La County, Baishuitai village , 27 ° 30 ' 14.2236 " N, 100 ° 2 ' 50.5716 " E, elevation 2,380 m, in brown soil under Quercus aquifolioides Rehd. et Wils. , 25 Sep. 2020, collected by X. H. Wang ( KUN- HKAS 121212 View Materials , holotype; YAAS - WXH _ 9068 , isotype) GoogleMaps .

Description.

Basidiomata 0.5–2.5 × 0.2–2.2 cm, hypogeous, globose, subglobose or ellipsoidal, pale-yellow to orange or brown-yellow, scaled, lobed or concave in the surface, without visible rhizomorphs (Fig. 3 e View Figure 3 ). Odor faint. Peridium two-layered, outer layer 40–80 μm thick, composed of interwoven hyphae, 3.5–7.5 μm broad, with fusoid to cylindrical terminal cells, deeply orange-yellow walls toward surface, with clamp connections; inner layer 150–260 μm thick, composed of interwoven hyphae, 5–10 μm broad, with inflated cells, 7.5–15 μm broad, bright pale yellow, with abundant clamp connections. Gleba solid, milk-white when immature, pale yellow at maturity, hard when dried; trama plates of hyaline or yellowish, gelatinized hyphae (Fig. 3 f View Figure 3 ); locules 2–3 mm in diam (Fig. 3 g View Figure 3 ). Basidia exhibit limited reviving, appearing clavate, hyaline, 4 – spored. Basidiospores obovate to subglobose, smooth, 3.0–5.1 × 2.0–4.0 μm (L m × W m = 3.8 ± 1.0 × 3.2 ± 0.8, Q = 1.0–1.8, Q m = 1.2 ± 0.6, n = 75), hyaline (immature) to light yellow, dark brown (mature) in KOH 5 %, with truncate-cupped base and very short hilar appendage in optical microscopy, 0.5–1.5 μm in diam (Fig. 3 h View Figure 3 ).

Notes.

Six Melanogaster species, namely M. subglobisporus , M. natsii , M. spinisporus ( Wang et al. 1995) , M. rivularis , M. luteus = M. microsporus ( Moreau et al. 2011) , are similar to M. diqingensis in morphology and related by phylogeny. The colors of their basidiomata are similar to M. diqingensis , i. e. rust brown to deep brown in M. subglobisporus , yellow-brown in M. natsii , grayish brown to light brown in M. spinisporus , and bright golden yellow in M. minysporus , but the basidiomata of all of latter species are without scales, lobes or concave area, by which they were easily differentiated from M. diqingensis . M. rivularis (anthracite-black gleba), and M. luteus (club-shaped or cylindro-elliptical to cylindrical basidiospores) also are easily differentiated from M. diqingensis . The thickness of the peridium (≤ 300 μm) is similar among M. subglobisporus , M. ovoidisporus , and M. coccolobae, However , the size of basidiospores provide a clear distinction between these species ( M. subglobisporus 8–11 × 7–9 μm, M. ovoidisporus 5–7 × 3.5–5.8 μm and M. coccolobae 6.2–12 × 5.2–10 μm). Phylogenetically, M. diqingensis and M. subglobisporus formed an independent and strongly supported clade (BS = 78 %, PP = 1.0; Fig. 2 View Figure 2 ), but M. diqingensis shared less than 93.2 % ITS similarity with M. subglobisporus , supporting M. diqingensis as a distinct species.