Phallus haitangensis H.L. Li, P.E. Mortimer, J.C. Xu & K.D. Hyde, 2016
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.280.2.2 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/45338C3F-C049-4321-6AD7-459DE0F0FE99 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Phallus haitangensis H.L. Li, P.E. Mortimer, J.C. Xu & K.D. Hyde |
status |
sp. nov. |
Phallus haitangensis H.L. Li, P.E. Mortimer, J.C. Xu & K.D. Hyde View in CoL , sp. nov. Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2
Index Fungorum number: IF552109; Facesoffungi number: FoF: 02184
Etymology:—The species epithet “haitangensis ” refers to the place where the type species was collected.
Holotype:— CHINA. Yunnan Province: Baoshan, Haitangwa Village , 25.266°N, 99.300°E, alt. 2473m, 8 April 2013, Huili Li ( HKAS 88193 View Materials ). GoogleMaps
Diagnosis:—Receptacle strongly reticulate, golden orange, with a prominent opening at the apex. Pseudostipe creamy white, with a well-developed and light orange indusium, and a sac-like volva with rhizomorphs.
Description:—Immature fruiting body not seen. Expanded basidioma up to 130–165 mm high, unbranched, with an indusium flaring out from beneath the receptacle, a stipe-like pillar and a volva with thin rhizomorphs. Receptacle 30–35 mm high × 25–50 mm wide, bell shape to umbrella shape, dark orange (5B7) to golden yellow (5B7), strongly reticulated, gold yellow (5B7) ridges, yellowish brown (5E5–7) sticky gleba in the pits, with a prominent hole at the apex with 1–8 mm diameter. Receptacle margin is lightly upturned. Pseudostipe creamy white (4A1), 100–132 mm high × 8–11/15–20/ 18–22 mm wide (apex-middle-base), nearly equal or lightly tapering upwards, fragile or soft, spongiform, holes in pseudostipe is 1–10 mm diameter. Indusium 85–95 mm long, 80–155 mm broad, pale orange (5A3) to light orange (5A4–5), well-developed, at first contracted under the edge of the receptacle, later expanding almost touching the ground. The holes of the indusium are nearly round to polygonal, 4–35 mm diameter and 1–4 mm thick, smooth edges. Volva present at base of pseudostipe, 30–140 mm high and 20–45 mm thick, yellowish white (4A2), smooth surface, attached to the substrate by a pinkish white (13A2) rhizomorph. Odor foetid.
Basidiospores [100/4/4] 2.8–4.2 (3.4±0.3) μm length, 1.1–2.6 (1.7±0.3) μm width, L=3.4 μm, W=1.7 μm, Q=2, elongate or cylindrical, hyaline, smooth surface. Cells of pseudostipe 15–38.8 (28±6.2) μm diameter, bubble-like or foam-like, hyaline, smooth surface. Cells of indusium 21.2–41.6 (30.1±5.7) μm diameter, bubble-like or foam-like, hyaline, smooth surface. Hyphae of volva 1.8–3.8 (2.6±0.5) μm width, tubular and branched, septate with clampconnection, hyaline, smooth surface ( Fig.3 View FIGURE 3 ).
Habitat and Distribution:—solitary or scattered on soil with decaying litter under P. armandii trees, Yunnan Province, China.
Material examined:— CHINA. Yunnan Province: Baoshan, Haitangwa Village , 25.266°N, 99.300°E, alt. 2473m, 8 April 2013, Huili Li ( HKAS 88193 View Materials , holotype) GoogleMaps ; Ibid., Haitang Village , 4 August 2013, Huili Li ( HKAS 88191 View Materials , paratype) ; Ibid. 26 August 2014, Huili Li ( HKAS 88197 View Materials , paratype) ; Ibid. 2 September 2014, Huili Li ( HKAS 88199 View Materials , paratype) .
Notes:—The main distinguishing characteristics of Phallus haitangensis are the golden orange receptacle that is strongly reticulate, with a somewhat prominent apex, which has a light orange opening, and a light orange indusium with rounded to polygonal meshes without serrated margins ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ), and a creamy white spongy pseudostipe which tapers upwards. The results of the phylogenetic tree showed that P. haitangensis grouped with P. serrata , P. mengsongensis and P. cinnabarinus , however P. serrata has a white and half-egg receptacle, a white indusium with serrated margins of the holes, and larger basidiospores ( Li et al. 2014); P. mengsongensis has small fruiting bodies without an indusium ( Li et al. 2014); the receptacle of P. cinnabarinus is cinnabar-red and the pseudostipe is pale cinnabar-red and shorter than that in P. haitangensis , and the indusium of P. cinnabarinus is also cinnabar-red above to paler below, and the basidiospores of P. cinnabarinus are brownish green ( Lee 1957, Hemmes & Desjardin 2009) ( Table 2).
Some indusiate species are morphologically similar to P. haitangensis , however, the indusium of P. impudicus (= P. impudicus var. pseudoduplicatus O. Andersson (1989: 233)) is pure white and up to 1/3 to 2/3 of the pseudostipe length; the indusium of P. indusiatus is longer than that of P. haitangensis with a white receptacle ( Kreisel & Hausknecht 2002, Das et al. 2007, Li et al. 2008, Dash et al. 2010) ( Table 3); P. indusiatus var. roseus Lloyd (1909) ( Kreisel & Hausknecht 2002) has a white or cream or yellowish receptacle with a light pinkish indusium; P. haitangensis has a taller fruiting body (130mm – 165mm high) than P. indusiatus (= P. indusiatus f. citrinus K. Das, S. K. Singh & Calonge (2007: 136)) (75mm – 110mm high) and P. flavidus Kreisel & Hauskn (2009: 152) (50mm – 80mm) ( Table 3); the pseudostipe of P. multicolor is yellowish white ( Kreisel & Hausknecht 2002, Li et al. 2008, Dutta et al. 2012) ( Table 3); the orange or chrome yellow indusium of P. multicolor var. laeticolor D. A. Reid (1976) ( Kreisel & Hausknecht 2002) up to 1/2 to 3/4 of pseudostipe length ( Kreisel & Hausknecht 2002); P. luteus (Liou & L. Hwang 1936) T. Kasuya (2008: 9) has an orange to yellowish white receptacle and a chrome yellow or orange-yellow indusium ( Kreisel & Hausknecht 2002).
Phallus haitangensis View in CoL should also be compared with P. echinovolvatus View in CoL , however, the receptacle of P. echinovolvatus View in CoL is whitish yellow under a dark brown gleba, the indusium is white, and the volva is echinulated (Calonge 2005, Li et al. 2008, Li et al. 2014). Phallus haitangensis View in CoL closely resembles P. duplicatus Bosc (1811: 86) View in CoL , but this species has a white receptacle and indusium, an annulus under the indusium, and the basidiospores are light greenish. ( Li et al. 2008, Cortez et al. 2011, Kibby & McNeil 2012) ( Table 2).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Phallus haitangensis H.L. Li, P.E. Mortimer, J.C. Xu & K.D. Hyde
Li, Huili, Ma, Xuelan, Mortimer, Peter E., Karunarathna, Samantha C., Xu, Jianchu & Hyde, Kevin D. 2016 |
Phallus haitangensis
H. L. Li, P. E. Mortimer, J. C. Xu & K. D. Hyde 2016 |
Phallus haitangensis
H. L. Li, P. E. Mortimer, J. C. Xu & K. D. Hyde 2016 |
P. echinovolvatus
Kreisel 1996 |
P. echinovolvatus
Kreisel 1996 |
P. duplicatus
Bosc 1811: 86 |