Trochila colensoi (Berk.) Quijada, 2021
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https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.78.62046 |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C83D9FC2-6A2D-5D22-9AF7-70261076EF21 |
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scientific name |
Trochila colensoi (Berk.) Quijada |
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comb. nov. |
Trochila colensoi (Berk.) Quijada comb. nov.
Cenangium colensoi ≡ Cenangium colensoi Berk., Hooker, Bot. Antarct. Voy. Erebus Terror 1839-1843, II, Fl. Nov.-Zeal.: 201 (1855). [Basionym]
Pseudopeziza colensoi = Pseudopeziza colensoi (Berk.) Massee, J. Linn. Soc., Bot. 31: 468 (1896)
Notes.
Cenangium colensoi is described from dead leaves of Cordyline sp. ( Asparagales, Asparagaceae) in New Zealand ( Hooker 1855). The host had been mistakenly reported as Phormium ( Asparagales, Asphodelaceae) by Berkeley in Hooker (1855) and only recently corrected after re-study of the type collection ( Landcare Research 2020). Cenangium colensoi was later combined in Pseudopeziza and described in more detail by Massee (1896). Both authors commented on the watery-grey disc and brownish receptacle of the apothecia. The apothecia develop among the rigid vascular bundles of the epidermis, first covered by the cuticle, then erumpent and opening by a narrow slit, becoming discoid when mature ( Hooker 1855; Massee 1896). The habit of this fungus fits well with typical macromorphological features of the genus Trochila - a dark brown to black receptacle, which develops beneath the host tissues and eventually becomes erumpent to expose the hymenium by splitting along radial lines or by its splitting into lobes (von Höhnel 1917; Greenhalgh and Morgan-Jones 1964; Dennis 1978; Baral and Marson 2005). Microscopically, P. colensoi was described with a parenchymatous excipulum (angular-globose or isodiametric cells), hyaline under the hymenium and dark brown at the cortex (Berkeley in Hooker 1855; Massee 1896), which is also in agreement with the excipular features of Trochila species. Finally, the hymenium of P. colensoi was described as composed of inamyloid, 8-spored asci with elliptical hyaline ascospores and slender paraphyses (op. cit.).
In 2018, P.R. Johnston collected two specimens (PDD:112240, PDD:112242, Landcare Research 2020) on leaves of Cordyline australis ( Asparagaceae). The morphology, ecology (host), and locality of these new collections agree with P. colensoi . The photographs of both specimens reveal features such as guttules in ascospores and paraphyses, protruding hyaline cells in the cortical layer of the upper flank and margin, and hyaline gelatinized hyphae covering the dark globose-angular cells of the ectal excipulum at the base and lower flanks. The latter excipular feature of the receptacle is reminiscent of Zhuang’s (1990) description of Calycellinopsis xishuangbanna . An ITS sequence of this species was generated from the recent material (PDD:112240) and included in the Leotiomycetes -wide ITS phylogeny of Johnston et al. (2019). Their results and those in this study (Figs 1 View Figure 1 , 2 View Figure 2 ) show that P. colensoi is placed among species of Trochila .
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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Trochila colensoi (Berk.) Quijada
Gomez-Zapata, Paula Andrea, Haelewaters, Danny, Quijada, Luis, Pfister, Donald H. & Aime, M. Catherine 2021 |
Cenangium colensoi
Gómez-Zapata & Haelewaters & Quijada & Pfister & Aime 2021 |
Cenangium colensoi
Gómez-Zapata & Haelewaters & Quijada & Pfister & Aime 2021 |
Pseudopeziza colensoi
Gómez-Zapata & Haelewaters & Quijada & Pfister & Aime 2021 |
Pseudopeziza colensoi
Gómez-Zapata & Haelewaters & Quijada & Pfister & Aime 2021 |