Cleistocybe vernaloides H.M. Wu, J.Q. Luo, Ke Wang & Y.J. Yao, 2018
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.336.3.7 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AA3487D9-FF80-FFA8-9FB8-FF7BFAD8FA19 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Cleistocybe vernaloides H.M. Wu, J.Q. Luo, Ke Wang & Y.J. Yao |
status |
sp. nov. |
Cleistocybe vernaloides H.M. Wu, J.Q. Luo, Ke Wang & Y.J. Yao View in CoL , sp. nov. Figs 1–3 View FIGURE 1 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3
Fungal Names database registration FN570383
Holotype:— CHINA. Qinghai Province, Qilian County, Binggou Linchang, 100°18’45.59”N, 38°02’44.38”E, 3112 m alt., in a forest of Platycladus orientalis ( L.) Franco , mixed with broadleaved trees, 27 August 2015, Ke Wang-180 ( HMAS 0276619 View Materials ).The specimen is deposited in the Fungarium ( HMAS) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
GenBank accession numbers:—ITS-nrDNA, KY 622013; LSU-nrDNA, KY 622014.
Species diagnosis:—The new species is molecularly related to C. vernalis , the type of Cleistocybe , but is a different species as revealed by both ITS and LSU-nrDNA sequence analyses. It is also morphologically similar to C. vernalis but differs in having broader basidiospores.
Description:— Pileus 1.0–3.0 cm in diameter, convex to plane; surface dry, not viscid, glabrous, often wrinkled forming reticulate grooves and appearing like large squamules; cartridge buff to pale ochraceous, becoming green in KOH when dry; margin incurved to decurved, with submembranous veil remnants. Lamellae decurrent; up to 2 mm broad, arcuate; close (40‒60 reach the stipe), 1‒2 tiers of lamellulae; near to pale pinkish buff; edge smooth. Stipe 1.5‒ 3.5× 0.5‒0.7 cm, central; cylindrical or slightly attenuate upwards; buff to cinnamon; surface dry, slightly fibrillose; sometimes attached with remaining veil towards the cap, occasionally with a mark of annulus; basal mycelium whitish. Context of pileus 0.2–0.3 cm thick in the center, tapering abruptly to the margin; fleshy; subcolorous close to pileus cuticle. Smell and taste not distinctive.
Basidiospores 8.0‒10.5 × 5.0‒6.5 μm, Q =1.2‒2.1; broadly ellipsoid to ellipsoid to elongate; more or less thin-walled, colorless, sometimes with droplets and granules, inamyloid. Basidia 37‒49‒55 × 7.0‒10.0 μm, clavate; foursterigmate, hyaline to subhyaline, some with granular material. Hymenophoral trama 50–120 μm wide, interwoven to strongly interwoven, more parallel in some areas; hyphae 0.5–2.0 μm diam., thin-walled and hyaline, mostly straight to twisted. Pleurocystidia and cheilocystidia absent. Pileipellis composed of interwoven radiating hyphae 2.0–9.0 μm diam. Stipitipellis longitudinally parallel; hyphae 2.0–6.0 μm diam., hyaline to cinnamon. Clamp connections common in all parts of basidioma.
Comments:—The close relationship between C. vernaloides and C. vernalis , the type species of the genus, is supported both morphologically and molecularly as shown by macroscopic characters, e.g. clitocyboid habitat, decurrent gills and 97% similarity of ITS sequences by Blast search. However, phylogenetic analyses of the ITS sequences demonstrated that C. vernaloides and C. vernalis are segregated in two terminal clades ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ). The molecular distinction of the two species is also supported by the analysis of LSU sequences as shown in Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 . Further, the morphological differentiation of C. vernaloides from C. vernalis was revealed by detailed observation. The former is characterized by smaller basidiomata and broader basidiospores. To facilitate the species identification, a key to the known species of Cleistocybe based on morphological characters and occurring seasons is provided below.
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