Entoloma paulense Karstedt & Capelari

Karstedt, Fernanda, Bergemann, Sarah E., Gates, Genevieve, Ratkowsky, David, Cunha, Kelmer Martins & Capelari, Marina, 2024, Species of Entoloma (Entolomataceae) with cuboidal basidiospores from Brazil, Phytotaxa 654 (1), pp. 1-76 : 54

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.654.1.1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13215045

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/19575B62-7625-0C5A-FF4A-89BEBE3FA21E

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Entoloma paulense Karstedt & Capelari
status

sp. nov.

Entoloma paulense Karstedt & Capelari , sp. nov.

Figs. 25 View FIGURE 25 , 36g –h View FIGURE 36

MB 838598

Etymology:— Paulense refers to the species being found in the city of São Paulo.

Diagnosis:— Entoloma paulense is characterized by the combination of its blue basidiome, entirely sky blue when young, that when old or injured becomes olive-green, by cuboidal basidiospores or even a few basidiospores with one side very reduced or with two faces joined in an angle of 180 º that resembles a prism ( Fig. 10c–f View FIGURE 10 of Karstedt & Capelari 2013), by clavate, broadly clavate, ventricose or irregular cheilocystidia ( Fig. 25d View FIGURE 25 , recorded here with a more variable form than in Karstedt & Capelari 2013), for the pseudocystidia that are present ( Fig. 25c View FIGURE 25 ) and for their pigmented refractive hyphae.

Type:— BRAZIL. São Paulo: São Paulo, Fontes do Ipiranga State Park, near the Mycology Research Center building, 28 January 2009, F. Karstedt FK1151 (Holotype, SP; isotype, K) .

Description:—The morphological description of this species appears in Karstedt & Capelari (2013), as Inocephalus virescens (Sacc.) Largent & Abell-Davis (2011:232)

Habitat:—Gregarious with little dispersion, in soil amid grass, in the domain of the Atlantic Forest biome.

Distribution:— São Paulo, Brazil, the type locality.

Additional material examined:— BRAZIL. São Paulo : São Paulo, Fontes do Ipiranga State Park, near the Mycology Research Center building, 5 December 2006, F. Karstedt FK0821 (SP) .

Comments:—The collections now identified as Entoloma paulense were initially treated as E. virescens ( Karstedt & Capelari 2013, as Inocephalus virescens ). The morphological characteristics of the E. virescens isotype and the descriptions of the materials identified as E. virescens (Horak 1976a, Noordeloos & Hausknecht 2007, Largent & Abell-Davis 2011) overlap with those of E. paulense . However, phylogenetic analysis ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 ) showed that the collections named as E. virescens occurring in Australia (Largent & Abell-Davis 2012, as I. virescens ), in La Reunion (Noordeloos & Hausknecht 2007, as E. virescens (Sacc.) E. Horak ex Courtec. (1986:131)) and Guyana (collection MCA2479, cited in the Baroni et al. 2011, as I. ‘virescens’) are distinct from E. paulense .

Entoloma virescens was recorded from the state of Ceará ( Alves & Nascimento 2012, as E. virescens ) and according to the morphological description differs from E. paulense only in terms of the color that turns blue-green to entirely green-grey instead of green-olive or olivaceus ochre. It was not possible to confirm whether the material collected in Ceará represents E. paulense , as most of the microscopic structures had collapsed. In addition, there are more collections identified as E. virescens collected in South America (MCA2479, TJB9703, FK0821 and FK1151, Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 ) that were given the same name for having similar morphology but are likely to be at least three species. A larger sampling study is necessary to elucidate the morphological and geographical delimitation of the species of the E. virescens complex.

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