Spathaspora jiuxiensis C.Y. Chai & F.L. Hui, 2020
publication ID |
https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.75.57192 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/749F6068-3E6A-58F6-801B-77710D2D60A9 |
treatment provided by |
|
scientific name |
Spathaspora jiuxiensis C.Y. Chai & F.L. Hui |
status |
sp. nov. |
Spathaspora jiuxiensis C.Y. Chai & F.L. Hui sp. nov. Figure 4 View Figure 4
Type.
China, Yunnan Province, Honghe Prefecture, Luxi County, in rotting wood in Jiuxi Mountain Forest Park, July 2017, K.F. Liu & L. Zhang (holotype, NYNU 17416T preserved in a metabolically-inactive state), ex-holotype: CICC 33264; CBS 15226.
Etymology.
Jiuxiensis refers to Jiuxi Mountain, the mountain from which it was collected.
Description.
In YM broth after 3 days at 25 °C, cells are ovoid to elongate (3-6 × 3.5-9 μm) and occur singly or in pairs (Fig. 4a View Figure 4 ); pseudohyphae are present. Budding is multilateral. Sediment is formed after a month, but a pellicle is not observed. After 3 days of growth on YM agar at 25 °C, colonies are white to cream-coloured, butyrous and smooth with entire margins. After 12 days at 25 °C on Dalmau plate culture on CM agar, pseudohyphae and true hyphae are formed (Fig. 4b View Figure 4 ). Asci or signs of conjugation were not seen on the sporulation media used. Glucose and maltose are weakly fermented. Xylose fermentation is negative using Durham tubes, but ethanol is produced from xylose when determined with alcohol oxidase and peroxidase tests. Glucose, d-glucosamine, d-ribose, d-xylose, sucrose, maltose, trehalose, methyl α-d-glucoside, cellobiose, salicin, arbutin, melezitose, inulin, ribitol, d-glucitol, d-mannitol, 2-keto-d-gluconate, dl-lactate, succinate and ethanol are assimilated. No growth occurs with galactose, l-sorbose, l-arabinose, d-arabinose, l-rhamnose, melibiose, lactose, raffinose, glycerol, erythritol, xylitol, galactitol, myo -inositol, d-glucono-1, 5-lactone, 5-keto-d-gluconate, d-gluconate, d-glucuronate, citrate, l-arabinitol or methanol. For the assimilation of nitrogen compounds, growth on l-lysine, glucosamine or d-tryptophan is present, whereas growth on nitrate, nitrite, ethylamine, cadaverine, creatine, creatinine or imidazole is absent. Growth is observed at 35 °C, but not at 37 °C. Growth in the presence of 0.01% cycloheximide is present, but growth in the presence of 0.1% cycloheximide, 10% NaCl plus 5% glucose and 1% acetic acid is absent. Starch-like compounds are not produced. Urease activity and diazonium blue B reactions are negative.
Additional isolate examined.
China, Yunnan Province, Honghe Prefecture, Luxi County, in rotting wood in Jiuxi Mountain Forest Park, July 2017, K.F. Liu & L. Zhang, NYNU 17417.
Notes.
The two strains, both representing Sp. jiuxiensis , cluster in a well-supported clade in the phylogenetic analysis and are closely related to Sp. parajiuxiensis . The nucleotide differences between these two new species were 1.4% substitutions in the D1/D2 domain and 4.6% substitutions in the ITS region ( Groenewald et al. 2016). These two sister species can also be differentiated by a few physiological characteristics; Sp. jiuxiensis can assimilate dl-lactate and Sp. parajiuxiensis can grow at 37 °C.
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.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
|
Genus |