Dyplolabia chumphonensis J. Kalb & K. Kalb, 2016
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.268.2.2 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0397B65B-FFBC-5C3D-FF75-F974516D76E2 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Dyplolabia chumphonensis J. Kalb & K. Kalb |
status |
sp. nov. |
Dyplolabia chumphonensis J. Kalb & K. Kalb View in CoL , sp. nov. ( Fig. 6E–F View FIGURE 6 )
MycoBank MB817436
Differing from Dyplolabia oryzoides by smaller ascospores.
Type: — THAILAND. Chumphon province: Tasae district, Tambon Tha Sae ; area of 72 nd Anniversary Queen Sirikit Park ; 10°43’24’’ N, 99°15’43’’ E, 100 m; on a ± free standing deciduous tree; 19 March 2011, J. Sutjaritturakan 3606 (holotype RAMK 027820 About RAMK ) .
Thallus corticolous, epiperidermal, yellow-olive, smooth to uneven, with dense, prosoplectenchymatous cortex; photobiont layer without or with very rare scattered clusters of calcium oxalate crystals.Apothecia erumpent, elongate-lirellate, 1–4 mm long and 0.5–0.75 mm broad, straight or curved, very rarely branched; disc immersed, thickly white-pruinose, fully covered by margin; proper margin distinct, thick, erect, black but with a very thick, white cover; thalline margin absent. Excipulum apically and laterally carbonized, jet-black, without discernable structure. Periphysoids absent but hymenium laterally with a broad zone of widely spaced, anastomosing paraphyses embedded in a gelatinous matrix. Pseudocolumella absent. Hymenium 75–110 μm high; paraphyses unbranched except for lateral areas as described above.Ascospores 4–6 (–8)/ascus, uniseriate, submuriform with 3–5 transverse and 0–1 longitudinal septa per segment, 16–19 × 8–9 μm, oval, with mostly thick septa (rarely thin septa) and diamond-shaped lumina ( Astrothelium - type), colorless, I– (non-amyloid).
Secondary chemistry: —White cover of ascoma margin C+ red (lecanoric acid).
Etymology: ―This new species is named after the Thai province where it was collected.
Distribution and ecology: ― Thailand; thus far only known a single collection from the type locality, growing on bark of a deciduous tree in a park.
Remarks: ― Dyplolabia chumphonensis is very similar to D. afzelii and D. oryzoides . The first one very rarely has one longitudinal septum per spore ( Kalb & Staiger, 2000), but is usually separated by only 4-locular ascospores without a longitudinal septum. The spores of D. oryzoides are considerably larger, 19–27 × 10–14 μm.
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