Arthonia sanguinaria Frisch & Y. Ohmura, 2018
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.356.1.2 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13705821 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C487F7-FF99-FF93-F4CE-FA0DFEBAFBD1 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Arthonia sanguinaria Frisch & Y. Ohmura |
status |
sp. nov. |
Arthonia sanguinaria Frisch & Y. Ohmura sp. nov.
MycoBank MB823125
Diagnose.—This species differs from the similar A. meissneri Müll. Arg. by the larger ascospores (15–21 × 5–8 μm, 4–5-septate vs 10–14 × 4.5–5.5 μm, 2-septate). Arthonia picea Vain. has thick-walled ascospores, 26–35 × 9–12 μm, turning brown with granular ornamentation in the perispore at late maturity, and a different chemistry (pigments A4, A5, A6). Arthonia ferruginea Vainio (1890: 165) has a distinct K+ blue pigment in the ascomata and slightly larger ascospores (20–24 × 5–8 μm, 5-septate).
Etymology.—The new species is named after the blood red colour of the ascomata.
Type.— Japan, Ogasawara Islands (Tôkyô Metropolis): Chichi-jima, Mt Tsutsuji (27°03′33.7″N, 142°13′15.6″E), on bark of Livistona chinensis var. boninensis , elev. 250 m. 28. vi. 2009, Y. Ohmura 6609 (TNS holotype). FIG. 3C, 3D View FIGURE 3 , 4C View FIGURE 4
THALLUS pale olivish grey to pale buff(almost whitish),thin,matt, smooth to granular-warty, coherent to fissured-areolate, up to 0.1 mm tall, partly endophloeodal; prothallus line not observed; photobiont trentepohlioid, the cells rounded to elliptical, 6–18 × 4–8 μm, in short chains or single cells; mycobiont hyphae 1.5–2.5 μm wide, with thick (0.7–1.0 μm) walls, hyaline, weakly conglutinated; calcium oxalate crystals not observed. ASCOMATA dispersed, maculate, immersed, flat, irregularly rounded to elliptical to shortly lobed, 0.5–3.0 × 0.4–1.3 mm, often separated from the thallus by a thin fissure, margin not differentiated; disc dark red, flat, level with the thallus, epruinose; proper exciple not differentiated, the margins of the ascomata without asci and with more closely netted paraphysoids; epithecium deep orange, 7–12 μm tall; hymenium deep orange-red, 40–45 μm tall, strongly conglutinated, the asci distantly spaced; hypothecium brown to olive-brown, 15–25 μm tall, conglutinated, of short-celled, densely branched and netted prosoplectenchymatic hyphae (cells 2–5 × 0.7–1.0 μm); quinoid pigments mainly as amorphous pigmentation in the gelatinous matrix of epithecium, hymenium and hypothecium, and to a lesser degree as ca 1 μm wide granular crystals attached to the hyphal walls; paraphysoids densely branched and netted, 1.0–1.5 μm wide, somewhat wavy; paraphysoid tips only slightly widened to 1–2 μm, without pigmentation of the walls. ASCI of the Arthonia-type, with broadly triangular ocular chamber, 40– 48 × 20–24 μm (n=10), lateral walls 0.5–1.0 μm thick, base not abruptly deflected, 8-spored (spores in 2–3 irregular rows). ASCOSPORES narrow elliptical with capitate upper cell, (15.0–)16.8–19.4(21.0) × (5.0–)6.1–7.5(–8.0) μm (n=40; STDV: l=1.30, w=0.66), hyaline, 4–5-septate, slightly constricted at the septa, overaged collapsed spores with pale brownish walls lacking a clear granular ornamentation in the perispore. PYCNIDIA not observed.
Chemistry.— Confluentic acid (major), ± psoromic acid (minor), pigment A7 (major) in solvents B′ and C detected by TLC. Thallus hyphae I+ pale blue, KI+ blue; ascomatal gels I dil –, I+ blue, KI+ blue; asci with small KI+ blue ring structure in the tholus; ascospore walls and septa I–, KI–. The pigments change to purple in K but do not dissolve.
Ecology and distribution.— On the trunk of Livistona chinensis var. boninensis in dense humid forest. The species is known from a single locality on Chichi-jima in the Osagawara Islands.
Notes.— A distinctive species with almost whitish, pale olive grey thallus, dark red maculate apothecia, and hyaline, 4–5-septate ascospores with enlarged apical cell, 15–21 × 5–8 μm. The thallus margins show a distinct but rather weak zonation of brownish pigmentation. The pigments in the apothecia dissolve in LCB with precipitation of stellate clusters of red prism-shaped crystal needles ( Fig. 4B View FIGURE 4 ), a character not observed in the other species treated in this study. A. meissneri Müll. Arg. (type: G!) is a fairly similar widespread species in the tropics. The ascospores of A. meissneri , however, are distinctly smaller (10–14 × 4.5–5.5 μm, 2-septate) and this species does not contain psoromic acid. Superficial similarities also exist with the neotropical A. ferruginea Vain. (TUR-Vain 28914!, holotype), but that species differs by a distinct K+ blue pigment in the ascomata and slightly larger ascospores (20–24 × 5–8 μm, 5- septate).
Additional specimen examined: — Japan, Ogasawara Islands (Tôkyô Metropolis): Chichi-jima, Mt Tsutsuji (27°03′33.7″N, 142°13′15.6″E), on bark of Livistona chinensis var. boninensis , elev. 250 m. 19. iii. 2013, A. Frisch 13/Jp59 (TNS).
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