Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-j824f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-11T07:20:42.376Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Heteroacanthella ellipsospora sp. nov., the first lichenicolous basidiomycete with acanthoid basidia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 January 2014

Juan Carlos ZAMORA
Affiliation:
Real Jardín Botánico, CSIC, Plaza de Murillo 2, E-28014 Madrid, Spain. Email: jczamora@rjb.csic.es
Sergio PÉREZ-ORTEGA
Affiliation:
Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales, CSIC, Serrano 115 dpdo., E-28006 Madrid, Spain
Víctor J. RICO
Affiliation:
Departamento de Biología Vegetal II, Facultad de Farmacia, Universidad Complutense, E-28040 Madrid, Spain

Abstract

Heteroacanthella ellipsospora is described as new to science. It is the only known lichenicolous Heteroacanthella, always found parasitizing apothecia and the surrounding thallus of the crustose epiphytic lichen Lecanora carpinea. The new parasite has so far only been found in two Spanish provinces, Jaén and Madrid. The shape and size of its basidiospores, the basidia with acanthoid ornamentation, acanthohyphidia, as well as its parasitic lichenicolous habitat, with a replacement of host tissues by the parasite hymenium, are useful diagnostic characters.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © British Lichen Society 2014 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Burdsall, H. H. Jr. (1986) Platygloea acanthophysa, a new species with single sterigmate basidia and acanthophyses. Mycotaxon 27: 499502.Google Scholar
Couch, J. N. (1938) The genus Septobasidium. Chapel Hill: University of Carolina Press.Google Scholar
Diederich, P. (1996) The lichenicolous heterobasidiomycetes. Bibliotheca Lichenologica 61: 1198.Google Scholar
Duhem, B. & Trichiès, G. (2005) Une nouvelle découverte en France, Heteroacanthella acanthophysa . Bulletin Trimestriel de la Société Mycologique de France 121: 119125.Google Scholar
Hawksworth, D., Kirk, P. M., Sutton, B. C. & Pegler, D. N. (1995) Ainsworth & Bisby's Dictionary of the Fungi, 8th ed. Wallingford: CAB International.Google Scholar
Kirk, P. M., Cannon, P. F., Minter, D. W. & Stalpers, J. A. (2008) Ainsworth & Bisby's Dictionary of the Fungi, 10th ed. Wallingford: CAB International.Google Scholar
Lumbsch, H. T., Plümper, M., Guderley, R. & Feige, B. G. (1997) The corticolous species of Lecanora sensu stricto with pruinose apothecia. Symbolae Botanicae Upsalienses 32: 131162.Google Scholar
Moncalvo, J.-M., Nilsson, R. H., Koster, B., Dunham, S. M., Bernauer, T., Matheny, P. B., Porter, T. M., Margaritescu, S., Weiss, M., Garnica, S., et al. (2006) The cantharelloid clade: dealing with incongruent gene trees and phylogenetic reconstruction methods. Mycologia 98: 937948.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Nimis, P. L. (1993) The Lichens of Italy. Torino: Museo Regionale di Scienze Naturali.Google Scholar
Oberwinkler, F. (1993) Diversity and phylogenetic importance of tropical heterobasidiomycetes. In Aspects of Tropical Mycology (Isaac, S., Frankland, J. C., Watling, R. & Whalley, A. J. S., eds): 121147. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Oberwinkler, F., Langer, E., Burdsall, H. H. Jr. & Tschen, J. (1990) Heteroacanthella: a new genus in the Tulasnellales . Transactions of the Mycological Society of Japan 31: 207213.Google Scholar
Rivas-Martínez, S. (1987) Mapa de las Series de Vegetación de España 1:400 000 y memoria. Madrid: ICONA, Serie Técnica.Google Scholar
Roberts, P. (1998 a) Oliveonia and the origin of the holobasidiomycetes. Folia Cryptogamica Estonica 33: 127132.Google Scholar
Roberts, P. (1998 b) Heteroacanthella: a surprising addition to the British mycota. Mycologist 12: 146147.Google Scholar
Roberts, P. (1999) Rhizoctonia-forming Fungi. Kew: Royal Botanical Gardens.Google Scholar
Roberts, P. (2005) Celatogloea simplicibasidium: a heterobasidiomycetous parasite of Corticium roseum . Mycologist 19: 6971.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, C. W., Aptroot, A., Coppins, B. J., Fletcher, A., Gilbert, O. L., James, P. W. & Wolseley, P. A. (eds) (2009) The Lichens of Great Britain and Ireland. London: British Lichen Society.Google Scholar
Weiss, M., Bauer, R. & Begerow, D. (2004) Spotlights on heterobasidomycetes. In Frontiers in Basidiomycete Mycology (Agerer, H., Piepenbring, P. & Blanz, P., eds): 748. Ecking: HIW-Verlag.Google Scholar
Wells, K. (1994) Jelly fungi, then and now! Mycologia 86: 1848.Google Scholar
Wells, K. & Bandoni, R. J. (2001) Heterobasidiomycetes. In The Mycota, Vol. VII, Part B: Systematics and Evolution (MacLaughlin, D. J., MacLaughlin, E. G. & Lemke, P. A., eds): 85120. Berlin: Springer.Google Scholar
Zamora, J. C., Pérez-Ortega, S. & Rico, V. J. (2011) Tremella macrobasidiata (Basidiomycota, Tremellales), a new lichenicolous fungus from the Iberian Peninsula. Lichenologist 43: 407415.Google Scholar