<documentid="661AB351BA5C3B59CEB4770C944313A0"ID-CLB-Dataset="302277"ID-DOI="10.11646/phytotaxa.307.4.3"ID-GBIF-Dataset="f1baf902-944e-490d-bd19-15d276ee4789"ID-ISSN="1179-3163"ID-Zenodo-Dep="13686606"IM.bibliography_approvedBy="felipe"IM.illustrations_approvedBy="felipe"IM.materialsCitations_approvedBy="felipe"IM.metadata_approvedBy="felipe"IM.tables_requiresApprovalFor="GgImagineBatch"IM.taxonomicNames_approvedBy="felipe"IM.treatments_approvedBy="felipe"checkinTime="1725484331092"checkinUser="felipe"docAuthor="Zamora, Juan Carlos, Diederich, Paul, Millanes, Ana M. & Wedin, Mats"docDate="2017"docId="B42216330A1FA47243E3F8E8FAEB7435"docLanguage="en"docName="phytotaxa.307.4.3.pdf"docOrigin="Phytotaxa 307 (4)"docSource="http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.307.4.3"docStyle="DocumentStyle:96748F8F1B6C902996E134952A3A36B9.13:Phytotaxa.2014-.journal_article"docStyleId="96748F8F1B6C902996E134952A3A36B9"docStyleName="Phytotaxa.2014-.journal_article"docStyleVersion="13"docTitle="Tremella anaptychiae J. C. Zamora & Diederich 2017, sp. nov."docType="treatment"docVersion="2"lastPageNumber="259"masterDocId="481B6E4B0A1CA477436BFFDEFFB17263"masterDocTitle="An old familiar face: Tremella anaptychiae sp. nov. (Tremellales, Basidiomycota)"masterLastPageNumber="262"masterPageNumber="254"pageNumber="257"updateTime="1725485018694"updateUser="ExternalLinkService"zenodo-license-figures="UNSPECIFIED"zenodo-license-treatments="UNSPECIFIED">
<mods:namePartid="544B2ACE492A8BA4180831DA809E3F18">Millanes, Ana M.</mods:namePart>
<mods:affiliationid="F1CBE55DE00C8AEA0E4773082F94EBDE">Departamento de Biología y Geología, Física y Química Inorgánica, Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, E- 28933 Móstoles, Spain</mods:affiliation>
<mods:affiliationid="3D40A77A3BD96300FFDD82837C55C416">Department of Botany, Swedish Museum of Natural History, P. O. Box 50007, SE- 10405 Stockholm, Sweden</mods:affiliation>
<taxonomicNameid="FB8BDCA60A1FA47443E3F8E8FD19752C"authority="J.C. Zamora & Diederich"authorityName="J. C. Zamora & Diederich"authorityYear="2017"box="[136,680,1846,1871]"class="Lecanoromycetes"family="Collemataceae"genus="Tremella"kingdom="Fungi"order="Peltigerales"pageId="3"pageNumber="257"phylum="Ascomycota"rank="species"species="anaptychiae"status="sp. nov.">
<figureCitationid="A4B0BBA00A1FA474407CF8E8FCEB752C"box="[791,858,1846,1871]"captionStart="FIGURE 2"captionStartId="4.[136,229,1781,1802]"captionTargetBox="[196,1391,175,1756]"captionTargetId="figure-14@4.[196,1391,175,1757]"captionTargetPageId="4"captionText="FIGURE 2. Morphological characteristics of T. anaptychiae, A morphological variation of the basidiomata on the host thallus, B micromorphological features; B1 hymenium; B2 young hyphae with haustorial branches (black arrows); B3 young cell (perhaps a probasidial initial) with a spur-like basal swelling (white arrow); B4–B5 asteroconidia and conidiogenous cell (black arrow); B6–B11 basidiospores, in B11 collapsed basidiospore with yeast-like cells; B12–B18 basidial development, note that basidia are often thick-walled, particularly towards the stalk; B19–B20 epibasidia with an apical sterigma, in B19 with an asymmetrically attached young basidiospore; B21–B24 basidia with transverse (B21), almost longitudinal (B22) or oblique (B23, B24) septa; B25 young long-stalked basidium. B26– B31; mature basidia with epibasidia in different degrees of development; B1–B11 and B19–B31, phloxin B in 5% KOH; B12–B18, Congo red and phloxin B in 5% KOH. Scale bars: A=1 mm (all photographs at the same scale), B=20 μm (B2–B31 at the same scale). B4–B5 from E. Zimmermann 1065, all other photographs from the holotype."figureDoi="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13686610"httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/13686610/files/figure.png"pageId="3"pageNumber="257">Fig. 2</figureCitation>
Diagnosis:—Basidiomata growing parasitically on different parts of the thallus of
<taxonomicNameid="FB8BDCA60A1FA47440CBF85EFBE675F6"authorityName="Korb. ex Massalongo"authorityYear="1853"baseAuthorityName="Linnaeus 1753:"baseAuthorityYear="1144"box="[928,1111,1920,1941]"class="Lecanoromycetes"family="Physciaceae"genus="Anaptychia"kingdom="Fungi"order="Caliciales"pageId="3"pageNumber="257"phylum="Ascomycota"rank="species"species="ciliaris">
<taxonomicNameid="FB8BDCA60A18A473413CF92BFD597569"authorityName="J. C. Zamora & Diederich"authorityYear="2017"box="[599,744,1781,1802]"class="Lecanoromycetes"family="Collemataceae"genus="Tremella"kingdom="Fungi"order="Peltigerales"pageId="4"pageNumber="258"phylum="Ascomycota"rank="species"species="anaptychiae">
micromorphological features; B1 hymenium; B2 young hyphae with haustorial branches (black arrows); B3 young cell (perhaps a probasidial initial) with a spur-like basal swelling (white arrow); B4–B5 asteroconidia and conidiogenous cell (black arrow); B6–B11 basidiospores, in B11 collapsed basidiospore with yeast-like cells; B12–B18 basidial development, note that basidia are often thick-walled, particularly towards the stalk; B19–B20 epibasidia with an apical sterigma, in B19 with an asymmetrically attached young basidiospore; B21–B24 basidia with transverse (B21), almost longitudinal (B22) or oblique (B23, B24) septa; B25 young long-stalked basidium. B26– B31; mature basidia with epibasidia in different degrees of development; B1–B11 and B19–B31, phloxin B in 5% KOH; B12–B18, Congo red and phloxin B in 5% KOH. Scale bars: A=1 mm (all photographs at the same scale), B=20 μm (B2–B31 at the same scale). B4–B5 from
<taxonomicNameid="FB8BDCA60A19A47243D6FF1AFEC972BA"authorityName="Korb. ex Massalongo"authorityYear="1853"baseAuthorityName="Linnaeus 1753:"baseAuthorityYear="1144"box="[189,376,196,217]"class="Lecanoromycetes"family="Physciaceae"genus="Anaptychia"kingdom="Fungi"order="Caliciales"pageId="5"pageNumber="259"phylum="Ascomycota"rank="species"species="ciliaris">
Description:—Basidiomata subglobose to somewhat tuberculate when old, waxy-gelatinous, cream-coloured, pinkish, brownish or blackish, rarely with greenish shades,
<figureCitationid="A4B0BBA00A19A472404EFEABFC3373ED"box="[805,898,373,398]"captionStart="FIGURE 2"captionStartId="4.[136,229,1781,1802]"captionTargetBox="[196,1391,175,1756]"captionTargetId="figure-14@4.[196,1391,175,1757]"captionTargetPageId="4"captionText="FIGURE 2. Morphological characteristics of T. anaptychiae, A morphological variation of the basidiomata on the host thallus, B micromorphological features; B1 hymenium; B2 young hyphae with haustorial branches (black arrows); B3 young cell (perhaps a probasidial initial) with a spur-like basal swelling (white arrow); B4–B5 asteroconidia and conidiogenous cell (black arrow); B6–B11 basidiospores, in B11 collapsed basidiospore with yeast-like cells; B12–B18 basidial development, note that basidia are often thick-walled, particularly towards the stalk; B19–B20 epibasidia with an apical sterigma, in B19 with an asymmetrically attached young basidiospore; B21–B24 basidia with transverse (B21), almost longitudinal (B22) or oblique (B23, B24) septa; B25 young long-stalked basidium. B26– B31; mature basidia with epibasidia in different degrees of development; B1–B11 and B19–B31, phloxin B in 5% KOH; B12–B18, Congo red and phloxin B in 5% KOH. Scale bars: A=1 mm (all photographs at the same scale), B=20 μm (B2–B31 at the same scale). B4–B5 from E. Zimmermann 1065, all other photographs from the holotype."figureDoi="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13686610"httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/13686610/files/figure.png"pageId="5"pageNumber="259">Fig. 2A</figureCitation>
). Context hyphae and subbasidial hyphae thick-walled, slender, (2.5)3–5.5(6.5) μm diam., clampless, but small spur-like swellings (perhaps pseudoclamps) have been seen at few septa, exceptionally with clamps. Haustorial branches very abundant, mother cell subglobose to broadly ellipsoid, 3–4 × 3–3.5 μm diam., haustorial filament 1.5–7(11) × 1 μm, unbranched or with few and short apical branches (
<figureCitationid="A4B0BBA00A19A472422FFDDBFE1A707D"box="[324,427,517,542]"captionStart="FIGURE 2"captionStartId="4.[136,229,1781,1802]"captionTargetBox="[196,1391,175,1756]"captionTargetId="figure-14@4.[196,1391,175,1757]"captionTargetPageId="4"captionText="FIGURE 2. Morphological characteristics of T. anaptychiae, A morphological variation of the basidiomata on the host thallus, B micromorphological features; B1 hymenium; B2 young hyphae with haustorial branches (black arrows); B3 young cell (perhaps a probasidial initial) with a spur-like basal swelling (white arrow); B4–B5 asteroconidia and conidiogenous cell (black arrow); B6–B11 basidiospores, in B11 collapsed basidiospore with yeast-like cells; B12–B18 basidial development, note that basidia are often thick-walled, particularly towards the stalk; B19–B20 epibasidia with an apical sterigma, in B19 with an asymmetrically attached young basidiospore; B21–B24 basidia with transverse (B21), almost longitudinal (B22) or oblique (B23, B24) septa; B25 young long-stalked basidium. B26– B31; mature basidia with epibasidia in different degrees of development; B1–B11 and B19–B31, phloxin B in 5% KOH; B12–B18, Congo red and phloxin B in 5% KOH. Scale bars: A=1 mm (all photographs at the same scale), B=20 μm (B2–B31 at the same scale). B4–B5 from E. Zimmermann 1065, all other photographs from the holotype."figureDoi="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13686610"httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/13686610/files/figure.png"pageId="5"pageNumber="259">Fig. 2B2</figureCitation>
<figureCitationid="A4B0BBA00A19A4724267FDF7FED77021"box="[268,358,553,578]"captionStart="FIGURE 2"captionStartId="4.[136,229,1781,1802]"captionTargetBox="[196,1391,175,1756]"captionTargetId="figure-14@4.[196,1391,175,1757]"captionTargetPageId="4"captionText="FIGURE 2. Morphological characteristics of T. anaptychiae, A morphological variation of the basidiomata on the host thallus, B micromorphological features; B1 hymenium; B2 young hyphae with haustorial branches (black arrows); B3 young cell (perhaps a probasidial initial) with a spur-like basal swelling (white arrow); B4–B5 asteroconidia and conidiogenous cell (black arrow); B6–B11 basidiospores, in B11 collapsed basidiospore with yeast-like cells; B12–B18 basidial development, note that basidia are often thick-walled, particularly towards the stalk; B19–B20 epibasidia with an apical sterigma, in B19 with an asymmetrically attached young basidiospore; B21–B24 basidia with transverse (B21), almost longitudinal (B22) or oblique (B23, B24) septa; B25 young long-stalked basidium. B26– B31; mature basidia with epibasidia in different degrees of development; B1–B11 and B19–B31, phloxin B in 5% KOH; B12–B18, Congo red and phloxin B in 5% KOH. Scale bars: A=1 mm (all photographs at the same scale), B=20 μm (B2–B31 at the same scale). B4–B5 from E. Zimmermann 1065, all other photographs from the holotype."figureDoi="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13686610"httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/13686610/files/figure.png"pageId="5"pageNumber="259">Fig. 2B</figureCitation>
<figureCitationid="A4B0BBA00A19A472420DFDF7FEC07021"box="[358,369,553,578]"captionStart="FIGURE 1"captionStartId="2.[136,229,1851,1872]"captionTargetBox="[266,1323,179,1818]"captionTargetId="figure-14@2.[254,1334,171,1822]"captionTargetPageId="2"captionText="FIGURE 1. Fifty-percent majority rule Bayesian consensus phylogram with average branch lengths, from the combined analyses of ITS1, 5.8S, ITS2, and 28S datasets. Bayesian Posterior Probability values are indicated over the branches, and bootstrap values obtained in the maximum likelihood analysis are added below the branches. White circles represent nodes supported only in the Bayesian analysis. Black circles represent nodes supported in both Bayesian and ML analyses. BPP values ≥ 0.5 are indicated above the branches, and ML bootstrap values ≥ 50%, below branches. The newly described species is highlighted in bold font, and the type specimen is indicated with (T). Some lichenicolous groups distinguished by Millanes et al. (2011) are indicated in grey in the right margin. Branch lengths are scaled to the expected number of nucleotide substitutions per site."figureDoi="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13686608"httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/13686608/files/figure.png"pageId="5"pageNumber="259">1</figureCitation>
). Hyphidia absent or indistinct. Probasidial initials mostly claviform to narrowly ellipsoid, rarely subglobose, with a long, thick-walled stalk, clampless, but often with an asymmetric attachment to the subtending hypha, rarely with a small spur-like swelling (perhaps a pseudoclamp,
<figureCitationid="A4B0BBA00A19A47240D0FDAFFBA470E9"box="[955,1045,625,650]"captionStart="FIGURE 2"captionStartId="4.[136,229,1781,1802]"captionTargetBox="[196,1391,175,1756]"captionTargetId="figure-14@4.[196,1391,175,1757]"captionTargetPageId="4"captionText="FIGURE 2. Morphological characteristics of T. anaptychiae, A morphological variation of the basidiomata on the host thallus, B micromorphological features; B1 hymenium; B2 young hyphae with haustorial branches (black arrows); B3 young cell (perhaps a probasidial initial) with a spur-like basal swelling (white arrow); B4–B5 asteroconidia and conidiogenous cell (black arrow); B6–B11 basidiospores, in B11 collapsed basidiospore with yeast-like cells; B12–B18 basidial development, note that basidia are often thick-walled, particularly towards the stalk; B19–B20 epibasidia with an apical sterigma, in B19 with an asymmetrically attached young basidiospore; B21–B24 basidia with transverse (B21), almost longitudinal (B22) or oblique (B23, B24) septa; B25 young long-stalked basidium. B26– B31; mature basidia with epibasidia in different degrees of development; B1–B11 and B19–B31, phloxin B in 5% KOH; B12–B18, Congo red and phloxin B in 5% KOH. Scale bars: A=1 mm (all photographs at the same scale), B=20 μm (B2–B31 at the same scale). B4–B5 from E. Zimmermann 1065, all other photographs from the holotype."figureDoi="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13686610"httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/13686610/files/figure.png"pageId="5"pageNumber="259">Fig. 2B</figureCitation>
3, 2B12–B15). Mature basidia two-celled, with often longitudinal or oblique septa, sometimes transverse, stalked, thick-walled (walls thicker towards the base); stalk 2–21(24) μm long; upper part (without stalk) ellipsoid, claviform or subglobose, 15–20 × 10–15 μm; epibasidia subcylindrical or slightly dilated close to the apex, 3–4(5) × 10–30(60) μm, developing an apical sterigma, 3–5 μm long (
<figureCitationid="A4B0BBA00A19A4724241FCDFFE307179"box="[298,385,769,794]"captionStart="FIGURE 2"captionStartId="4.[136,229,1781,1802]"captionTargetBox="[196,1391,175,1756]"captionTargetId="figure-14@4.[196,1391,175,1757]"captionTargetPageId="4"captionText="FIGURE 2. Morphological characteristics of T. anaptychiae, A morphological variation of the basidiomata on the host thallus, B micromorphological features; B1 hymenium; B2 young hyphae with haustorial branches (black arrows); B3 young cell (perhaps a probasidial initial) with a spur-like basal swelling (white arrow); B4–B5 asteroconidia and conidiogenous cell (black arrow); B6–B11 basidiospores, in B11 collapsed basidiospore with yeast-like cells; B12–B18 basidial development, note that basidia are often thick-walled, particularly towards the stalk; B19–B20 epibasidia with an apical sterigma, in B19 with an asymmetrically attached young basidiospore; B21–B24 basidia with transverse (B21), almost longitudinal (B22) or oblique (B23, B24) septa; B25 young long-stalked basidium. B26– B31; mature basidia with epibasidia in different degrees of development; B1–B11 and B19–B31, phloxin B in 5% KOH; B12–B18, Congo red and phloxin B in 5% KOH. Scale bars: A=1 mm (all photographs at the same scale), B=20 μm (B2–B31 at the same scale). B4–B5 from E. Zimmermann 1065, all other photographs from the holotype."figureDoi="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13686610"httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/13686610/files/figure.png"pageId="5"pageNumber="259">Fig. 2B</figureCitation>
<figureCitationid="A4B0BBA00A19A4724044FC97FC347101"box="[815,901,841,866]"captionStart="FIGURE 2"captionStartId="4.[136,229,1781,1802]"captionTargetBox="[196,1391,175,1756]"captionTargetId="figure-14@4.[196,1391,175,1757]"captionTargetPageId="4"captionText="FIGURE 2. Morphological characteristics of T. anaptychiae, A morphological variation of the basidiomata on the host thallus, B micromorphological features; B1 hymenium; B2 young hyphae with haustorial branches (black arrows); B3 young cell (perhaps a probasidial initial) with a spur-like basal swelling (white arrow); B4–B5 asteroconidia and conidiogenous cell (black arrow); B6–B11 basidiospores, in B11 collapsed basidiospore with yeast-like cells; B12–B18 basidial development, note that basidia are often thick-walled, particularly towards the stalk; B19–B20 epibasidia with an apical sterigma, in B19 with an asymmetrically attached young basidiospore; B21–B24 basidia with transverse (B21), almost longitudinal (B22) or oblique (B23, B24) septa; B25 young long-stalked basidium. B26– B31; mature basidia with epibasidia in different degrees of development; B1–B11 and B19–B31, phloxin B in 5% KOH; B12–B18, Congo red and phloxin B in 5% KOH. Scale bars: A=1 mm (all photographs at the same scale), B=20 μm (B2–B31 at the same scale). B4–B5 from E. Zimmermann 1065, all other photographs from the holotype."figureDoi="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13686610"httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/13686610/files/figure.png"pageId="5"pageNumber="259">Fig. 2B</figureCitation>
6–B11). Asteroconidia sometimes present, with 4 arms, 10–15 μm in diam., individual arms 3.5–8 μm long, basal arm often longer and connected to the conidiogenous cell; conidiogenous cells 17–26 μm long, 1.5–4 μm in diam., with a few or several branches close to the apex up to 4 μm long, very numerous in the hymenium of some basidiomata in which basidia are sparse (
<figureCitationid="A4B0BBA00A19A47247FFFC6BFB5971AD"box="[1172,1256,949,974]"captionStart="FIGURE 2"captionStartId="4.[136,229,1781,1802]"captionTargetBox="[196,1391,175,1756]"captionTargetId="figure-14@4.[196,1391,175,1757]"captionTargetPageId="4"captionText="FIGURE 2. Morphological characteristics of T. anaptychiae, A morphological variation of the basidiomata on the host thallus, B micromorphological features; B1 hymenium; B2 young hyphae with haustorial branches (black arrows); B3 young cell (perhaps a probasidial initial) with a spur-like basal swelling (white arrow); B4–B5 asteroconidia and conidiogenous cell (black arrow); B6–B11 basidiospores, in B11 collapsed basidiospore with yeast-like cells; B12–B18 basidial development, note that basidia are often thick-walled, particularly towards the stalk; B19–B20 epibasidia with an apical sterigma, in B19 with an asymmetrically attached young basidiospore; B21–B24 basidia with transverse (B21), almost longitudinal (B22) or oblique (B23, B24) septa; B25 young long-stalked basidium. B26– B31; mature basidia with epibasidia in different degrees of development; B1–B11 and B19–B31, phloxin B in 5% KOH; B12–B18, Congo red and phloxin B in 5% KOH. Scale bars: A=1 mm (all photographs at the same scale), B=20 μm (B2–B31 at the same scale). B4–B5 from E. Zimmermann 1065, all other photographs from the holotype."figureDoi="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13686610"httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/13686610/files/figure.png"pageId="5"pageNumber="259">Fig. 2B</figureCitation>
<taxonomicNameid="FB8BDCA60A19A472413AFC07FC947191"authorityName="Korb. ex Massalongo"authorityYear="1853"baseAuthorityName="Linnaeus 1753:"baseAuthorityYear="1144"box="[593,805,985,1010]"class="Lecanoromycetes"family="Physciaceae"genus="Anaptychia"kingdom="Fungi"order="Caliciales"pageId="5"pageNumber="259"phylum="Ascomycota"rank="species"species="ciliaris">
<taxonomicNameid="FB8BDCA60A19A4724177FA57FD4277C1"authorityName="Korb. ex Massalongo"authorityYear="1853"baseAuthorityName="Linnaeus 1753:"baseAuthorityYear="1144"box="[540,755,1417,1442]"class="Lecanoromycetes"family="Physciaceae"genus="Anaptychia"kingdom="Fungi"order="Caliciales"pageId="5"pageNumber="259"phylum="Ascomycota"rank="species"species="ciliaris">
. As for most lichenicolous fungi, the distribution is primarily dependent on the host.
<taxonomicNameid="FB8BDCA60A19A47242E5FA73FDD577A5"authorityName="Korb. ex Massalongo"authorityYear="1853"baseAuthorityName="Linnaeus 1753:"baseAuthorityYear="1144"box="[398,612,1453,1478]"class="Lecanoromycetes"family="Physciaceae"genus="Anaptychia"kingdom="Fungi"order="Caliciales"pageId="5"pageNumber="259"phylum="Ascomycota"rank="species"species="ciliaris">
is a palearctic species, known from Scandinavia, the British Isles, Central and Southern Europe, north Africa, the Canary Islands and eastern Europe including
<bibRefCitationid="581ADAD40A19A4724387FA2BFEDD746D"author="Rose, F."box="[236,364,1525,1550]"pageId="5"pageNumber="259"refId="ref7448"refString="Rose, F. (1998) Anaptychia ciliaris ssp. ciliaris. Species account 45 / 1998 in the third fascicle of the Lichen Atlas of the British Isles. British Lichen Society, London."type="journal volume"year="1998">Rose 1998</bibRefCitation>
), growing mainly within the “temperate broadleaf and mixed forests” and the “Mediterranean forest, woodlands and scrub” biomes (
<bibRefCitationid="581ADAD40A19A472415FF9C7FD487451"author="Olson, D. M. & Dinerstein, E. & Wikramanayake, E. D. & Burgess, N. D. & Powell, G. V. N. & Underwood, E. C. & D'Amico, J. A. & Strand, H. E. & Morrison, J. C. & Loucks, C. J. & Allnutt, T. F. & Lamoreux, J. F. & Ricketts, T. H. & Itoua, I. & Wettengel, W. W. & Kura, Y. & Hedao, P. & Kassem, K."box="[564,761,1561,1586]"pageId="5"pageNumber="259"pagination="933 - 938"refId="ref7067"refString="Olson, D. M., Dinerstein, E., Wikramanayake, E. D., Burgess, N. D., Powell, G. V. N., Underwood, E. C., D'Amico, J. A., Strand, H. E., Morrison, J. C., Loucks, C. J., Allnutt, T. F., Lamoreux, J. F., Ricketts, T. H., Itoua, I., Wettengel, W. W., Kura, Y., Hedao, P. & Kassem, K. (2001) Terrestrial ecoregions of the world: A new map of life on Earth. BioScience 51: 933 - 938. https: // doi. org / 10.1641 / 0006 - 3568 (2001) 051 [0933: TEOTWA] 2.0. CO; 2"type="journal article"year="2001">
<taxonomicNameid="FB8BDCA60A19A472473BF9C7FB457451"authorityName="J. C. Zamora & Diederich"authorityYear="2017"box="[1104,1268,1561,1586]"class="Lecanoromycetes"family="Collemataceae"genus="Tremella"kingdom="Fungi"order="Peltigerales"pageId="5"pageNumber="259"phylum="Ascomycota"rank="species"species="anaptychiae">