Recognition of Mycenasect. Amparoina sect. nov. (Mycenaceae, Agaricales), including four new species and revision of the limits of sect. Sacchariferae
Author
Na, Qin
Author
Bau, Tolgor
text
MycoKeys
2019
52
103
124
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.52.34647
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.52.34647
1314-4049-52-103
Mycena hygrophoroides T.Bau & Q.Na
sp. nov.
Figs 2h, 5
Diagnosis.
Pileus concave with slight pruinose. Lamellae distant. Stipe with dense white fibrils and swollen base. Acanthocysts forming two types. Caulocystidia long-elliptic with conical excrescences, up to 120
μm
long.
Holotype.
CHINA. Guangdong Province, Shaoguan City, Chebaling National Nature Reserve, 8 May 2017, Qin Na, HMJAU 43417.
Etymology.
Name refers to its sparse lamellae.
Description.
Pileus 1.5-2.5 mm in diam., campanulate to hemispherical, applanate or slightly concave at centre, white with greyish shade (6B1), shallowly sulcate, translucent-striate, slightly pruinose, pubescent. Context white, thin and very fragile. Lamellae distant, sparse, white, concolorous with the sides. Stipe 4.5-8.2
x
0.5-0.8 mm, cylindrical, hollow, fragile, pure white (5A1) with a greyish (5B1) base, covered with dense white fibrils, base swollen and not forming basal disc, hirsute. Odour and taste indistinctive.
Basidiospores (6.9-)7.2-8.9(-9.3)
x
(5.3-)6.4-6.7(-7.1)
μm
, Q=1.2-1.5, Qav=1.31, broadly-ellipsoid, hyaline in water and 5% KOH, amyloid, smooth. Basidia 15-21
x
7-9
μm
, 4- or 2-spored, clavate, hyaline. Cheilocystidia 23-37
x
19-28
μm
, subglobose, sphaero-pedunculate to utriform with numerous sharp spines, thin-walled and hyaline, inamyloid. Pleurocystidia absent. Pileipellis hyphae 3-9
μm
wide, dextrinoid; cherocytes absent; a cutis overlaid by elements of universal veil, not in chains; acanthocysts forming two types, pyriform to vesicular, 13-29
x
11-24
μm
, clavate to ovoid or obovoid, 29-42
x
14-20
μm
, inamyloid. Hyphae of the stipitipellis 3-7
μm
wide, smooth, dextrinoid; caulocystidia abundant, clavate, long-elliptic, 32-122
x
8-11
μm
, with numbers of conical spines, inamyloid. Clamps present in all tissues.
Habit and habitat.
Scattered on rotten wood of coniferous trees, ex.
Cunninghamia
.
Other specimens examined.
Guangdong Province, Shaoguan City, Liangjiang Town, Shangxie Village, 7 May 2017, Qin Na, HMJAU 43421.
Remarks.
Mycena hygrophoroides
could be considered to be a member of
Hemimycena
Singer owing to the tiny basidiomata and sparse lamellae, but the absence of a basal disc, amyloid spores and spinulose cheilocystidia, acanthocysts and caulocystidia are diagnostic characters for
M. hygrophoroides
, which should be placed in
Mycena sect. Amparoina
stirps
Alphitophora
.
Mycena acanthophila
J.C.Zamora&
Catala
, of which the holotype was collected from Spain growing on dead branches of
Leguminosae
, most resembles
M. hygrophoroides
, but differs in having a yellow pileus, smaller cheilocystidia (13.5-22
x
8.5-12
μm
) and diverse caulocystidia (Zamora and
Catala
2012).
Mycena depilata
, a species of stirps
Alphitophora
, shows some morphological similarities to
M. hygrophoroides
in possessing white and tiny basidiomata, distant lamellae (L = 7-9) and globose-pedicellate acanthocysts with hyaline contents. However,
M. depilata
differs in producing ellipsoid spores (Q = 1.64
+/-
0.11), broadly clavate cheilocystidia and shorter caulocystidia (16-50
x
5-16
μm
;
Singer 1989
).
Mycena hemitrichialis
is difficult to distinguish from
M. hygrophoroides
, but
M. hemitrichialis
has free to subfree lamellae, longer caulocystidia (100-300
x
5-15
μm
) and ellipsoid spores (
Singer 1989
). In comparison with
M. hygrophoroides
,
M. alphitophora
and
M. distincta
have larger basidiomata and longer caulocystidia of more than 400
μm
and 300
μm
, respectively (
Desjardin 1995
;
Aravindakshan and Manimohan 2015
). Their noticeably pigmented pileus enables discrimination of
M. brunneospinosa
,
M. incarnativelum
and
M. roseotincta
from
M. hygrophoroides
(
Desjardin 1995
;
Aravindakshan and Manimohan 2015
). The significantly larger basidiomata and globose spores can be used to distinguish
M. corynephora
,
M. globispora
and
M. yalensis
from
M. hygrophoroides
.
Figure 5. Microscopic features of
Mycena hygrophoroides
(HMJAU 43417, holotype) a Basidiomata b Basidia c Basidiospores d Cheilocystidia e Universal veil acanthocysts f Caulocystidia g Pileipellis. Scale bars: 2 mm (a); 10
μm
(
b-g
). Drawing by Qin Na.