Three new species of Inosperma (Agaricales, Inocybaceae) from Tropical Africa
Author
Aignon, Hyppolite L.
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3014-9194
Research Unit Tropical Mycology and Plant-Soil Fungi Interactions, Faculty of Agronomy, University of Parakou, 03 BP 125, Parakou, Benin
hyppoliteaignon@yahoo.com
Author
Jabeen, Sana
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8839-7716
Department of Botany, Division of Science and Technology, University of Education, Lahore, Pakistan
Author
Naseer, Arooj
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4458-9043
Department of Botany, University of the Punjab, Quaid-e-Azam Campus- 54590, Lahore, Pakistan
Author
Yorou, Nourou S.
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6997-811X
Research Unit Tropical Mycology and Plant-Soil Fungi Interactions, Faculty of Agronomy, University of Parakou, 03 BP 125, Parakou, Benin
Author
Ryberg, Martin
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6795-4349
Systematic Biology Programme, Department of Organismal Biology, Uppsala University, Norbyvaegen 18 D, 752 36, Uppsala, Sweden
text
MycoKeys
2021
2021-01-28
77
97
116
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.77.60084
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.77.60084
1314-4049-77-97
D4ED4A46B49A584DA81ED79A30640B4A
3.
Inosperma flavobrunneum
Aignon
, Yorou & Ryberg
sp. nov.
Figs 2c, d
, 5
Diagnosis.
Characterised by yellow to orange-brown pileus, 7-12
x
4-7
μm
smooth, thick-walled, ellipsoid basidiospores with cheilocystidia measuring 23-41
x
7-10
μm
, clavate, thin-walled.
Type.
Holotype
.
Benin, Borgou Province, Tchaorou, Okpara Forest:
9°15.13'N
,
2°43.05'E
on soil in Woodland dominated by
Isoberlina doka
12 June 2017, leg. AIGNON L.H, Voucher (HLA0367), GenBank accession: ITS (MN096199); LSU (MT536754).
Description.
Pileus 28-38 mm diam., umbonate, yellow (5A3) to orange brown (5C5), dark brown in middle, convex when young, plane at maturity, hard, surface rimose, dry. Lamellae emarginated, adnexed and decurrent, yellow brown (5B5). Stipe 27-39
x
5-6 mm, central, cylindrical, uniform; white, equal, solid, hard, base slightly swollen to bulbous, pruinose at the apex. Basidiospores (7.1) 9.2-11.2 (12)
x
(4.1) 5.7-7 (7.2)
μm
, avl
x
avw = 9.2
x
5.7
μm
, Q = (1.2) 1.6-2.1 (2.5), avQ = 1.6, smooth, ellipsoid. Basidia 24-40
x
6-14
μm
, clavate, 2-4 spored. Cheilocystidia 23-41
x
7-10
μm
, clavate, thin walled. Pleurocystidia absent. Pileipellis a cutis thin-walled hyphae 4-16
μm
diam., subparallel, compact hyphae, negative reaction of pileus surface in KOH. Stipitipellis a cutis hyphae 5-10
μm
diam., septate, filamentous, thick, subparallel, compact. Caulocystidia 23-52
x
9-10
μm
, utriform, rare, observed on the upper third of the stipe.
Distribution.
Currently known only from Benin in Soudano-Guinean zone.
Ecology.
Gregarious under Woodland dominated by
Isoberlinia doka
,
I. tomentosa
and Monotes kerstingii
Gilg.
Etymology.
Inosperma flavobrunneum
referring to yellow to dark brown pileus.
Additional specimens examined.
Benin, Tchaorou, Borgou Province, Okpara Forest:
9°15.27'N
,
2°43.40'E
on soil in Woodland dominated by
Isoberlina doka
,
I. tomentosa
13 June 2017, leg. AIGNON L.H, HLA0372, GenBank accession: ITS (MT534290); LSU (MT536756).
Notes.
In the phylogenetic tree (Figure
1
),
Inosperma flavobrunneum
is a sister of
Inosperma
sp. PC96013, an undescribed species from Zambia in Miombo woodland. Morphologically,
I. flavobrunneum
is similar to
I. lanatodiscum
by its yellow to orange-brown pileus, but differs from it by the smaller size of the basidiomata, larger basidiospores, ecological association with
Fabaceae
/
Dipterocarpaceae
Blume and distribution in West Africa.
I. lanatodiscum
is associated with a variety of hardwoods and conifers and is widely distributed from Europe to North and Central America (
Kropp et al. 2013
). The other related taxa are all African taxa not yet described, such as
Inosperma
sp. BB3233 from Zambia and the Democratic Republic of Congo, as well as
Inosperma
sp. G1842 distributed in south-eastern Africa, while
I. flavobrunneum
is distributed in West Africa.
Figure 1.
ML tree of 28S and RPB2 sequences showing the placement of
Inosperma africanum
,
I. bulbomarginatum
and
I. flavobrunneum
. Values above or below branches indicate bootstrap proportions SH-aLRT support ≥ 80% / ultrafast bootstrap support ≥ 95% / Bayesian posterior probabilities> 0.95 as shown. Origin of species is given after the name of each taxon. The new species are in red.
Figure 2.
Macromorphology of:
A
Inosperma africanum
(HLA0383)
B
Inosperma bulbomarginatum
(MR00357)
C, D
Inosperma flavobrunneum
(HLA0367). Scale bar: 1 cm.
Figure 3.
Microscopic structures of
Inosperma africanum
(HLA0383)
A
basidiospores
B
basidia
C
cheilocystidia
D
caulocystidia
E
pileipellis
F
stipitipellis. Scale bars: 3
μm
(
A
); 5
μm
(
B
); 10
μm
(
C-F
).
Figure 4.
Microscopic structures of
Inosperma bulbomarginatum
(MR00357)
A
basidiospores
B
basidia
C
cheilocystidia
D
caulocystidia
E
pileipellis
F
stipitipellis. Scale bars: 3
μm
(
A
); 5
μm
(
B
); 10
μm
(
C-F
).
Figure 5.
Microscopic structures of
Inosperma flavobrunneum
(HLA0367)
A
basidiospores
B
basidia
C
cheilocystidia
D
caulocystidia
E
pileipellis and
F
stipitipellis. Scale bars: 3
μm
(
A
); 4
μm
(
B
); 10
μm
(
C-F
).