Two new Chrysomyxa rust species on the endemic plant, Picea asperata in western China, and expanded description of C. succinea
Author
Cao, Jing
The Key Laboratory for Silviculture and Conservation of Ministry of Education, Beijing Forestry University, Beijing 100083, China
Author
Tian, Cheng-Ming
The Key Laboratory for Silviculture and Conservation of Ministry of Education, Beijing Forestry University, Beijing 100083, China
Author
Liang, Ying-Mei
Museum of Beijing Forestry University, Beijing 100083, China
Author
You, Chong-Juan
The Key Laboratory for Silviculture and Conservation of Ministry of Education, Beijing Forestry University, Beijing 100083, China
text
Phytotaxa
2017
2017-01-27
292
3
218
230
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.292.3.2
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.292.3.2
1179-3163
13690286
Chrysomyxa zhuoniensis
C. J. You & J. Cao
,
sp. nov.
(
Fig. 2
)
MycoBank no.
:—MB819570
Etymology
:—
zhuoniensis
, referring to the location of the
type
specimen.
Diagnosis
:—
Chrysomyxa zhuonisis
differs from all other
Chrysomyxa
species
on
Picea
in possessing aeciospores with a distinct broad longitudinal smooth cap at ends of spores.
Type
:—
CHINA
,
Gansu Province
: Zhuoni County, on
Picea asperata
Mast.
(
Pinaceae
),
7 August 2012
, coll. Y.M. Liang &T. Yang (
Holotype
: BJFC-R00521).
Gansu Province
: Zhuoni County, on
Picea asperata
Mast.
(
Pinaceae
),
7 August 2012
, coll. Y.M. Liang & T. Yang (
Paratype
: BJFC-R00522).
Spermogonia, uredinia and telia unknown.
Aecia discrete, not confluent, tongue-like, even in width,
0.2–0.5 mm
, up to
3 mm
long, mostly epiphyllous (
Fig. 2A
). Aeciospores ellipsoidal, or ovoid, 24–37 × 17–28 μm, wall plus warts 1.9–3.4 μm (
Fig. 2B
), with a distinct broad, shallow, and smooth cap at one or both ends, with a broken, fissured edge, warts crowded, annulate, tapered or irregular in shape, 4–6 annuli, with uneven tops (
Figs 2C, 2D, 2E
); aecial peridium persistent, cells polygonal, round or square, outer surface deeply convave, with sharply defined edges, slightly rough surface, inner surface flat to convex, with raised edges, warts distinct and densely crowded (
Figs 2F, 2G
).
Notes
:—There are two
Chrysomyxa
species
,
C. nagodhii
and
C. cassandrae
in North America, that resemble
C. zhuoniensis
(
Table 3
). They both have aeciospores with a conspicuous longitudinal cap, but differ in the surface appearance of the cap (
Crane 2005b
), with
C. nagodhii
having a rougher cap with a smooth edge than
C. zhuoniensis
, and
C. cassandrae
with a more broad shallow warted cap with a broken edge.
C. zhuoniensis
differs from the other five known
Chrysomyxa
species
occurring on spruce needles in
China
in its smoother longitudinal cap at ends of aeciospore, with a broken and fissured edge (
Fig 2C, 2D
) (
Table 2
).
C. ledi
psossesses aeciospore with a narrow longitudinal groove, features not seen in
C. zhuoniensis
.
C. qilianensis
and
C. woroninii
which lack a cap on the aeciospore, and the present species
C. zhuoniensis
, with a conspicuous cap at ends of aeciospore, appears to be distinctly different in aeciospore characters, and
C. rhododendri
and
C. succinea
possess aeciospores with a poorly defined longitudinal smooth stipe (
Tai 1979
,
McBeath 1984
,
Wang 1987
,
Cao & Li 1996
,
1999
,
Cao 2000
,
Crane 2005b
,
Zhang 2005
, Kaitera
et.al.
2010).