The genus Catathelasma (Catathelasmataceae, Basidiomycota) in China
Author
Ge, Zai-Wei
Author
Wu, Jian-Yun
Author
Hao, Yan-Jia
Author
Zhang, Qingying
Author
An, Yi-Feng
Author
Ryberg, Martin
text
MycoKeys
2020
62
123
138
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.62.36633
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.62.36633
1314-4049-62-123
8D99EEAE6EE65B3C811708A684E21F85
Catathelasma subalpinum Z. W. Ge
sp. nov.
Figs 2B
, 4
Diagnosis.
Catathelasma subalpinum
is distinguished from
C. laorentou
by having greyish-yellow to grey pilei, higher elevation (alt. 2600-3500 m) occurrence and association with
Pinus densata
Mast.
Type.
China. Yunnan Province: Lijiang, Ninglang, Xichuan Xiang, 14 July, 2010, J. Qin 65 (Holotype: HKAS 67751). GenBank accession numbers: - ITS, MK909099; LSU, MK909121.
Description.
Pileus 3.5-15 cm broad, hemispherical at early stage, expanding to broadly convex with age, shallowly depressed at centre, white to dirty white at first, then greyish-white (1B1) to greyish-yellow (4C4), grey (8B1) when mature, with incurved margin, viscid when wet, sometimes irregularly cracked. Lamellae slightly decurrent, crowded, whitish, thick, 8 mm in height, with 2-3 tiers of lamellulae, with smooth edge, covered by a white, well developed, thick membranous veil in early stage. Stipe 11-14
x
3-5.5 cm, fusiform, attenuated downwards, whitish to yellowish-white, firm, with double annulus in which the lower annulus is flimsy and the upper one is membranous, thick, around 2.5 cm away from the stipe apex; with white inner side and greyish-yellow outer side. Context white in pileus and stipe, not changing colour when cut, 3.5 cm thick in pileus; smell and taste farinaceous. Spore print white.
Basidiospores [43/2/2] (9) 10-12
x
5-6
μm
(mean 10.7
+/-
0.8
x
5.4
+/-
0.5
μm
), Q = (1.67) 1.80-2.20 (2.40), Qm = 1.99
+/-
0.18, subcylindrical in frontal view, subcylindrical to somewhat inequilateral in side view, hyaline in KOH, amyloid, smooth, thin-walled. Basidia 35-45
x
8-9
μm
, narrowly clavate, 4-spored; sterigmata up to 5
μm
long. Pleurocystidia none. Cheilocystidia basidiole-like, hyalinous. Lamella trama subregular, somewhat bilateral towards lamella edge, made up of more or less parallel to interwoven hyphae. Oleiferous hyphae present in both lamella and pileus trama. Pileipellis a thick ixolattice (500-650
μm
thick) of 1.5-10
μm
wide hyphae which gelatinise and collapse, occasionally interspersed with oleiferous hyphae; the layer grading gradually into pileal trama. Clamp connections abundant in all tissues.
Distribution.
Known from Yunnan Province, south-western China.
Ecology.
Presumably ectomycorrhizal, in
Pinus densata
forests distributed at around alt. 2600-3500 m. Solitary to scattered, terrestrial.
Etymology.
The epithet "
subalpinum
" refers to the distribution range of the species.
Additional specimens examined.
China. Yunnan Province: Lijiang, Elephant Hill, 1 August 2011, Q. Cai 495 (HKAS 70091); Ninglang, 6 August 2011, L. P. Tang 1459 (HKAS 69920).
Discussion.
Catathelasma subalpinum
is closely related to
C. laorentou
, which is also from south-western China. However,
C. subalpinum
differs by its higher elevation distribution and its association with
Pinus densata
, while
C. laorentou
has pale yellow to greyish-yellow basidiomes, associations with
P. yunnanensis
and
Keteleeria evelyniana
forests and is comparatively more common than
C. subalpinum
. Besides,
C. subalpinum
has much fewer oleiferous hyphae in the pileipellis. In addition, phylogenetic trees, reconstructed from ITS, 28S, TEF1 and concatenated ITS-LSU-TEF1, support the separation of
C. subalpinum
from
C. laorentou
.
Catathelasma subalpinum
is also morphologically similar to
C. ventricosum
Peck) Singer in general appearance. However,
C. subalpinum
is found in coniferous forest dominated by
Pinus densata
in south-western China, while
C. ventricosum
is associated with hardwood trees in south-eastern North America (
Singer 1940
);
C. subalpinum
has abundant clamp connections in all tissues and longer stipes measuring 11-14
x
3-5.5 cm (compared to the 4-5
x
4 cm for
C. ventricosum
).
Catathelasma singeri
from USA is morphologically somewhat similar to
C. subalpinum
. However,
C. singeri
has a slimy viscid pileus that is more similar to species within the genus
Hygrophorus
Fr. (
Mitchel and Smith 1978
), smaller basidiomes (pileus around 6 cm, stipe 4
x
1.2 cm) compared with those of
C. subalpinum
(pileus up to15 cm, stipe 11-14
x
3-5.5 cm) and narrow, basidiole-like cheilocystidia.
Catathelasma evanescens
, which was described from Wyoming (USA), is similar in general appearance and also has a high elevation distribution. However,
C. evanescens
has obvious distant lamellae, a hollow stipe, a volva-like veil around the base of the stipe and longer but narrower basidiospores measuring 14-17.5
x
3-5
μm
, according to
Lovejoy (1910)
.
Figure 4.
Microscopic features of
Catathelasma subalpinum
(HKAS 67751).
A
Basidiospores
B
Basidia
C
Pileipellis. Oleiferous hyphae are indicated by thick-walled hyphae. Scale bars: 10
μm
.