Small island but great diversity: thirty six species of Parmotrema (Parmeliaceae, lichenized Ascomycota), including sixteen new species, on Réunion (Mascarenes), with additional data from the Western Indian Ocean
Author
Masson, Didier
0000-0002-3340-5472
Vertevoye, 2860 route d’Irieu, F- 40390 Saint-Martin-de-Seignanx, France di. masson @ wanadoo. fr; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 3340 - 5472
di.masson@wanadoo.fr
Author
Magain, Nicolas
0000-0001-5409-9518
Evolution and Conservation Biology, InBios research centre, Sart Tilman B 22, Quartier Vallée 1, Chemin de la vallée 4, B- 4000 Liège, Belgium nicolas. magain @ uliege. be; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0001 - 5409 - 9518
nicolas.magain@uliege.be
Author
Sérusiaux, Emmanuël
0000-0002-3340-5472
Vertevoye, 2860 route d’Irieu, F- 40390 Saint-Martin-de-Seignanx, France di. masson @ wanadoo. fr; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 3340 - 5472 & Evolution and Conservation Biology, InBios research centre, Sart Tilman B 22, Quartier Vallée 1, Chemin de la vallée 4, B- 4000 Liège, Belgium e. serusiaux @ uliege. be; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 0456 - 0131 * Corresponding author & Vertevoye, 2860 route d’Irieu, F- 40390 Saint-Martin-de-Seignanx, France di. masson @ wanadoo. fr; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 3340 - 5472
di.masson@wanadoo.fr
text
Phytotaxa
2024
2024-06-27
657
1
1
138
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.657.1.1
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.657.1.1
1179-3163
13217474
Parmotrema aurantioreagens
D.M. Masson & Sérus.
,
sp. nov.
MycoBank no. 853865
Diagnosis.
Shares with
P. explanatum
(Hale) Hale
the barbatic acid chemosyndrome, a rare medullary chemistry in the genus
Parmotrema
, but differs chiefly by the presence of marginal cilia, soralia, a maculate upper surface and the corticolous habit.
Holotype
:—
FRANCE
.
Réunion
:
Sainte-Suzanne
, les
Hauts de la Perrière
, elev.
765 m
,
20°58’44”S
,
55°33’52”E
, in disturbed windward submontane rainforest in overall NE orientation, on roadside, on bark of a branch of an undetermined tree,
11 August 2015
,
D. Masson
974.4598
(MNHN-PC-PC0088068).
GenBank accession numbers: ITS (
PP
840413), mtSSU (
PP
842550), EF1-α (
PP
852812).
(
Fig. 7
)
Thallus
foliose, loosely adnate, membranaceous, ca. 12 ×
8 cm
(thallus fragmented).
Lobes
irregular, imbricate,
5–11 mm
wide, irregularly wrinkled, sometimes convolute, with margins undulating, crenate to laciniate when sorediate, rarely lobulate, ciliate (
Fig. 7E
).
Cilia
black, unevenly distributed (
Fig. 7C
), simple, very rarely 1–2 times branched, ca.
0.04–0.05 mm
in diameter at the base, up to
3 mm
long.
Upper surface
pale greenish grey, mat or slightly shiny, faintly to clearly effigurate white-maculate, slightly wrinkled, rarely smooth, sometimes cracked in the older parts, sorediate, lacking schizidia, pustules, dactyls, phyllidia and isidia.
Soralia
marginal at the tip of short laciniae (
Fig. 7D
), occasionally somewhat labriform.
Soredia
subgranulose, (30)–
42.3
–(60) µm in diameter (n = 30, from 1 thallus, SD = 7.7 µm).
Lobules
occasional, marginal, up to 2 ×
2.5 mm
.
Medulla
white throughout.
Lower surface
smooth or granulose, rather dull in the central part, shiny in the periphery, black to the margin, or with an ochraceous-buff erhizinate marginal zone (ca.
1–3.5 mm
wide) at main lobe tips; sorediate laciniae often ivory mottled (
Fig. 7D
).
Rhizines
± in clusters, sometimes rather dense, concolor to the lower surface, often with pale tip when young, simple, rarely 1–2 times branched, slender, heterogeneous in size, up to
2.5 mm
long.
Apothecia
not present.
Pycnidia
not present.
Upper cortex
palisade plectenchymatous, not fragile, (9)–
14.2
–(25) µm thick.
Algal layer
discontinuous, (0)–
17.0
–(30) µm thick.
Medulla
(67)–
77.0
–(83) µm thick.
Lower cortex
prosoplectenchymatous, (11)–
14.2–
(17) µm thick.
FIGURE 7.
Parmotrema aurantioreagens
.
A
: Distribution on Réunion (UTM 2×2 km grid system);
B
: Bioclimatic characteristics of collection site (abbreviations and threshold values for thermotype and ombrotype horizons from
Rivas-Martínez
et al
. 2011: 17–18
);
C
: Upper surface of lobes with marginal cilia unevenly distributed (holotype);
D
: Sorediate lobe with marginal soralia at the tip of short laciniae, and margin of lower surface mottled with ivory white (holotype);
E
: Gross morphology of thallus (holotype). Scale bars: A = 10 km; C = 5 mm; D = 4 mm; E = 10 mm.
Chemistry
:—
Spot tests and fluorescence
: upper cortex K+ yellow, UV−; medulla K−,
C
+ orange,
KC
+ orange, P−, UV± bluish-white.
Secondary metabolites
(
TLC
): upper cortex with atranorin and chloroatranorin; medulla with barbatic acid (major), 4-
O
-demethylbarbatic acid (major), and obtusatic acid (trace).
Etymology
:—The specific epithet refers to the orange reaction of the medulla produced by the C and KC spot tests.
Geographical distribution
: —So far known from a single locality on
Réunion Island
, at an elevation of
765 m
, on the northern slope of the Piton des Neiges massif (
Fig. 7A
).
Ecology
:—The species was found on the bark of a branch of an undetermined tree, on the side of a road through a degraded windward submontane rainforest covering a northeastern facing slope. Various alien plants invaded this forest, mainly Strawberry Guava (
Psidium cattleianum
Afzel. ex Sabine
). The bioclimate of the locality is pluvial tropical, thermotype belt = upper thermotropical (It = 500), ombrotype belt = lower hyperhumid (Io = 16.2) (
Fig. 7B
).
Notes
:—
Parmotrema aurantioreagens
is primarily characterized by its medullary chemistry, which is uncommon in the genus
Parmotrema
. Only one other species,
P. explanatum
, has both barbatic and 4-
O
-demethylbarbatic acids as major substances (
Hale
1965b
, label of the
isotype
kept in the
US
herbarium). However,
P. explanatum
lacks marginal cilia, vegetative propagules, and maculation on the upper surface, and its medulla is twice as thick (
Hale
1965b
).
Parmotrema insuetum
(Kurok.) Hale
,
P. matudae
(Kurok.) Hale
ex
DePriest & B.W. Hale
and
P. neodiffractaicum
R.S. Egan
are also sorediate species with barbatic acid in the medulla, but they are eciliate, emaculate, and they all contain diffractaic acid as the major substance, not 4-
O
-demethylbarbatic acid (
Kurokawa 1984
,
Louwhoff & Elix 1999
,
Egan
et al
. 2016
).
As demonstrated by our phylogenetic analysis of a 3-locus data matrix (
Fig. 3
),
Parmotrema aurantioreagens
belongs to a supported clade, comprising two other species either described as new in this paper (
P. mascarenense
) or already described (
P. meiospermum
). All three are possible endemics to the Mascarenes.