Phallus fuscoechinovolvatus (Phallaceae, Basidiomycota), a new species with a dark spinose volva from southern China
Author
Song, Bin
BIN SONG and TING LI contributed equally to this work.
Author
Li, Ting
BIN SONG and TING LI contributed equally to this work.
Author
Li, Taihui
Author
Huang, Qiuju
Author
Deng, Wangqiu
text
Phytotaxa
2018
2018-01-12
334
1
19
27
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.334.1.3
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.334.1.3
1179-3163
13721138
Phallus fuscoechinovolvatus
T.H. Li, B. Song & T. Li
,
sp. nov.
Figs. 1–2
FIGURE 1
. Plate of
Phallus fuscoechinovolvatus
. A: Mature fruiting body of GDGM 48589 (holotype), B: Receptacle of GDGM 48589, C: Indusium and pseudostipe of GDGM 48589. D and E: Immature basidiomata of GDGM 48663 and GDGM 48629, respectively. F:
Spinose volva of GDGM 48589. Scale bars: 10 mm. Photo by: Xiangrong Zhong.
FIGURE 2
. Microscopic features of
Phallus fuscoechinovolvatus
(GDGM 48589, holotype). A: Basidiospores. B: Cells of indusium. C: Hyphae of volva. D: Line drawing of basidiospores. E: Line drawing of hyphae of volva. Scale bars: A, B, C, E = 10 μm, D = 5μm. Structures B and C were mounted in Congo Red mixed with the 5% KOH. Photo by: Ting Li. Line drawings by: Ting Li.
MycoBank: MB 821193
Diagnosis:—Receptacle strongly rugose, yellowish white, with a perforate hole at apex. Pseudostipe snow white to milky white, spongy, with a white indusium. Volva dark brown or blackish, with many white to pale yellow echinules, often dark brown at the base of echinules.
Etymology:—“
fusco
” means dark brown;
“
echinovolvatus
” means a spinose volva. The epithet
“
fuscoechinovolvatus
” refers to the distinct dark brown to blackish spinose volva of the new species.
Typification
:—
CHINA
.
Guangdong Province
,
Shaoguan City
,
Shixing county
,
Chebaling National Nature Reserve
, at
114°15′E
,
24°43′N
;
28 July 2016
, coll.
Bin Song
,
Hao Huang
&
Xiangrong Zhong
(
Holotype
,
GDGM 48589
, MF039585 for nrLSU and MF039581 for ITS)
.
Description:—
Immature basidiomata
globose to subglobose,
20–30 mm
high,
15–25 mm
broad, azonate to slightly zonate, with many white (3A1), yellowish white (3A2), pale yellow (4A3) to dark brown (4F3–5) echinules of
2–5 mm
long. Exoperidium papery, greyish violet (17D5) when bruised, snow white to milk white (1A1–2) in section, gradually turning greyish violet (17D5–7), dark violet (17F6–8), dark brown (4F3–5) to blackish brown (6G8) when exposed; mesoperidium gelatinous or lightly viscous, transparent to subtransparent,
3–5 mm
thick, grey to yellowish grey (3B1–2); endoperidium membranous, quite thin, silky white (1A1–2), partially slightly becoming pale lilac (15B4) at the base of peridium when exposed, covering upper surface of gleba.
Mature basidiomata
90–140 mm
high.
Receptacle
ovoid to slightly conical or bell-shape,
22–40 mm
high,
10–22 mm
broad, strongly rugose, with yellowish white (3A2) ridges, covered with mucilaginous olivaceous brown (4D4–8 to 4E4–8) gleba, with a perforate hole
3–5 mm
diameter at apex, white (1A1) or nearly so when the gleba is removed.
Pseudostipe
cylindrical or fusiform, usually becoming narrower upwards especially at apex and enlarged downwards,
80–130 mm
long, 7–12/15–20/
18–24 mm
broad (apex/middle/base), snow white (1A1) to milky white (1A2), hollow; pseudostipe wall usually of two layers of small chambers, fragile and soft, spongy.
Indusium
coarsely latticed, white (1A1), pendant expanded to 3/4 portion of pseudostipe or usually lower than midway between receptacle and volva. Apertures of indusium large, hexagonal or polygonal,
4–15 mm
broad.
Volva
globose or slightly obovate, concolorous with the surface of immature basidiomata or darker, dark brown (4F3–5) to blackish brown (6G8),
25–45 mm
high,
25–40 mm
broad, with many white (1A1), yellowish white (3A2) to pale yellow (4A3) spines and 1–4 thin white to greyish violet (17D5–7) rhizomorphs.
Taste
mild.
Odour
foetid. The foetid odour is from the gleba; other parts of the basidiomata without gleba have a pleasant odour.
Basidiospores
[100/5/5] (2.5–)3.0–3.5(–4.0) × (1.0–)1.3–1.5(–2.0) μm, Q= (2.00–)2.30–2.43 (–2.50), Qm = 2.36 ± 0.25, cylindrical to broadly ellipsoid, hyaline and very light olivaceous in H
2
O and 5% KOH, inamyloid, thin-walled, smooth.
Receptacle hyphae
2–7 μm diameter, hyaline, thin-walled, branched, septate, with clamp-connections.
Indusium hyphae
composed of globose to subglobose, irregular vesicular or bubble-like cells 32–50 μm diameter, thin-walled.
Volva hyphae
tubular and branched, 2–3.6 μm diameter, thin-walled, smooth, septate, with clamp-connections.
Known distribution:—Known only from
Guangdong province
in southern
China
.
Habit and habitat:—Solitary or scattered on soil, in broad-leaved forests dominated by
Castanopsis chinensis
(Spreng.) Hance
and
Schima superba
Gardner & Champ
, July to September, Chebaling Nature Reserve, at
114°15′05′′ E
,
24°43′05′′ N
, alt.
382 m
.
Additional specimens examined:—
CHINA
.
Guangdong Province
,
Qingyuan
,
Lianshan County
,
Jigongshan Mountain
, at
112°06′59′′ E
,
24°47′58′′ N
, alt.
775 m
,
19 July 1985
, coll.
Zheng Guoyang
(
HMIGD 9037
)
;
Shaoguan
,
Chebaling National Nature Reserve
, at
114°11′43′′ E
,
24°41′48′′ N
, alt.
560 m
,
29 July 2016
, coll.
Xiangrong Zhong
&
Hao Huang
(
GDGM 43465
)
;
Chebaling National Nature Reserve
, at
114°11′57′′ E
,
24°42′15′′ N
, alt.
460 m
,
19 August 2016
, coll.
Xiangrong Zhong
&
Hao Huang
(
GDGM 48663
)
;
Chebaling National Nature Reserve
, at
114°11′58′′ E
,
24°42′16′′ N
,
19 August 2016
, coll.
Xiangrong Zhong
,
Bin Song
&
Hao Huang
(
GDGM 48676
)
.