New species of Tayloriellina (lichenized Ascomycota, Teloschistaceae) from Bolivia
Author
Wilk, Karina
text
Phytotaxa
2023
2023-09-26
616
2
183
188
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.616.2.8
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.616.2.8
1179-3163
8389654
Tayloriellina malmeana
Wilk
,
sp. nov.
MycoBank number: 849807
Thallus areolate-subsquamulose to granulose, orange yellow to creamy/grey side by side, with indistinct globose isidia in places.Apothecia abundant, zeorine, apothecial discs intensively orange.Ascospores polarilocular, ellipsoid to narrowly ellipsoid, medium size, 11‒17 × 4.5‒8.0 µm, septum 3.0‒5.0 µm.
Type
:—
BOLIVIA
. Dept.
Cochabamba
, Prov. Quillacollo:
East Cordillera
, area of
Inkarraya-Sipesipe
, dry
Inter-Andean Valleys
,
3146 m
elev.,
17°29’25”S
,
66°22’09”W
, rocky and shrubby slope, sunny place, E exposed,
17 December 2004
,
K. Wilk
3206 (KRAM-L-71766‒
holotype
,
LPB
, B‒isotypes)
.
(
Fig. 1
)
Thallus
tiny, areolate to subsquamulose or granulose, 70‒120 µm thick, usually discontinuous, irregular in outline, orange yellow, creamy to light gray, often occurs with orange and grayish thalli side by side, epruinose, subsquamules crenate, areoles
0.1‒0.4 mm
in diam.; vegetative propagules scarce, as small globose isidia, concolorous with thallus, scattered; prothallus absent.
Thalline cortex
clearly paraplectenchymatous, even, 5‒45 µm thick, anthraquinone pigments present, K+ red, or absent; necral layer present, ca. 8.5 µm thick, covered by thin layer of granules insoluble in K and N, pol+ creamy;
algal layer
continuous,
algae
chlorococcoid, 5‒14 µm in diam.
Apothecia
abundant, crowded, initially immersed, then erumpent to adnate, round or angular by compression, distinctly zeorine, up to
0.7 mm
in diam.; disc first concave, then plane, intensive orange, epruinose, even;
apothecial margin
medium thick, more or less elevated above discs;
proper margin
conspicuous, slightly paler than disc, epruinose;
thalline margin
usually partly reduced, orange or creamy/gray, even.
Parathecium
thin, 50‒70 µm thick, prosoplectenchymateous, anthraquinone pigments present.
Amphithecium
thick, 60‒130 µm thick, partly reduced,
apothecial cortex
indistinct, thin, 5‒15 µm thick, anthraquinone pigments present or absent;
algae
abundant, forming continuous layer (but algae fewer below hypothecium);
epihymenium
brownish yellow, granular (anthraquinones), K+ red;
hymenium
75‒85 µm thick;
hypothecium
85‒110 µm thick, prosoplectenchymatous, pale yellowish, oil droplets absent; paraphyses simple to branched, 1 µm broad at base, with upper cell 3‒4 µm wide.
Asci
8-spored;
ascospores
hyaline, ellipsoid to narrowly ellipsoid, thin-walled, (11‒)13.5±1.2(‒17) × (4.5‒)5.8±0.6(‒8.0) µm, septum (3.0‒)3.7±0.7(‒5.0) µm (n= 79).
Pycnidia
not abundant, ostiole orange, partly immersed,
conidia
bacilliform, 2‒3 × 1 µm (n= 15).
Spot tests:
Apothecial discs K+ red, thallus K+ red or K–.
Etymology:
The epithet is derived from the name of the Swedish lichenologist Gustav Oskar Andersson Malme (1864–1937) in appreciation of his major contribution to the knowledge of South American
Teloschistaceae
.
Habitat and distribution:
The species was found growing on tree bark (branches) in semiarid, shrubby and rocky slops in Inter-Andean Valleys in
Bolivia
, at the elevation of ca.
3000 m
. It is known only from
Bolivia
.
FIGURE 1.
Tayloriellina malmeana
(holotype, K. Wilk 3206, KRAM).
A. B.
Habit of thallus, creamy (B) and grayish forms (B).
C.
Cross-section of apothecium.
D. E.
Cross-sections of thallus in regular (D) and polarized light (E, arrow indicates granule layer, pol+ creamy, insoluble in K and N).
F.
Ascospores.
G.
Pycnospores (paratype, K. Wilk 3198, KRAM). Scales: A, B = 1 mm; C = 100 µm; D, E = 50 µm; F = 20 µm; G = 10 µm.
The collecting site was shared with other species of the
Teloschistaceae
recently reported, e.g.
Cinnabaria boliviana
Wilk & Lücking
in
Wilk
et al.
(2021: 113)
,
Scutaria andina
(
Räsänen 1939: 140
) Søchting, Frödén & Arup
in
Arup
et al.
(2013: 63)
, and
Wetmoreana
spp.
(
Wilk
et al.
2021
).
Note:
Tayloriellina malmeana
is characterized by delicate, orange-yellow, creamy to gray, areolate-subsquamulose to granulose thalli, and numerous, zeorine apothecia with intensive orange discs. Vegetative propagules are scarce, in the form of globose isidia, concolorous with the thallus. The thallus cortex is thin but clearly paraplectenchymatous, covered by a necral layer, with or without anthraquinones, but always with other colorless granules insoluble in K and N, pol+ creamy (
Figs 1D–E
).
The molecular analysis indicates that
T. malmeana
is closely related to
T. microphyllina
(
Fig. 2
). The two species are, however, clearly separated by their thallus morphology—in
T. microphyllina
the thallus is generally much better developed and mostly dark orange, not dominated by apothecia, but producing distinct and usually abundant orange soralia. Moreover,
T. microphyllina
has distinctly smaller ascospores (10‒14 µm vs. 11‒17 µm in
T. malmeana
), and larger apothecia (up to 1.0 mm vs. up to
0.7 mm
in
T. malmeana
) (
Wetmore 2004
).Another similar species,
“
Caloplaca
” trabicola
differs from
T. malmeana
in having a whitish areolate thallus, numerous and distinct pycnidia, and larger spores with distinctly thicker spore septa [(12‒)14.9±1.1(‒16) × (5.0‒)6.5±0.6(‒7.0) µm, septum (5.0‒)5.9±1.0(‒9.0) µm (n= 17)] (
Fig. 3
).
Tayloriellina malmeana
is also similar to
“
Caloplaca
” durietzii
H. Magn. (1953: 188). According to
Magnusson (1953)
the latter taxon, in comparison to
T. malmeana
, has a thallus that is mostly indistinct, it has ±lecanorine apothecia with crenulate margins, and it does not produce vegetative propagules.
“
Caloplaca
” durietzii
was examined by
Gaya
et al.
(2015)
and
Kondratyuk
et al.
(2014
,
2015b
), and the results suggest that
“C.” durietzii
is nested in the subfamily
Xanthorioideae
, in the genus
Scythioria
S.Y. Kondr.
et al.
in
Kondratyuk
et al.
(2014: 156)
. Finally,
T. malmeana
has some similarities with an undescribed species,
“
Caloplaca
”
sp. 5, studied by
Wetmore (2007)
. Both produce globose isidia but the latter forms an orange, areolate thallus with abrupt margins, and apart from the isidia, the thallus margin may also bear small lobules.
During taxonomic studies on
“
Caloplaca
” byrsonimae
s. lat.
from Swedish Museum of Natural History (S),
two specimens
collected by Malme in
Paraguay
(S-L50600, S-L50601;
Malme 1926
) were found to be superficially very similar to the Bolivian material of
T. malmeana
. These were recognized as a putative undescribed species (under elaboration), different from
“C.” byrsonimae
(
Malme 1926: 14
) Zahlbr. (1930 [1931]: 80) s.str. The latter resembles
“
Caloplaca
” granularis
(Müll. Arg. 1888: 63) Zahlbr. (1930 [1931]: 141) in that it produces distinct yellow-orange soralia and it lacks a distinct thallus (see also
Wetmore 2004
). The Malme specimens from
Paraguay
differs from
T. malmeana
by having a better developed, permanently gray thallus (K–), common blastidia and longer ascospores with distinctly thicker spore septa. Due to its high similarity to
T. malmeana
, the
Paraguay
material of
“C.” byrsonimae
s. lat.
may be considered to belong to
Tayloriellina
. However, further studies must be carried out especially to compare specimens from
Paraguay
with additional
“
Caloplaca
” trabicola
collections, which produces similar ascospores and also shares a similar morphology.
FIGURE 2.
Phylogenetic placement of
Tayloriellina malmeana
within the subfamily
Teloschistoideae
derived from maximum likelihood (ML) analyses of rDNA ITS locus. ML bootstrap value are presented at the nodes.
Wetmoreana decipioides
was used to root the tree.
Paratypes
examined:
BOLIVIA
. Dept.
Cochabamba
, Prov. Quillacollo:
East Cordillera
, area of
Inkarraya-Sipesipe
, dry
Inter-Andean Valleys
,
3146 m
elev.,
17°29’25”S
,
66°22’09”W
, rocky and shrubby slope, sunny place, E exposure,
17 December 2004
,
K. Wilk
3177, 3181, 3198, 3199, 3206, 3207, 3250, 3255, 3211, 3263 (
KRAM
,
LPB
and B);
2846 m
elev.,
17º28’39”S
66º21’43”W
,
17 December 2004
,
A. Flakus
4933 (
KRAM
,
LPB
)
.
Comparative material seen:
“
Caloplaca
” brysonimae
:
BRAZIL
. Matto Grosso, Serra da Chapada, pr. S„o
Jeronymo
,
3 June 1894
, G. A:n,
Malme
s. n. (S-L2644,
holotype
)
.
PARAGUAY
. ad arborem solitariam, in coni apricot,
2 September 1892
, G. A:n,
Malme
1491
××
and 1491 (S-L50600, S-L50601,
syntypes
).
“
Caloplaca
” trabicola
:
URUGUAY
.
Florida
,
22 January 1949
,
H. S. Osorio
1752 (
F
).
Tayloriellina erythrosticta
:
AUSTRALIA
.
Western Australia
, “
Dryandra Forest
”, a few km
NW of Narrogin
,
17 August 1994
,
K. & A. Kalb
s. n. (
Obermayer
,
Lichenoth. Graec.
26,
B
).
Tayloriellina microphyllina
: Wetmore, Telosch. Exsicc.
58–63 (
KRAM
).
Wetmore
,
Lich. Exsicc.
180 (
KRAM
)
.