New species of Rhizomyces (Ascomycota, Laboulbeniales) parasitic on African stalk-eyed flies (Diptera, Diopsidae)
Author
Rossi, Walter
Author
Feijen, Hans R.
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2018
2018-11-08
474
1
13
journal article
22183
10.5852/ejt.2018.474
eb7603a7-9328-484e-897b-ad72c9e80be6
2118-9773
3825121
Rhizomyces forcipatus
W.Rossi & Feijen
sp. nov.
MycoBank No: MB827885
Fig. 1
A–C
Description
Basal cell hyaline, subsigmoid, more than twice as long as the maximum width, lying flat on the insect, with the black foot placed laterally and flanked by a depression apparently working as a sucker. Suprabasal cell (cell II) variable in size, shape and color, usually smaller and sometimes darker than the basal. Stalk cell of the appendage (cell III) distinctly smaller and darker than cell II, from which it is separated by a slightly oblique septum. Free appendage usually exceeding the perithecial apex, with the axis consisting of 12–16 almost hyaline cells gradually longer and more slender, each bearing a branch arising from the upper, outer angle; these branches consist of an elongate basal cell bearing distally 2–4 bottle-shaped antheridia with darker necks and a one-celled short, hyaline, slender and erect cell which gives rise laterally to a vertical series of 4–8 very slender branchlets; the latter are dark brown, distinctly curved, with hyaline and enlarged tips. Perithecial stalk-cell (cell VI) long, slender, flexuous and hyaline (or almost so). Basal cell region well distinguished, tinged with very pale brown, concolorous with the perithecial venter, consisting of relatively large, subequal cells with their outer margins bulging outwards. Perithecium almost three times longer than maximum width, the venter very slightly inflated, distinctly enlarged below the brownish tip, which tapers rather abruptly to a subspherical apex. Trichogyne consisting of a club-shaped cell from which arise distally 4–5 spreading branchlets which are curved or sigmoid, sometimes bifurcate, gradually tapering towards the apex. Length from foot to perithecial apex
210–345 µm
; from foot to the apex of the appendage
250–400 µm
; perithecium 70–75 ×
25–30 µm
; antheridia about
20 µm
.
Etymology
From Latin
forceps
, referring to the forceps-like shape and function of the basal cell.
Types
KENYA
:
Naro Moru
river, on
Centrioncus decoronotus
Feijen
,
1983
, 20 Jul. 1987,
H.R. Feijen
leg. (holo-:
FI
4100a; iso-:
FI
4100b); same data as preceding except different host
specimens
(para-:
FI
4099,
FI
4101,
FI
4102).
MALAWI
: Mt. Soche, on sternites of male
Centrioncus jacobae
Feijen, 1983
,
19 Mar. 1972
,
H.R. Feijen
leg. (para-: FI 4103, RMNH-HF-74); same data as preceding except on wing of the same host specimen (para-: RMNH-HF-90); Mt. Soche, on sternites of male
Centrioncus jacobae
,
7 Jan. 1973
,
H.R. Feijen
leg. (para-: RMNH-HF-86, RMNH-HF-87); same data as preceding except on wing of female
Centrioncus jacobae
(para-: RMNH-HF-88); Mt. Ndirande, on wing of female
Centrioncus jacobae
,
16 Feb. 1974
,
H.R. Feijen
leg. (para-: RMNH-HF-73).
Fig. 1.
Photomicrographs of the new species of
Rhizomyces
Thaxt.
:
A
.
R. forcipatus
W.Rossi & Feijen
sp. nov.
(FI 4100a).
B
. Thallus of
R. forcipatus
sp. nov.
from the wing of
Teloglabrus
sp. (FI 4125).
C
. Immature thallus of
R. forcipatus
sp. nov.
showing the trichogyne and the basal cell holding firmly a piece of the exoskeleton of the host insect (FI 4099).
D
.
R. tschirnhausii
W.Rossi & Feijen
sp. nov.
(FI 4091).
E
. Upper portion of the perithecium of
R. tschirnhausii
sp. nov.
(FI 4090).
F
.
R. ramosus
W.Rossi & Feijen
sp. nov.
(FI 4201a), amid the four mature perithecia, near the base of the stalk cells, it can be seen a fifth very immature perithecium bearing the trichogyne.
G
.
R. ramosus
sp. nov.
(FI 4201a), the pyriform haustorium with remains of the host integument and cell I showing two primordia of new branches. Scale bars: 50 µm.
IVORY COAST
: Amanikro, on the wing of a female
Centrioncus decellei
Feijen, 1983
,
Sep. 1961
(para-: RMNH-HF-3).
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
,
Eastern Cape
, Hogsback, Tyume Forest,
32.6029° S
,
26.9384° E
,
1166 m
a.s.l., on
Teloglabrus
sp.,
10 Apr. 2010
,
A.H. Kirk-Spriggs
&
V. de Swart
leg. (para-: FI 4125, FI 4126);
Western Cape
, Buffelsbos forest,
33.9026° S
,
23.6388° E
,
400 m
a.s.l., on
Teloglabrus australis
Feijen, 1983
,
27 Mar. 2009
,
A.H. Kirk-Spriggs
leg. (para-: FI 4129).
Remarks
The description is based on the parasites obtained from the sternites of the host insects; thalli growing on the wings are smaller (
180–255 µm
from foot to perithecial apex:
Fig. 1B
). The thalli observed on
Centrioncus jacobae
are paler, more slender and longer on average (up to
550 µm
from foot to perithecial apex).
Rhizomyces forcipatus
sp. nov.
is distinguished from all the other species in the same genus by the peculiar shape and function of the basal cell. The latter is turned in, forming a ‘forceps’ which grasps a fold of the exoskeleton of the host insect (
Fig. 1C
).
Rhizomyces forcipatus
sp. nov.
bears a superficial resemblance with
R. crispatus
. However, the latter species has a stockier habitus, a more luxuriant appendage, a distinctly smaller and darker cell III, a darker and subconical tip of the perithecium, and it obviously differs from the new species in the shape of the basal cell.
The presence of this fungus was already reported on various species of
Centrioncus
Speiser, 1910
and
Teloglabrus
Feijen, 1983
by
Feijen (1983)
.
Rhizomyces forcipatus
sp. nov.
is found on several species of the genera
Centrioncus
and
Teloglabrus
. This is remarkable, since the species of these genera occur in Afromontane forests and have very limited, allopatric distributions (
Feijen 1983
). The rate of parasitism came to 17%; however, this figure was lowered by the large
Teloglabrus sanorum
Feijen, 1983
sample of young flies. In female flies,
R. forcipatus
sp. nov.
was only found on the wings. In male hosts, the thalli were found on the wings (79%) and on the sterna (30%). Thalli were most often found on both wings together (61%), followed by right wing only (32%). 90% of thalli found on the sterna of males flies were on the left hand side (
Table 2
).