A revision of the genus Orbilia in the Canary Islands
Author
Quijada, Luis
Departamento de Botánica, Ecología y Fisiología Vegetal, Universidad de La Laguna, Tenerife 38200, Canary Islands, Spain.
Author
Baral, Hans-Otto
Blaihofstr. 42, D- 72074 Tübingen, Germany.
Author
Beltrán-Tejera, Esperanza
Departamento de Botánica, Ecología y Fisiología Vegetal, Universidad de La Laguna, Tenerife 38200, Canary Islands, Spain.
text
Phytotaxa
2016
2016-11-18
284
4
231
262
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.284.4.1
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.284.4.1
1179-3163
13645048
Orbilia hesperidea
Rolland,
Bull. Soc. Mycol. Fr.
17: 118 (1901)
. (
Fig. 5
)
Apothecia
0.3–0.6 mm
in diam.,
0.2–0.3 mm
high, scattered to subgregarious, deep reddish orange (35. s. r O) to brown-orange (54. br O), slightly erumpent from outer wood fibres, disc flat to slightly convex, margin smooth to slightly crenulate, very slightly protruding.
Asci
*(54)59–68(75.5) × 5.7–6.6(7.3) μm, †(43)46–58.5(64) × 5–6 μm; dead asci with thickened apical wall (0.8–1.3 μm); cylindric-clavate, 8-spored, spores 4-seriate with 2–4 lower spores inverted, pars sporifera *21–31 μm; with a long thin bifurcate base.
Ascospores
*(9.5)11.5–12.5(14) × (1.9)2–2.4 μm, †9.5–12.5 × 1.7–2.2 μm; cylindric-clavate to fusiform-clavate, apex obtuse to subacute, straight to inequilateral or medium curved; SBs *(2.3)3–3.5(4.4) × 0.6–1.3 μm, plug- or rod-shaped to subulate, apically broadly attached.
Paraphyses
cylindrical, slightly to medium clavate to spathulate (rarely lageniform), 3–4-septate; terminal cell *(6)9– 11.7(14.5) × 2.1–3.4 μm, cell below *(7)8.5–10.5(13) × 1.2–2.3 μm; branched at second cell or below; exudate over paraphyses 0.9–2(3) μm thick, hyaline to medium yellow (87. m. Y), continuous or forming broken amorphous clods over paraphyses, not firmly attached, with globose SCBs *1.4–2 μm diam., but also with grayish yellow (90. gy. Y) trapezoid SCBs.
Ectal excipulum
at base and middle flanks of
textura angularis
to
t. globosa
, *(50)64–96(112) μm thick; at margin and upper flank of
t. angularis
to
t. prismatica
, *12–30(43) μm thick; hyaline, not gelatinized, with a continuous or broken, deep orange yellow (72. d. OY) to strong yellow (84. s. Y) layer of amorphous exudate from lower flank to margin, 3–10 μm thick.
Cells of ectal excipulum
*(7)10–11.5(16) × (7)8–9(11.5) μm at base and lower flank, wall thickness *0.3–0.8 μm; *(5.5)7–8.5(12.5) × 2.2–4 μm at margin, with deep yellow (88. d. Y) globose (1.4–2.4 μm diam.), annular (1.6–3 μm diam) and trapezoid (2.3–4.3 × 1.4–3 μm) SCBs.
FIGURE 5.
Morphological features of
Orbilia hesperidea
. 1. Rehydrated apothecia. 2. Living ascospores. 3. Excipular tissues in median section. 4. Living and dead asci. 5. Living and dead paraphyses. 100 μm= 1a–d; 50 μm= 3a; 10 μm= 2a–b, 3b–c, 4a–d, 5a–b. Mounted in: CR= 4d, 5b; H
2
O= 2a–b, 3a–c, 4a–c, 5a. Photos: TFC Mic. 23914= 1a–b, 2a, 3c, 4a, 4c–d, 5b; TFC Mic. 24233= 1c–d, 2b, 3a–b, 4b, 5a.
Specimens
examined:—
SPAIN
.
Canary Islands
:
Tenerife
,
Fasnia, La Morra los Cardones,
28°14’47’’N
,
16°25’47’’W
,
346 m
,
Euphorbia atropurpurea
scrub, on wood of
Periploca laevigata
,
18 December 2013
, L. Quijada & C. Quijada (TFC Mic. 24430!). La Laguna, Anaga Rural Park, Andén de la Cruz,
28°34’03’’N
,
16°18’06’’W
,
337 m
,
Euphorbia canariensis
scrub, on wood and bark of
Bystropogon odoratissimus
,
20 May 2013
, L. Quijada & C. Quijada (TFC Mic. 24233!).
Idem,
Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Hoya el Laurel,
28°31’53’’N
,
16°11’53’’W
,
305 m
,
Euphorbia canariensis
scrub, on wood of
Periploca laevigata
,
5 March 2013
, L. Quijada & C. Quijada (TFC Mic. 23914!).
Distribution and ecology:—
The species has been reported in the northern hemisphere from Europe (
France
). The
type
grew on wood of
Citrus
. Without data about phenology (
Rolland 1901
), but February on herbarium label.
O. hesperidea
occurs on xeric wood and bark of both gymno- and angiosperms and is widely distributed in the mediterranean region of Europe but occurs also in semihumid to semiarid regions of North America and
Australia
(Baral
et al.
in prep.).
Orbilia hesperidea
was found in Macaronesia in winter and spring in the
Euphorbia
scrubs, below
350 m
of altitude. It grows on different woody plants, but was never found on succulent species.
Remarks:—
The original description gave the asci as 70 × 7 μm and the ascospores as *20 × 4 μm (
Rolland 1901
). Rolland saw living ascospores with spore bodies, but his spore measurements are much bigger in comparison to the present range of variation. Re-examination of the
holotype
by one of us (H.B.) revealed distinctly smaller ascospores (†11.5–14.8 × 2.2–2.9 μm), which better correspond to our samples and also to his uncalibrated drawing: when taking Rolland’s drawn ascus as 70 μm, the spores measure about *12.5–17 × 2.1–2.5 μm.
Orbilia hesperidea
can be confused with
O. vinosa
and
O. adenocarpi
. All of them have fusiform ascospores, plug- or rod-shaped to subulate spore bodies and a thickened ascus apical wall.
Orbilia vinosa
has shorter asci (*40–62 μm vs. *54–75.5 μm) and narrower ascospores, usually only up to 1.8–2 μm.
Orbilia adenocarpi
has longer asci (*61–116 x 5.3–7.6 μm) and longer ascospores (*13.2–30 × 1.7–3.2 μm) (
Quijada
et al.
2012
).