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 occultum
D.M. Masson & Sérus.
,
sp. nov.
MycoBank no. 853875
Diagnosis.
Similar to
Parmotrema crinitum
, but differs by the thicker cupular exciple and by its ITS barcode (
Table 3
).
Holotype
:—
FRANCE
.
Réunion
:
Saint-Benoît
,
Bébour
, piste forestière 3
de Takamaka
, elev.
1240 m
,
21°05’59”S
,
55°34’44”E
, in windward montane rainforest, on bark of branch of
Dombeya
sp.
,
16 August 2017
,
D. Masson
974.4966
(MNHN-PC-PC0088078).
GenBank accession numbers: ITS (
PP
840530), mtSSU (
PP
842604), EF1-α (
PP
852872).
(
Fig. 30
)
Thallus
foliose, moderately adnate, membranaceous to subcoriaceous, up to 16 ×
19 cm
.
Lobes
irregularly branched, imbricate,
5–11 mm
wide, irregularly wrinkled; margins sinuate, crenate to dentate, irregularly isidiate, at times shortly laciniate or lobulate, ciliate (
Fig. 30E
).
Cilia
black, sparse to moderately dense, unevenly distributed at the margin of the lobes and lobules, also present on isidia, slender, mostly simple, rarely 1–2 times branched or slightly squarrose, ca.
0.03–0.05 mm
in diameter at the base, up to
1.8 mm
long.
Upper surface
pale greenish grey, shiny at the periphery, duller towards the centre, ± clearly white-maculate, ± rugose, occasionally a little cracked in the older parts, isidiate, lacking soralia, schizidia, pustules, dactyls.
Isidia
sparse to dense, marginal and laminal, but often more concentrated submarginally, cylindrical to coralloid, occasionally irregularly flattened; often laterally and/or apically ciliate; up to
2.5 mm
high (
Fig. 30D
).
Laciniae
rare, marginal, poorly developed, unbranched to slightly branched, up to
1 mm
long,
0.2–0.5 mm
wide, ciliate, at times isidiate.
Lobules
occasional, marginal, up to 6 ×
9 mm
, ciliate.
Medulla
white throughout.
Lower surface
smooth, rugulose or granulate, shiny towards the lobe tips, duller in the central parts, black to the margin, or with a chestnut brown, erhizinate or partly rhizinate, marginal zone (ca.
1–4 mm
wide) at main lobe tips, lateral lobes with isidia occasionally with a narrow erhizinate, buff or buff-mottled, marginal zone (
0.2–1 mm
wide).
Rhizines
numerous, ± evenly distributed, black, slender, mostly simple, rarely 1–2 times branched or squarrose, up to
3 mm
long.
Apothecia
present in the
holotype
, submarginal, cupuliform, ± flattening with age, up to
8 mm
in diameter, stipitate on constricted stipes (up to
1.3 mm
in diameter); disc imperforate, orange-brown, concave, initially shiny and smooth, then ± rough and dull; margin crenate, with ± branched and ciliate isidia; amphithecium rugose, white-maculate, not or weakly isidiate; hymenium s. lat. (80)–
114.8
–(150) µm high, proper exciple with hyaline layer (8)–
12.3
–(17) µm high, intermediate layer (10)–
16.2
–(25) µm high, cortex-like basal layer (32)–
39.7
–(45) µm high.
Ascospores
8 per ascus, simple, colourless, broadly ellipsoidal to ellipsoidal, (22)23–
27.6
–32 × 12–
14.7
–17(18) µm, Q = (1.57)–
1.88
–2.22(2.31), epispore (3)–
3.5
–(4) µm thick, n = 30, from one thallus.
Pycnidia
rare, submarginal, black.
Conidia
bacilliform 5.5–7.5 × ca. 1 µm.
Upper cortex
palisade plectenchymatous, (15)–
19.0
–(25) µm thick.
Algal layer
here and there briefly interrupted, (15)–
20.3
–(27) µm thick.
Medulla
(110)–
136.7
–(163) µm thick.
Lower cortex
prosoplectenchymatous, (15)–
18.5–
(20) µm thick.
FIGURE 30.
Parmotrema occultum
.
A
: Distribution on Réunion (UTM 2×2 km grid system);
B
: Bioclimatic characteristics of collection sites (abbreviations and threshold values for thermotype and ombrotype horizons from
Rivas-Martínez
et al
. 2011: 17–18
);
C
: Transverse sections of mature apothecia of
P. crinitum
(left,
Masson 974.5107
) and
P. occultum
(right, holotype), stained in lactic cotton blue, showing the cupulate proper exciple clearly thicker in
P. occultum
;
D
: Isidiate lobe with ciliate, simple to coralloid-branched isidia (
Masson 974.4269
);
E
: Gross morphology of thallus (holotype). Scale bars: A = 10 km; C = 100 µm; D = 3 mm; E = 10 mm.
Chemistry
:—
Spot tests and fluorescence
: upper cortex K+ yellow, UV−; medulla K+ yellow,
C−
,
KC−
, P+ orange, UV−.
Secondary metabolites
(
TLC
): upper cortex with atranorin and chloroatranorin; medulla with stictic acid (major), constictic acid (minor), menegazziaic acid (trace), cryptostictic acid (trace) and hypostictic acid (trace).
Etymology
:—From the Latin
occultus
: hidden, concealed. The new taxon is phenotypically very similar to
Parmotrema crinitum
and was confused with it before molecular analysis.
Geographical distribution
:—Currently known only from two localities on the windward side of the
Réunion Island
(
Fig. 30A
), at relatively low elevations (1085 and
1240 m
).
Ecology
:—The two collected specimens were found in cloud forests (windward montane rainforest and
Pandanus
montane wet thicket), one on the bark of a branch of
Dombeya
sp.
, the other on the mossy bark of a trunk of
Pandanus montanus
.
Parmotrema occultum
appears to be an ombrophilous species and somewhat more thermophilous than its close relative
P. crinitum
, as suggested by the bioclimatic indices (bioclimate pluvial tropical) of the two collection localities: thermotype belts = upper thermotropical (It = 500) and lower mesotropical (It = 415), ombrotype belts = upper hyperhumid (Io = 20.8) and ultrahyperhumid (Io = 29.2) (
Fig. 30B
). We did not collect
P. crinitum
at the same locations where
P. occultum
was found, and it would be very interesting to precisely compare the ecological niches of these two lichens, for example in the Forêt de Bébour where both were found, but at different elevations:
1240 m
for
P. occultum
, 1390, 1405 and
1520 m
for
P. crinitum
.
Notes
:—Molecular investigations of Reunionese
Parmotrema
with ciliate lobe margins, commonly ciliate isidia, black lower surface, and unpigmented medulla with stictic and constictic acids as main secondary metabolites revealed the existence of two distinct lineages (
Fig. 3
&
4
). One is most likely
P. crinitum
(see the entry for this taxon). The other relates to a very similar taxon overall, but a posteriori comparative analysis of specimens from both lineages suggests the existence of subtle differences. Compared to
P. crinitum
, the near-cryptic taxon tends to have wider lobes (5–11 vs
2–9 mm
), and the isidiate lateral lobes less frequently have an erhizinate margin on the underside and, when it occurs, it is narrower and buff rather than ivory-white. The average thickness of the cupular proper exciple is an interesting anatomical diagnostic feature, as it is distinctly thicker in
P. occultum
(
Fig. 15A
,
Fig. 30C
). However, these potential phenotypic differences need to be confirmed by examining more thalli, particularly those of
P. occultum
. We found no differences in the relative thickness of the three layers of the proper exciple (Fisher’s exact test, two-tailed,
P
= 0.795), or in the size and shape of the ascospores or conidia (
Table 6
), or in the secondary chemistry (at least with the resolution capacity of TLC).
Hale
(1965a)
and
Hale
& DePriest (1999)
listed seven species-level names as heterotypic synonyms of
P. crinitum
.
Parmelia proboscidea
Taylor
,
Parmelia excrescens
(Arnold) Zopf
(based on
Imbricaria perlata
var.
excrescens
Arnold
), and
Parmelia pilosella
Hue
were described from European material (
Taylor 1836
,
Arnold 1882
,
Hue 1898
). Our phylogenetic tree based on ITS sequences (
Fig. 4
) shows that European specimens from
France
,
Norway
, mainland
Portugal
, and
Switzerland
nest together with North American specimens, and part of the Reunionese material, in the same
Parmotrema
crinitum-P.
perlatum
clade (
Stelate
et al
. 2022
). So, it is unlikely that the names
Parmelia excrescens
,
P. pilosella
and
P. proboscidea
would apply to our near-cryptic taxon. This is also the case with
Parmelia schweinfurthii
Müll. Arg.
, described from the island of
Socotra
,
Yemen
(
Müller 1882
). A specimen from this island, whose ITS has been studied (GenBank accession AY251442), seems to be more closely related to
Parmotrema crinitum
than our near-cryptic taxon (
Fig. 4
).
Parmelia pseudocatharinensis
Gyeln.
is based on
P. catharinensis
Müll. Arg. f.
isidiosa
Müll. Arg.
, from
Brazil
(
Müller 1891
). The
type
material in G is accompanied by two annotation labels by M.
Hale
. One, typed, is dated 1959 and indicates ‘
Parmelia crinita
Ach.
[probably]. Atranorine, stictic acid +’. The other, handwritten and dated 1974, mentions ‘
Parmelia internexa
Nyl. TLC
: stictic, norlobaridone, atranorin, constictic’. The occurrence of norlobaridone in addition to stictic acid and related substances, as well as the non-ciliated isidia (cf. photograph of
type
material from G; cilia not cited in the protologue) are indeed characteristic of
Parmotrema internexum
(
Spielmann & Marcelli 2009
, Lendemer 2015).
Parmelia catharinensis
f.
isidiosa
is therefore a junior synonym of
Parmotrema internexum
, and not of
P. crinitum
as indicated by
Hale
(1965a)
and
Hale
& DePriest (1999)
. The enigmatic
Parmelia tuckermanii
Du Rietz
, from
Cuba
, has non-ciliate isidia and produces small ascospores (7–9 × 14–17 µm), with a thin epispore (ca. 1 µm) (
Du Rietz 1924
). It is therefore quite different from our near-cryptic taxon, and even its synonymy with
Parmotrema crinitum
is questionable. It is much the same for
Parmelia chlorocarpa
Müll. Arg.
, described from
Venezuela
. Philippe Clerc kindly examined for us the
type
in G. Norlobaridone was not detected by TLC and the lobe margins are copiously ciliate. However the isidia are eciliate, and the average thickness of the cupular exciple is more similar to those found in
Parmotrema crinitum
from
Réunion
than to those of our near-cryptic taxon. As we have not found any existing species-level name that could match the near-cryptic species related to
P. crinitum
, we describe it as new.
In our 3-locus analysis, the four species
P. crinitum
,
P. nephophilum
,
P. occultum
and
P. perlatum
were resolved as a single supported clade (
Fig. 3
). The sibling species
P. occultum
was resolved with strong support on a distant branch, and recognized as a distinct species by both Stacey and bPP analyses.
Additional specimen examined (
paratype
)
:—
FRANCE
.
Réunion
: Saint-Philippe, forêt de Saint-Philippe, sentier de Piton Ravine Basse Vallée, elev.
1085 m
,
21°19’28”S
,
55°42’16”E
, in
Pandanus
montane wet thicket, in an overall SSW orientation, on ± mossy bark of a trunk of
Pandanus montanus
,
16 August 2013
,
D. Masson 974.4269
(LG).
Nomenclatural comment
:—The status of species rank for
Imbricaria perlata
var.
excrescens
Arnold
needs further comments.
Hale
& DePriest (1999)
as well as Mycobank (www.mycobank.org, accessed
21 November 2022
) stated
Parmelia excrescens
(Arnold) Hav.
The combination
P. excrescens
was indeed used by
Havaas (1918)
in his work reporting the presence of
Parmotrema crinitum
in
Norway
. However,
Index Fungorum
(www.indexfungorum. org, accessed
21 November 2022
) proposes
Parmelia excrescens
(Arnold) Zopf
, according to an earlier publication (
Engler & Prantl 1907: 34
). Indeed, the new combination already appears in a paper by Zopf published in 1897 (
Zopf 1897: 280
).