Dominikia litorea, a new species in the Glomeromycotina, and biogeographic distribution of Dominikia
Author
Błaszkowski, Janusz
Department of Ecology, Protection and Shaping of Environment, West Pomeranian University of Technology in Szczecin, Słowackiego 17, 71 - 434 Szczecin, Poland
Author
Ryszka, Przemysław
Institute of Environmental Sciences, Plant-Microbial Interactions Group, Jagiellonian University, Gronostajowa 7, 30 - 387 Kraków, Poland
Author
Kozłowska, Anna
Department of Ecology, Protection and Shaping of Environment, West Pomeranian University of Technology in Szczecin, Słowackiego 17, 71 - 434 Szczecin, Poland
text
Phytotaxa
2018
2018-02-16
338
3
241
254
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.338.3.2
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.338.3.2
1179-3163
13719995
Dominikia litorea
Błaszk. & Kozłowska
,
sp. nov
.
Fig. 3A‒H
MycoBank MB 823832
Collections examined
:
Holotype
:—
ZT
Myc 58910 (
Z
+
ZT
),
isotypes
: 3602‒3614 (
DEPSE
), and
OSC 161511
,
OSC 161512
(
OSC
).
Etymology
:—
litorea
, referring to the sandy dunes, in which the species exists.
Diagnosis
:—Differs from
D. indica
in the phenotypic and histochemical properties of spore wall layers, the morphological characters of the spore subtending hypha, and in molecular phylogeny.
Description
:—Spores formed in soil in loose to compact clusters of 3‒22 spores; develop blastically at the tip of hyphae branched from a parent hypha continuous with a mycorrhizal extraradical hypha (Fig. 3A‒H); clusters frequently with incorporated soil debris (Fig. 3D, E).
Spores
hyaline; globose to subglobose; (11‒)25(‒35) μm diam; rarely egg-shaped or irregular, 23‒33 × 29‒50 μm; with one subtending hypha (Fig. 3A‒H).
Spore wall
consists of two layers (layers 1 and 2) of equal thickness, (0.8‒)1.0(‒1.2) μm thick (Fig. 3B‒H). Layer 1, forming the spore surface, permanent, unit (not divided into visible sublayers), smooth. Layer 2 permanent, laminate, smooth, consisting of very thin, <0.5 μm, sublayers tightly adherent to each other and therefore difficult to see; this layer frequently separates from the lower surface of layer
1 in
crushed spores and uncrushed spores subjected to the pressure of a microscope cover slip (Fig. 3B‒G). In Melzer’s reagent, only layer 2 usually stains pale red (7A3) to pastel red (7A5), rarely high red (9A8), or turns pastel yellow (3A4; Fig. 3C‒H).
Subtending hypha
hyaline; straight or recurved, usually funnel-shaped, more rarely cylindrical, rarely slightly constricted at the spore base; (2.5‒)3.7(‒9.0) μm wide at the spore base (Fig. 3C‒H).
Wall of subtending hypha
hyaline; (0.8‒)1.3(‒2.0) μm thick at the spore base; composed of two layers continuous with spore wall layers 1 and 2 (Fig. 3G, H).
Pore
(0.8‒)1.6(‒5.8) μm diam, open (Fig. 3F‒H).
Germination
unknown.
Mycorrhizal associations
:—As indicated studies of trap cultures, in the field,
D. litorea
probably lived in mycorrhizal symbiosis with
X. spinosum
that had colonized sand dunes of the Mediterranean Sea located near Verico,
Greece
. However, spores of the fungus were not found in the field-collected rhizosphere soil of
X. spinosa
and no molecular analyses were performed to confirm the presence of
D. litorea
in roots of the plant species.
In single-species cultures with
P. lanceolata
as host plant,
D. litorea
formed mycorrhiza with arbuscules, vesicles, and intra- and extraradical hyphae. All the structures were widely distributed along the root fragments examined and stained clearly [violet white (16A2) to deep violet (16E8)] in 0.1% Trypan Blue.
Distribution and habitat
:—Despite during the last 34 years J. Błaszkowski examined the occurrence of AMF in ca. 2500 field-collected soil samples and ca. 3000 trap cultures that represented different habitats, mainly maritime dunes, located in different regions of Africa, Asia, Europe,
Brazil
and
USA
,
D. litorea
was found only in one trap culture. The culture represented the
Greece
sand dunes of the Mediterranean Sea located near Verico. However, BLAST searches indicated that
D. litorea
has probably also been associated with roots of an unnamed plant species growing in
China
. The identity of the SSU‒ITS‒LSU sequences of
D. litorea
and two SSU‒ITS‒LSU sequences (KF836940, KF836961) of the Chinese AMF named
Glomus
sp. 6
, which were obtained in so called environmental studies, was 98%. Of the RPB1 gene sequences deposited in public databases, the percent identity of none suggested a molecular conspecificity with our new species. The highest identity was only 92% and regarded, among others,
D. indica
.