Species of Russula subgenera Archaeae, Compactae and Brevipedum (Russulaceae, Basidiomycota) from Dinghushan Biosphere Reserve
Author
Xie, Xiu-Chao
School of Biological Science & Engineering, Shaanxi University of Technology, Hanzhong 723000, China. Shaanxi Province Key Laboratory of Bio-resources, Hanzhong 723000, China. Qinba Mountain Area Collaborative Innovation Center of Bioresources Comprehensive Development, Hanzhong 723000, China. Qinba State Key Laboratory of Biological Resources and Ecological Environment (Incubation), Hanzhong 723000, China. Institut de Systématique, Écologie, Biodiversité (ISYEB), Muséum national d’histoire naturelle, CNRS, Sorbonne Université, EPHE, 57 rue Cuvier, CP 39, F- 75005 Paris, France. State Key Lab of Biocontrol, School of Life Science, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou 510275, China.
xiexiuchao@126.com
Author
Buyck, Bart
buyck@mnhn.fr
Author
Song, Yu
School of Biological Science & Engineering, Shaanxi University of Technology, Hanzhong 723000, China. Shaanxi Province Key Laboratory of Bio-resources, Hanzhong 723000, China. Qinba Mountain Area Collaborative Innovation Center of Bioresources Comprehensive Development, Hanzhong 723000, China. Qinba State Key Laboratory of Biological Resources and Ecological Environment (Incubation), Hanzhong 723000, China. Institut de Systématique, Écologie, Biodiversité (ISYEB), Muséum national d’histoire naturelle, CNRS, Sorbonne Université, EPHE, 57 rue Cuvier, CP 39, F- 75005 Paris, France. State Key Lab of Biocontrol, School of Life Science, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou 510275, China.
songyucanada@foxmail.com
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2023
2023-03-30
864
28
63
http://dx.doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2023.864.2085
journal article
264112
10.5852/ejt.2023.864.2085
7fa7c516-7875-493b-9f0f-da7e92896afd
2118-9773
7785576
Russula japonica
Hongo
Figs 11–13
Material examined
CHINA
•
Guangdong Province
,
Zhaoqing City
,
Dinghushan Biosphere Reserve
, on the ground in evergreen broad-leaf forest mainly with
Fagaceae
trees;
1 Oct. 2017
;
F
.
Yuan
&
Y
.
Song
K17100106
;
GenBank
nos:
MN275688
(ITS),
MK881959
(nLSU),
MK882086
(mtSSU),
MT085495
(
rpb1
),
MK880686
(
rpb2
),
MT085596
(
tef1
);
GDGM79697
•
same data as for preceding;
Y
.
Song
K17100104
;
GDGM79709
•
same data as for preceding;
26 May 2015
;
Y
.
Song
K15052631
;
GDGM79700
•
same data as for preceding;
13 Sep. 2015
;
J
.
B
.
Zhang
&
Y
.
Song
K15091301
;
GenBank
no:
MN275680
(ITS);
GDGM79702
•
same data as for preceding;
14 Sep. 2015
;
J
.
B
.
Zhang
&
Y
.
Song
K15091419
;
GDGM79703
•
same data as for preceding;
31 May 2016
;
Y
.
Song
K16053108
;
GDGM79704
•
same data as for preceding;
8 Aug. 2016
;
Y
.
Song
K16080813
;
GDGM79705
•
same data as for preceding;
Y
.
Song
K16080825
;
GDGM79706
•
same data as for preceding;
12 Sep. 2016
;
Y
.
Song
K16091228
;
GenBank
no:
MN275685
(ITS);
GDGM79707
•
same data as for preceding;
5 May 2018
;
Y
.
Song
K18050528
;
GenBank
nos:
MN839579
(nLSU),
MN839629
(mtSSU),
MT085497
(
rpb1
),
MT085656
(
rpb2
),
MT085627
(
tef1
);
GDGM79710
•
On
the ground in coniferous forest;
2 Sep. 2014
;
Y
.
Song
Z14090205
;
GDGM79698
•
On
the ground in broad-leaf and coniferous mixed forest;
8 May 2015
;
Y
.
Song
H15050805
;
GDGM79699
•
same data as for preceding;
6 Jun. 2015
;
Y
.
Song
H15060608
;
GDGM79701
•
same data as for preceding;
12 Jul. 2017
;
Y
.
Song
H17071211
;
GenBank
no:
MN275686
(ITS);
GDGM79708
.
Description
Basidiomata
medium sized to large.
Pileus
7–14 cm
in diam., hemispherical to convex when young, turning applanate with depressed center to infundibuliform; surface glabrous, dry, jet white to chalk white (#FFFFFF, #FAF9F9), often tinged or stained with reddish brown (#FD863D; #F7BE81) when mature; margin undulate and slightly inrolled, rarely cracked.
Lamellae
adnate to slightly decurrent, crowded, unequal with multidymous lamellulae, sometimes forked near stipe, interveined, white at first, turning brownish, reddish brown or yellowish brown (#FDBC78; #F5DA81) with maturity, often rust brown (#FAAC58) stained when old; lamellulae frequent.
Stipe
2.5–7 ×
2.5–4 cm
, central, subcylindrical, often slightly tapering towards base, solid at first, turning spongy with age, white, longitudinally rugulose, turning reddish brown (#FDB262) when bruised.
Context
white, becoming reddish brown (#FDB262) when bruised and brownish in 5% FeSO
4
.
Odor
distinct.
Spore print
cream (#FCF3CF).
Fig. 11.
Fruiting bodies of
Russula japonica
Hongo.
A
–B
. GDGM79699.
C–D
. GDGM79710.
E
. GDGM79706.
F
. GDGM79704. Scale bars = 1 cm.
Fig. 12.
Basidiospores under scanning electron microscope of
Russula japonica
Hongo.
A
–C
. GDGM79699.
D
. GDGM79704.
E–F
. GDGM79706. Scale bars = 1 µm.
Fig. 13.
Russula japonica
Hongo
(GDGM79697).
A
. Basidia.
B
. Cheilocystidia.
C
. Pleurocystidia.
D
. Pileocystidia.
E
. Caulocystidia. Scale bars = 10 µm.
Basidiospores
subglobose to broad ellipsoid, (100/5/5) (5.1–)5.8–6.2–6.6(–6.9) × (4.9–)5.3–5.7–6.1(– 6.5) µm, [Q = (1.02–)1.04–1.12–1.20(–1.23)], hyaline in 5% KOH; ornamentation amyloid, composed of verrucous to cylindrical warts less than 1 µm in height, some fused into crest, mostly connected by fine lines forming partial reticulum; suprahilar spot inamyloid.
Basidia
23–30–33(–38) × 5–7–9(– 12) µm, clavate, 2- or 4-spored, thin-walled; sterigmata 3.5–5.5 × 1–1.5 µm.
Pleurocystidia
(34–)38– 52–64(–72) × 4.5–8–10 µm, subcylindrical to fusiform, with mucronate or papillate apices, thin-walled, with refractive contents, negative in SV.
Cheilocystidia
similar to pleurocystidia in shape, but smaller, 35.5–40–45.5 × 5.5–7.0–8 µm, thin-walled, with refractive contents, negative in SV.
Subhymenium
pseudoparenchymatous.
Lamellar trama
composed of numerous sphaerocytes surrounded by connective hyphae, sphaerocytes measuring 6.5–21 × 5–17 µm.
Pileipellis
divided into two layers, 80–130 µm thick suprapellis composed of ascending to erect hyphae, and 160–240 µm thick subpellis composed of reptant hyphae; hyphae cylindrical, septate, hyaline, thin-walled, 1.5–5 µm wide; terminal cells (8.5–)19–26–35(–44) × 1.5–2–3.5 µm, cylindrical, with obtuse apices.
Pileocystidia
(26.5–)32–58– 103(–120) × 3–4.5–6.5(–8) µm, frequent, distributed both in suprapellis and subpellis, cylindrical, with obtuse or papillate apices, with granular refractive contents, unchanging in SV.
Stipitipellis
100–190 µm thick, composed of cylindrical, septate hyphae measuring 1.5–3.5 µm wide; terminal cells 11.5–17– 24.5×1.3–2–3 µm, cylindrical with obtuse apices, hyaline, thin-walled.
Caulocystidia
33–86 × 4–8 µm, cylindrical, obtuse or papillate, with refractive contents.
Clamp connections
absent in all tissues.
Comments
Russula japonica
has been collected 14 times during our survey and it is a frequent species in DHSBR. Our identification is based on detailed macromorphological comparison and a deposited LSU sequence for a Japanese specimen (AB154697). It is characterized in the field by the nearly smooth pileus and crowded polydymous gills and the appearance of brownish tinges with age. The same characters are also found in
R. polyphylla
Peck
of subg.
Compactae
with which it can easily be confused in the field, but the latter has different microscopic features (see Buyck
et al.
2003).
Russula japonica
was described (
Hongo 1954
) from
Japan
as a mild endemic species close to
R. delica
Fr.
, which is the
type
species of subsect.
Lactarioideae
Maire, now placed in subg.
Brevipedum
. Both in the field and under the microscope, it is a morphological twin of
R. vesicatoria
Murrill
, notwithstanding several errors in Hongo’s original description that suggest the opposite. Spores of Japanese specimens of
R. japonica
have ornaments that are minutely interconnected, just as in
R. vesicatoria
(see
Buyck & Adamčík 2013
), and do not have isolated warts as mentioned in the original description (Buyck unpubl. data) and both possess nearly identical dermatocystidia and hymenial cystidia.
Hongo’s species was originally described as mild, but was later given as having slightly bitter or slowly acrid components, but was never reported to be sometimes burningly acrid as in
R. vesicatoria
. Also
R. vesicatoria
has been described as being very variable in taste, mostly exhibiting a acridity of variable intensity that develops slowly – at least in younger specimens – after an initial mild to bitter sensation.
Kibby & Fatto (1990)
describe the acridity of
R. vesicatoria
as “burningly hot, blistering the lips and long lasting”, thus resuming the elaborate paragraph on taste from Burlingham’s original description (1944).
Bills (1986)
, on the other hand, gives the taste as bitter to disagreeable or mild for older specimens, with the acridity limited to younger specimens. Buyck’s collections from
New Jersey
were completely mild.
Russula vesicatoria
is one of the more common and sometimes very abundant associates of pine on deep sandy soil in the eastern
United States
. It was originally only known from
Florida
(
Burlingham 1944
). In later years,
Bills (1986)
reexamined this species in detail and extended its distribution with records from
Mississippi
,
New Jersey
,
South Carolina
and
Virginia
, describing the closely related
R. angustispora
Bills
with very elongate spores and darker spore print.
Shaffer (1964)
designed a
lectotype
for
R. vesicatoria
and described
R. cascadensis
Shaffer.
The latter species is equally assumed to be very closely related, differing principally by the absence of a clear odor and in being a west-coast species in America.
Shaffer (1964)
also introduced the new
R. inopina
Shaffer
, differing conspicuously, according to Shaffer, by the absence of a strongly acrid-bitter taste and a different smell.
All the above species are conifer associates, principally associated with
Pinus
, and sometimes highly host-specific as in the case of
R. angustispora
, apparently a strictly associate of
Pinus virginiana
Mill.
in its entire range of distribution (
Bills 1986
).
Russula vesicatoria
associates with various 2–3 needle pines (
Pinus taeda
L.,
P. virginiana
,
P. palustris
Mill.
, etc…) always growing in pure sand or sandy soil (
Bills 1986
). However, whereas
R. japonica
was originally described as being associated with
Pinus densiflora
Siebold & Zucc. (
Hongo 1954
)
, it has since mostly been found under
Castanopsis
sp.
and
Quercus
sp.
in
Japan
. Interestingly, a morphologically identical collection to
R. vesicatoria
has more recently also been collected under
Quercus oleoideis
in the tropical lowlands of
Costa Rica
(Buyck unpubl. data), which seems to suggest that both species are not strict conifer associates.
Both
R. callainomarginis
and
R. leucobrunnea
nom. nov.
(illustrations followed) can be distinguished from
R. japonica
because of their different spore ornamentation with much less differentiated warts.