Tranzscheliella helutae sp. nov. on Agropyron cristatum from Ukraine
Author
Savchenko, Kyryll
Department of Biological Sciences, Butler University, Indianapolis, IN 46208, USA
Author
Mahmood, Huda
Department of Biological Sciences, Butler University, Indianapolis, IN 46208, USA
text
Phytotaxa
2023
2023-04-18
592
2
151
156
http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/PDIS-04-22-0755-PDN
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.592.2.9
1179-3163
7840526
Tranzscheliella helutae
K.G. Savchenko
sp. nov.
MycoBank: 846947
Etymology: After a Ukrainian mycologist Dr. Vasyl P. Heluta.
Sori in the culms and surrounding the upper internodes and axes of abortive inflorescences, initially covered by the leaf sheath, later exposed. Peridium absent. Spore mass semi-agglutinated to powdery, dark brown. Spores globose to subglobose, 4.5–5.5 × 5–6.5 μm, dark olive-brown. Spores rarely with polar cups, medium brown, without appendages; spore wall c. 0.5–1 μm, smooth. In SEM unevenly, moderately verruculose.
Typification
:
UKRAINE
.
Kherson Oblast
:
Hola Prystan District
,
Chernomorsky Biosphere Reserve
,
46°45′15′′ N
, 32°12′74′′ E,
7 m
.
asl,
On
Agropyron cristatum
,
07 June 2009
,
K
.
G
. Savchenko, BUT-F 304 (
holotype
)
.
Other specimens examined
:
UKRAINE
.
Kherson Oblast
:
Hola Prystan District
,
Chernomorsky Biosphere Reserve
,
46°31′35′′ N
, 31°94′22′′ E,
1 m
.
asl,
on
Agropyron cristatum
,
09 June 2009
,
K
.
G
. Savchenko, BUT-F 305 (
paratype
)
.
Note—
Tranzscheliella helutae
is a part of
T. hypodytes
species complex.
Tranzscheliella helutae
is the only species from this genus occurring on
Agropyron
(subfamily
Pooideae
, tribe
Triticeae
).
Agropyron
contains about seven species found in temperate, mostly arid regions of Eurasia (
Dewey 1986
). Several species of
Agropyron
were listed as hosts of
T. hypodytes
s.l.
by
Vánky (2012)
.
Tranzscheliella helutae
has slightly larger and darker spores than
T. hypodytes
s.str.
(4–4.5 × 4.5–5.5 μm). The spores of
T. helutae
are unevenly, and moderately verruculose in SEM, which differ from the densely, minutely, uniformly verruculose spores of
T. hypodytes
s.str.
In the phylogenetic analysis, specimens of
T. helutae
were resolved in a well-supported monophyletic clade (
Fig. 1
). In a concatenated alignment there are 25 base pair differences between
T. helutae
and the most closely related species,
T. yupeitaniae
.