Revision of the Donald T. Kowalski’s collections of Lamproderma (Myxomycetes, Amoebozoa) reveals twice higher species diversity
Author
Ronikier, Anna
text
Phytotaxa
2022
2022-01-21
531
3
175
210
journal article
2467
10.11646/phytotaxa.531.3.2
8355bd7f-e81c-4d51-a858-bcfa8199c450
1179-3163
5886258
Lamproderma ovoideum
Meylan (1932: 370)
.
Fig. 15
Sporocarps in loose groups, stipitate, total height
1.28–1.72 mm
(
Fig. 15A
). Sporotheca ovoid, usually higher than wide, base obtuse or broadly conical,
0.72–1.26 mm
high,
0.72–1.10 mm
diam, brown, only slightly iridescent with blue, violet and golden reflections (
Fig. 15A
). Hypothallus well developed, red brown, continuous and connecting many sporocarps. Stalk 1/4 to 4/9 of the total sporocarp height,
0.40–0.64 mm
long black (
Figs 15A–B
). Peridium persistent, thin, thicker only at base, dehiscing irregularly in large patches, brown in transmitted light, inner surface rough. Columella reaching about one-half of the sporotheca height, cylindrical or tapering upwards (
Figs 15B–C
). Capillitium originating from the greater part of the columella, dense, rigid, brown with white extremities when spores are blown out, rusty brown, dark brown with hyaline extremities in transmitted light, with many anastomoses and many pointed ends (
Figs 15B–C
). Spores in mass dark brown, blackish brown, moderately brown in transmitted light, slightly paler at one side, globose (12)13.0–15 μm in total range, 13.90 ±0.7 μm on average ±SD (n = 30), covered with spines (
Figs 15D–E
), baculate by SEM, baculae about 1 μm high, with slightly irregular tips (
Figs 15F–G
).
FIGURE 15.
Lamproderma ovoideum
Meyl. A. Sporocarps
(note ovoid shape of sporotheca and domination of brown colours). B. Open sporocarp (note brown capillitium). C. Columella and capillitium in transmitted light. D. Spores in transmitted light (edge view). E. Spores in transmitted light (top view). F. Spore by SEM. G. Details of spore ornamentation by SEM. Bars: A–B = 1 mm, C = 500 μm, D–F = 10 μm, G = 3 μm. A–G: coll.
DTK 8401
.
Material examined
:—
USA
.
Mt. Rainer Nat. Park
,
Bench
Lake
Trail
,
4500 ft.
, on twigs,
10 June 1968
,
DTK 8401
(as
L. carestiae
, UC
1408273!)
.
Notes
:—
Kowalski (1970a)
did not recognize
L. ovoideum
as a separate taxon, but considered it to be conspecific with
L. sauteri
. Interestingly, however, none of the revised specimens of
L. sauteri
turned out to be
L. ovoideum
. Only
one specimen
of typical
L. ovoideum
was found in the examined material and this collection was originally identified as
L. carestiae
.
Lamproderma carestiae
was considered by
Kowalski (1970a)
as including
L. ovoideum
var.
cucumer
Meyl.
, currently treated at a species level as
L. cucumer
(Meyl.) Nowotny & H. Neubert.
Lamproderma ovoideum
occurs in Europe, North and South Americas, Asia,
Australia
and
New Zealand
(
Stephenson
et al.
1992
,
Stephenson & Johnston 2003
,
Stephenson
et al.
2007a
, b,
Stephenson & Shadwick 2009
,
Poulain
et al.
2011
,
Ronikier & Lado 2015
).