Tropical African Cantharellus Adans.: Fr. (Hydnaceae, Cantharellales) with lilac-purplish tinges revisited
Author
Buyck, Bart
Institut de Systématique, Evolution, Biodiversité (ISYEB - UMR 7205), Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle, Sorbonne Université, CNRS, EPHE, case postale 39, 57 rue Cuvier, F- 75231 Paris cedex 05 (France) buyck @ mnhn. fr
buyck@mnhn.fr
Author
Ndolo, Sydney T.
Faculté des Sciences et Techniques, Université Marien 01 Avenue des Premiers Jeux Africains, B. P. 69, (République du and Initiative des Champignons et des Plantes du Congo 82 rue Oboko, B. P. 2300, Brazzaville (République du ndoloicpc @ gmail. com (corresponding
ndoloicpc@gmail.com
Author
Ebika
NGOUABI, Brazzaville Congo) (ICPC), Congo) author)
Author
Kesel, André De
Meise Botanic Garden, Nieuwelaan 38, BE- 1860 Meise (Belgium) andre. dekesel @ botanicgardenmeise. be
andre.dekesel@botanicgardenmeise.be
Author
Hofstetter, Valérie
Department of plant protection, Agroscope Changins-Wadenswil Research Station ACW, Rte de Duiller, 1260, Nyon (Switzerland) valerie. hofstetter @ agroscope. admin. ch
valerie.hofstetter@agroscope.admin.ch
text
Cryptogamie, Mycologie
2020
2020-09-23
20
10
161
177
http://dx.doi.org/10.5252/cryptogamie-mycologie2020v41a10
journal article
10.5252/cryptogamie-mycologie2020v41a10
1776-100X
12214831
Cantharellus longisporus
Heinem.
(
Figs 2
;
3
)
Cantharellus longisporus
Heinem.
,
Bulletin du Jardin botanique de
l’État,
Bruxelles
28 (4): 409 (1958).
TYPE
MATERIAL
. —
Holotype
.
Central Africa
,
Democratic Republic of Congo
(ex
Belgium Congo
and Zaïre), district forestier central,
Binga
, gregarious and on the ground in a
Gilbertiodendron dewevrei
forest,
IV.1928
,
M
. Goossens-Fontana
692 (
BR
).
MATERIAL
EXAMINED
. —
Republic of the Congo
, Sangha department: Nouabalé-Ndoki National Park, Goualougo,
40 km
E-SE from Bomassa,
2°12.82’N
,
16°31.93’E
;
12.
I
.2012
, herb.
S
.
T
. Ndolo Ebika 737
(
NEST
[
NEST
737],
HICPC
[
HICPC
294]),
S
.
T
. Ndolo Ebika 744
(
NEST
744,
HICPC
295).
Democratic Republic of the Congo
, oriental province, Tshopo district, Yangambi, Man-and-Biosphere Reserve, rain forest dominated by
Gilbertiodendron dewevrei
;
00°47.85’N
,
24°29.87’E
; alt.
450 m
;
26.X.2012
;
P
. Ballings leg.; herb.
De Kesel 5210
(
ADK
[
ADK
5210],
BR
[
BR
5020212167440
V
]); near Binga, in groups on the soil in
Gilbertiodendron dewevrei
forest,
IV.1928
,
M
. Goossens-Fontana 692
(
holo-
,
BR
).
ICONOGRAPHY
. —
Heinemann (1958
: fig. 44; 1959: pl. XVII, fig. 4).
ORIGINAL
DIAGNOSIS
. — “
Pileus carnosus, centro depressus, lobatus, tomentosus, glabrescens, lilacino-armeniacus.
Stipes solidus
, lilacinoroseus, deorsum luteus, pallescens. Lamellae latiusculae, distantes, armeniacae, aciem versus aurantiacae, pallescentes, furcatae, leviter intervenulatae. Caro alba, in pileo dilute armeniaca, basi stipite luteola; sapor pungens. Sporae subcylindricae vel leviter arcuatae, 8-10,5 × 3,8-4,8 µm.
”
ORIGINAL
DESCRIPTION
(
FREELY
TRANSLATED
FROM
FRENCH
). — “
Pileus
6-12 cm
diam., thick and fleshy, convex with incurved margin, then plane with more or less depressed center; margin lobed, crenulate; surface dull, tomentose, becoming glabrous, pinkish lilac with paler margin, then slightly to distinctly more orange, in the center tinged with pink, vinaceous to brownish.
FIG
. 1. — Most likely phylogram obtained by analyses of the 4-locus/103 taxa dataset (-ln = 23519.35654). Branches significantly supported are in
bold
with BS values indicated along the branches. New taxa are in
bold blue
. Names of clades refer to subgenera recognized in
Buyck
et al.
(2014)
. — (note the orthographic correction for subgenera
Rubrini
and
Cinnabarini
).
Blue bars
indicate the distribution of taxa with violaceous tinges in the phylogeny. Scale bar: 0.01 substitution per site.
FIG
. 2. —
Cantharellus longisporus
Heinem.
:
A
, young specimens ([HICPC294] with inserted original watercolor of holotype from
Heinemann 1959
);
B
,
D
, details of the pileus [HICPC295];
C
, cylindrical or widening upwards stipe with hymenophore;
E
, detail of context. Photos: S. T. Ndolo Ebika & P. Ballings.
FIG
. 3. —
Cantharellus longisporus
Heinem.
(HICPC294):
A
, spores;
B
, basidia and basidiola;
C
, hyphal endings of the pileipellis.Scale bar: 10 µm, but only 5 µm for spores. Drawings: B. Buyck.
Stipe
50-90 ×
9-25 mm
, cylindrical or more irregular, solid inside, light reddish lilac, yellowish toward the base, becoming paler with age, sometimes coalescent at the base, basal mycelium apparent.
Hymenophore
with gill folds up to 5(7) mm high, rather spaced, at first pinkish orange to bright orange near the cap margin, then light pinkish with orange shades, rather thin, unequal and forked, with some subtle transversal veins.
Context
firm, white, tinged with yellow near the stipe base, and with pinkish or orange in the pileus.
Taste
acrid.
Smell
weakly of
C. cibarius
when boiling a small piece of the exsiccatum.
Spore print
white to pale.
Exsiccatum
brownish grey to ochraceous brown, stipe concolorous or slightly more yellow, hymenophore reddish brown, context ochraceous to ferrugineous.
Spores
8-10.5 × 3.8-4.8 µm, narrowly ellipsoid to subcylindrical or weakly curved, presenting often a slight depression at the adaxial side, thin-walled, with a small apiculus.
Basidia
measuring for ex. 65 × 7.5 µm, four-spored.
Pileipellis
composed of slender, cylindrical hyphae, measuring 4-11 µm diam., thin-walled and slightly yellowish.
Clamp connections
present.”
HABITAT
. — Dense rain forests of Central Africa, under
ECM
Gilbertiodendron dewevrei
,
either in monospecific stands or mixed with
ECM
Julbernardia seretii
and
Paramacrolobium coeruleum
(Taub.) J.Léonard.
DESCRIPTION
Basidiomata
Large, very firm and fleshy, frequently with few individuals fused together in the lower stipe (
Fig. 2
A-D), up to
100 mm
high and between
85-130 mm
wide when fully expanded.
Pileus
Plano-concave to slightly depressed (
Fig. 2A
), in age often becoming funnel-shaped; the margin first inrolled (
Fig. 2A
), becoming strongly lobed, wavy and straight at maturity (
Fig. 2B, D
); pileus surface azonate, when young entirely dark greyish violet to purple brown (10-11F2-4) from appressed, minute, dark squamules on the orange-yellow background of the surface underneath (
Fig. 2A
), remaining so with age in the pileus center, squamules towards the margin gradually more spaced, losing their dark color at the margin fading to yellowish orange or orange-yellow (4A4-6) (
Fig. 2B, D
).
Hymenophore
Deeply decurrent (
Fig. 2C
), 3-5(-7) mm high, when young composed of spaced, well-differentiated gill folds (4-6 long ones per cm at pileus margin) separated by smooth interstitial spaces and intermixed with up to four lengths of short lamellulae near the pileus margin, not forked, except near the very pileus margin; the interstitial spaces becoming with age gradually more veined over their entire surface with the veins descending on the sides of the gill folds, pale yellowish (4A2-3), brighter and more orange (4A4-6) near the pileus margin, hardly changing when bruised.
Stipe
45-90 mm
high, thick and fleshy, up to
20 mm
diam., cylindrical or widening upwards, sometimes splitting upwards, thereby forming more than one cap (
Fig. 2C
), white to yellowish (4A2) toward the base, marked with violet brown (10-11E2-5) in the upper part from minute squamules.
Context
Fibrous, whitish, clearly yellow in the base of the stipe and just beneath the pileipellis, unchanging when cut or injured (
Fig. 2E
).
Taste
Distinctly peppery.
Odour
Weak, not striking.
Spore print
Off-white on gill folds, pale yellowish in deposit (4A2).
Spores (
Fig. 3A
)
Narrowly ellipsoid to elongate, 7.7-
9.1
-10.5(-10.7) × 3.4-
3.9
-4.5(-4.5) µm {N=25}, Q = 1.96-
2.33
-2.7(-2.75), hyaline, thin-walled, smooth.
Basidia (
Fig. 3B
)
51-
64
-72 × 8.5-
10
-11.5 µm {N=7}, 4-6-spored.
Subhymenium
Subfilamentous, composed of rather narrow, more or less cylindrical cells.
Pileipellis (
Fig. 3C
)
Composed of thin-walled, elongated elements, sometimes slightly wider near the septa, 6.5-10 µm diam.; the terminal cell up to 95 µm long, predominantly subcylindrical, but frequently slightly constricted or somewhat narrowing at the tip.
Clamp connections
Conspicuous on hyphae of all tissues.
NOTES
Cantharellus longisporus
has been variously misinterpreted in the past (e.g.
Morris 1987
;
Ryvarden
et al.
1994
) most likely due to the remarkably long basidiospores – the apparently most prominent feature, reflected in its name – which are also found in a few other African
Cantharellus
species
, all of which share thin-walled hyphal extremities at the pileus surface, although mostly lacking clamp connections.
Field notes for the new collections of
C. longisporus
confirm the distinctly acrid taste mentioned in the original description. This suggests that taste should consistently be recorded when collecting
Cantharellus
in the field as it is a potentially interesting character to distinguish between different
Cantharellus
from this habitat. Another character from the original description is the presence of weak anastomosing veins in between the yellow-orange gill folds in the more mature stages. These veins are principally running down as vertical “ribs” on the lower gill sides.
However, we did not observe the appearance of pinkishlilac colors that Heinemann mentioned for the older stages of the hymenophore.
The extremely variable pileus coloration, which was described (and illustrated) as a mixture of pink, lilac, orange, brown and vinaceous (
Heinemann 1958
,
1959
), made it indeed difficult to decide whether or not specimens with at least one of the aforementioned colors and similar microscopy, belonged to the same species or not. As a consequence,
Buyck
et al.
(2012)
published two new and microscopically similar subspecies for
C. longisporus
from different habitats in
Madagascar
. One of these new subspecies,
C. longisporus
subsp.
littoralis
Buyck & Randrianjohany
, is associated with coastal
Uapaca
species
on the sandy soils of Madagascar’s east coast, while the other one,
C. longisporus
subsp.
isaloensis
Buyck & Eyssart.
, was collected in
Uapaca bojeri
Baill.
–
Sarcolaenaceae
woodland on the lateritic soils of the Central Plateau.
We were unable to obtain sequences from these more recent Central African specimens of
C. longisporus
, as well as for its Malagasy
subsp.
isaloensis
, but we did obtain most genes for
subsp.
littoralis
thanks to more recent collections. The latter subspecies actually corresponds to what
Heim (1936)
originally described as
C. cyanoxanthus
nom. inval., a name later validated – but differently interpreted – for a Central African chanterelle by
Heinemann (1958)
. Even in the absence of good sequence data for the Central African
C. longisporus
, the distinctive morphology of this species revealed here makes it completely different from both Malagasy subspecies. Consequently, these Malagasy subspecies are recombined below as new species as they undoubtedly represent independent, Malagasy
Cantharellus
lineages.