Back to Search
Start Over
Inocybe leucophaea Eyssart. & Buyck 2022, sp. nov
- Publication Year :
- 2022
- Publisher :
- Zenodo, 2022.
-
Abstract
- 116. Inocybe leucophaea Eyssart. & Buyck, sp. nov. (Figs 11; 12) DIAGNOSIS. — Differs from Inocybe subclavata in its larger spores with less prominent knobs, its distinctly thicker-walled cystidia and its association with trees from the African miombo woodland. HOLOTYPE. — Zambia. Near Lusaka, gregarious, in strongly degraded miombo woodland, 08.II.1996, Eyssartier 96095 (holo-, P [PC0088783]). INDEX FUNGORUM. — IF558793. GENBANK. — EU569860 (LSU), EU569859 (rpb 1). ETYMOLOGY. — Named after the general colors of the basidiomata, from ancient greek leukos, “white”, and phaios, “dusky”. DESCRIPTION Pileus Measuring (8)12-20(30) mm in diam., conical obtuse with inflexed margin or conico-campanulate, often with a broad umbo topped by another very small and obtuse one, sometimes totally absent, the young very pale by a white veil, sometimes greyish, then the margin becomes beige, slightly ochraceous but always pale, even in the young stages, soon fibrillose slightly rimose towards the margin, which is a little bit incised and paler by the veil. Lamellae Quite close, (1.5) 2-3 mm broad, emarginate, white in the young stages then ocraceous greyish, ocraceous beige, quite pale. Stipe 35-60(65) × 3-4(6) mm, bulbous, marginate, whitish, pale beige to straw-yellow, pruinose. Flesh Pale, whitish. Odor Slightly honey-like. Taste Mild, slightly herbaceous. Spores Nodulose, with (6)7-8(9) obtuse swellings, (7)8-9(10.5)× (5)6- 7(8) µm, few spores quite larger, up to 12-14 × 8-9 µm (possibly from 2-spored basidia?). Basidia 4-spored, clavate, (18)20-25 × 8-9 µm. Paracystidia Clavate, small, 15-20 × 8-9 (10) µm. Cheilocystidia Pyriform with a very obtuse base, or broadly lageniform, with very thickened walls, up to 4 (-4.5) µm, very slightly coloured in 10 % ammonia. Pleurocystidia Similar to cheilocystidia. Pileipellis A cutis of cylindrical hyphae, (3)5-7(10) µm broad, without clear pigment, very slightly incrusted. Clamp connections Present in all parts. NOTES Inocybe leucophaea sp. nov. was part of the multigene phylogenetic analyses published by Matheny et al. (2009) where it was part of a highly supported African clade together with two other species collected by us: I. glaucodisca Buyck & Eyssart. (Buyck & Eyssartier 1999) for which the LSU sequence is 98.2% similar for 100 % coverage, while it was placed sister to I. densifolia nom. prov. (similarity 99 % for 100 % coverage). This African clade was placed sister with high support to a neotropical clade composed of I. antillana Pegler and I. xerophytica Pegler (see Pegler 1983). The phylogenetic analyses based on LSU sequences in Horak et al. (2015) still grouped with high support I. glaucodisca, I. densifolia nom. prov. and I. leucophaea sp. nov., but lacked support for the deeper nodes that suggested close affinities with other Inocybe from the African miombo woodlands such as I. conspicuospora Buyck & Eyssart or the still undescribed I. velatorimosa nom. prov. Inocybe subclavata (E. Horak) Garrido closely resembles Inocybe leucophaea sp. nov., particularly in general habit, colour and presence of an abundant veil, but differs in its marginate stipe, and the smaller spores with less numerous and more prominent knobs, its distinctly thinnerwalled cystidia and the association with Nothofagus in New Zealand (Horak 2018).<br />Published as part of Buyck, Bart, Eyssartier, Guillaume, Armada, François, Corrales, Adriana, Hembrom, Manoj Emanuel, Rossi, Walter, Bellanger, Jean-Michel, Das, Kanad, Dima, Bálint & Ghosh, Aniket, 2022, Fungal biodiversity profiles 111 - 120, pp. 23-61 in Cryptogamie, Mycologie 20 (2) on page 36, DOI: 10.5252/cryptogamie-mycologie2022v43a2, http://zenodo.org/record/7828891<br />{"references":["MATHENY P. B., AIME M. C, BOUGHER N. L., BUYCK B., DESJARDIN D. E., HORAK E., KROPP B. R., LODGE D. J., TRAPPE J. M. & HIBBETT D. S. 2009. - Out of the palaeotropics? Historical biogeography and diversification of the cosmopolitan mushroom family Inocybaceae. Journal of Biogeography 36: 577 - 592. https: // doi. org / 10.1111 / j. 1365 - 2699.2008.02055. x","BUYCK B. & EYSSARTIER G. 1999. - Two new species of Inocybe (Cortinariaceae) from African woodland. Kew Bulletin 54: 675 - 681. https: // doi. org / 10.2307 / 4110863","PEGLER D. N. 1983. - Agaric Flora of the Lesser Antilles. Kew Bulletin Additional Series IX: 1 - 668.","HORAK E., MATHENEY P. B., DESJARDIN D. E. & SOYTONG K. 2015. - The genus Inocybe (Inocybaceae, Agaricales, Basidiomycota) in Thailand and Malaysia. Phytotaxa 230 (3): 201 - 238.","HORAK E. 2018. - Agaricales (Basidiomycota) of New Zealand, 2. Brown spored genera. Fungi of New Zealand 6: 1 - 205."]}
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........7dc7838765ea26f5aa6996a1f78b95f4
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7828924