Published November 13, 2024 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Pyrenula rufotetraspora M. Z. Dou & Z. F. Jia 2024, sp. nov.

  • 1. College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Liaocheng University, Liaocheng 252059, China
  • 2. Laboratório de Botânica, Liquenologia, Instituto de Biociências, Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso do Sul, Avenida Costa e Silva s / n, Bairro Universitário, CEP 79070 - 900, Campo Grande, Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil

Description

Pyrenula rufotetraspora M. Z. Dou & Z. F. Jia sp. nov.

Fig. 4

Etymology.

The specific epithet rufo refers to the red oil in over-mature ascospores and tetraspora means that there are four spores in each ascus.

Holotype.

China • Guizhou Province, Libo County, Xiaoqikong Scenic Area, Laya Waterfall, 25°15'10"N, 107°44'06"E, alt. 425 m, on bark, 24 October 2018, Z. F. Jia (LCUF GZ 18377, holotype; GenBank PP 692371 for ITS, and PP 692474 for nuLSU).

Diagnosis.

This new species can be distinguished from the most similar species Pyrenula yunguiensis by fewer ascospores per ascus, bigger ascospores, more locules and different lichen substances.

Description.

Thallus corticolous, crustose, olive-green in the field and khaki after drying, surface dull, corticate with pseudocyphellae, UV-. Apothecia emergent, dispersed, conical, 0.6–1.2 mm diam., the sides often partly covered by the thallus, with crystals. Excipulum completely carbonized when mature and falls apart when over-mature. Ostioles apical, white or brown. Hamathecium not inspersed, IKI + red. Ascospores 4 per ascus, uniseriate, fusiform, with pointed or blunt ends, 70–100 (– 106) × (17 –) 21–27 (– 41) μm, hyaline to brown, muriform, with c. 10–12 × 3–14 locules, lumina rounded, old spores containing globules of red oily substance.

Chemistry.

Thallus UV-. TLC with solvent C showed one unidentified black spot at the dividing line of Rf three and four under 254 nm ultraviolet light; unidentified red substances at Rf four under 365 nm ultraviolet light (Suppl. material 3).

Habitat and distribution.

The new species is currently only known from the subtropical regions of southern China on bark.

Notes.

This new species is similar to Pyrenula seminuda, P. endocrocea, P. breutelii, P. macularis, P. submacularis and P. yunguiensis in having (sub) muriform ascospores with red or orange oil when over-mature. This new species differs from P. seminuda by bigger and muriform ascospores with more locules, the latter 22–40 × 10–17 μm and submuriform with 6 × 1–2 locules, most transverse locules being single and few with an oblique or longitudinal division (Aptroot et al. 2013). P. endocrocea differs from this new species by medulla with a soft layer of copious orange anthraquinone crystals reacting UV + red and KOH + crimson, and smaller ascospores, (30 –) 32–44 (– 50) × 13–16 (– 19) μm (Aptroot et al. 2012). This new species can be distinguished from P. breutelii, P. macularis, P. submacularis and P. yunguiensis by different lichen substances (Suppl. materials 3, 4), bigger ascospores, more locules and fewer ascospores per ascus. There are 8 ascospores in per ascus in P. breutelii, P. macularis, P. submacularis and P. yunguiensis, 4 in the new species. P. rufotetraspora showed a black spot at the dividing line of Rf three and four under 254 nm ultraviolet light (no. nr. 13 on Suppl. material 3), which was not red on charred plate under 365 nm ultraviolet light. This black spot did not exist in P. breutelii, P. macularis, P. submacularis and P. yunguiensis and located at Rf four under 254 nm ultraviolet light on Suppl. material 4 (no. nr. 16). The difference of locations of this spot on Suppl. materials 3, 4 might be caused by edge effect. P. submacularis is sister to P. rufotetraspora with high support (1 / 92), but the latter has fewer ascospores in ascus (4) and obviously bigger ascospores.

Notes

Published as part of Dou, Mingzhu, Li, Jiechen, Hu, Yongshun, Aptroot, André & Jia, Zefeng, 2024, Phylogenetic analysis shows that Pyrenula (Pyrenulaceae) diversity is larger than expected: three new species and one new record discovered in China, pp. 159-183 in MycoKeys 110 on pages 159-183, DOI: 10.3897/mycokeys.110.131741

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Collection code
LCUF
Material sample ID
GZ 18377
Event date
2018-10-24
Verbatim event date
2018-10-24
Scientific name authorship
M. Z. Dou & Z. F. Jia
Kingdom
Fungi
Phylum
Ascomycota
Order
Verrucariales
Family
Verrucariaceae
Genus
Pyrenula
Species
rufotetraspora
Taxon rank
species
Taxonomic status
sp. nov.
Type status
holotype
Taxonomic concept label
Pyrenula rufotetraspora Dou & Jia, 2024

References

  • Aptroot A, Sipman HJM, Cáceres MEDS (2013) Twenty-one new species of Pyrenula from south America, with a note on over-mature ascospores. Lichenologist (London, England) 45 (2): 169–198. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0024282912000734
  • Aptroot A, Schumm F, Cáceres MES (2012) Six new species of Pyrenula from the tropics. Lichenologist (London, England) 44 (5): 611–618. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0024282912000254