Laboulbenia sphaerii Santam.

Santamaria, Sergi & Pedersen, Jan, 2021, Laboulbeniomycetes (Fungi, Ascomycota) of Denmark, European Journal of Taxonomy 781, pp. 1-425 : 202-204

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2021.781.1583

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5829183

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D3878A-B798-FF2F-6731-79C3DD4FFC09

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Laboulbenia sphaerii Santam.
status

 

Laboulbenia sphaerii Santam. View in CoL

MB#239158

Fig. 43E–F View Fig

Nova Hedwigia 56(3): 414 ( Santamaria 1993a). –

Type: “ Spain. Barcelona: Mura , 31TDG11, spread over the entire body of Sphaerius acaroides Waltl ( Coleoptera Sphaeriidae ) captured on the soft mud of Mura river, S. Santamaria, BCB-Mycotheca SS·1047b [holotypus]”; BCB .

Diagnostic features

Thallus diminutive, up to 85 µm in total length. Receptacle four-celled, because cells III and IV remain undivided and form a single cell (III–IV) ( Fig. 43E–F View Fig ). Lower receptacle consisting only of cell I. Cell V oval or obtriangular, half of the length of cell III–IV, not connected with cell II. Outer appendage unbranched, with a hooked apex. Inner appendage consisting of 1–3 simple branches arising from a flattened basal cell and bearing some solitary antheridium. [Detailed descriptions: Santamaria 1998; Majewski 1999]

Distribution and hosts

Exclusively on the mud beetle Sphaerius acaroides (Col. Sphaeriusidae ) [= Microsporus acaroides (Waltl, 1838) , Col. Microsporidae ]. Reported from Spain (type), Poland ( Majewski 1999), and Sweden ( Huggert 2010, not named).

Collections examined from Denmark

On Sphaerius acaroides Waltl, 1838 (Col. Sphaeriusidae ) DENMARK – Nordøstsjaelland (NEZ) • Søndersø, Jonstrup Vang ; 55°46.278′ N, 12°22.010′ E; UB38; 1 Apr. 1872; leg. unknown Dry0028; det. unknown; ZMUC C-F-124098 GoogleMaps .

Remarks

First record from Denmark. The Danish material consists of two immature thalli from a dry-preserved beetle captured in 1872 ( Fig. 43E View Fig ). Despite the scarcity and age of the material, the specimens are perfectly classifiable given the distinctive characteristics and ecology. For comparison and for documentary interest we reproduce a photograph of a mature thallus from the Spanish holotype ( Fig. 43F View Fig ).

Although most species in the genus Laboulbenia have a typically five-celled receptacle (namely cells from I to V), some species show undivided cells III+IV or III+IV+V. Song et al. (2019) listed 23 species with these characteristics but omitted L. sphaerii which is the only Danish species of the genus having undivided cells III+IV. These species have been reported to grow on hosts belonging to three insect orders ( Coleoptera, Diptera , and Heteroptera) and eight families ( Song et al. 2019); it will remain unknown whether this character evolved independently on multiple occasions until most of the species have been sequenced.

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