Lactarius exilis X.H. Wang, 2019

Wang, Xiang-Hua, Das, Kanad, Bera, Ishika, Chen, Yu-Hui, Bhatt, Rajendra Prasad, Ghosh, Aniket, Hembrom, Manoj Emanuel, Hofstetter, Valérie, Parihar, Arvind, Vizzini, Alfredo, Xu, Tai-Min & Zhao, Chang-Lin, 2019, Fungal Biodiversity Profiles 81 - 90, Cryptogamie, Mycologie 20 (5), pp. 57-95 : 74-76

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5252/cryptogamie-mycologie2019v40a5

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7825711

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DD3329-EF6D-585B-FC42-FCD9C7655DAF

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Lactarius exilis X.H. Wang
status

sp. nov.

85. Lactarius exilis X.H. Wang View in CoL View at ENA , sp. nov.

( Figs 9 View FIG ; 10B View FIG ; 13 View FIG )

A small slender species with pileus with a conical center, white latex, globose reticulate spores, absence of pleuromacrocystidia, numerous cheilomacrocystidia and pileipellis a (hymeno)epithelium. A long INDEL in the ITS1 region is also characteristic.

TYPUS. — China. Shanxi Prov., Xia Co., Sijiao, Tanghui , under Quercus trees, 15.VIII.2015, coll. X.H. Wang, no. 3683 (holo-, KUN [ HKAS 89954 ]!).

MYCOBANK. — MB 829288.

GENBANK. — MK351982 View Materials - MK351984 View Materials (ITS).

ETYMOLOGY. — Referring to the slender fruiting bodies.

ADDITIONAL SPECIMENS EXAMINED. — China. Henan Prov., Xinyang, Jigong Mt., between Laoyingwo and Xiannütan, 295 m a.s.l., 25.VIII.2015, coll. X.H. Wang, no. 3783 (KUN[HKAS 90043]).

South Korea. Seoul, Donggureung Nine Royal Tombs, under Quercus trees, 15.VIII.2011, coll. X.H. Wang, no. 2966 ( KUN [ HKAS 73523]).

HABIT, HABITAT AND DISTRIBUTION. — Caespitose or 1-4 individuals growing together, in fagaceous forests. Northern (Shanxi Prov.) and central (Henan Prov.) China and South Korea.

DESCRIPTION

Basidiomata

Small, slender.

Pileus

6-15 mm in diam., at first convex with a pointed papilla, becoming plano-convex with a depressed center when mature, ± sulcate, margin sometimes crenate; surface dry, somewhat areolate-rimose, dark brown or dark reddish brown when young, later remaining so or becoming yellowish brown, orange brown, hygrophanous, radially rugose.

Context

Very thin (<0.5 mm), concolorous with the lamellae.

Lamellae

1-3mm broad, decurrent, subdistant, pale yellow,grayish orange.

Stipe

20-40 × 1-2 mm, cylindrical, equal or gradually enlarged downward; surface dry, smooth, with silky luster, nearly concolorous with the lamellae or light brown.

Latex

White, watery, neither discoloring nor staining.

Odor

None.

Spore print

Not obtained.

Basidiospores

(80/4/3) 7.0-7.7-8.5 (9.0) × 6.5-7.2-8.0 (8.5) Μm [Q = 1.00- 1.12 (1.14), Q = 1.06 ± 0.03] [holotype (40/2/1) 7.0-7.7-8.5 (9.0) × 6.5-7.3-8.0 (8.5) Μm, Q = 1.00-1.10 (1.14), Q = 1.06 ± 0.03], globose, subglobose; ornamentation 0.8-1.5 (2.0) Μm high, of ridges connected, forming an incomplete to complete reticulum, often with subtransparent (less amyloid) dots in the ridges or at the crossing points of ridges; plage not amyloid or slightly distally amyloid.

Basidia

4-spored, 35-52 × 8-13 Μm, clavate.

Pleuromacrocystidia

Absent.

Pseudocystidia

Uncommon to common, 2-4 Μm broad, often slightly enlarged at the apex, some forking.

Lamella edge

Sterile, rarely with scattered basidia; cheilomacrocystidia numerous, 25-60 × 4-7 Μm, subfusiform, cylindrical, apex mostly mucronate or moniliform, with sparse to agglomerated contents.

Pileipellis

An epithelium, 50-100 Μm thick; cells 15-30 Μm in diam., globose, ellipsoid, terminal cells often ellipsoid, colorless, hyphae beneath globose cells 5-10 Μm broad, colorless.

Stipitipellis

A cutis, 40-50 Μm thick, closely packed; hyphae 3-5 Μm broad, pale yellowish brown.

Pileus and stipe trama

With numerous rosettes.

NOTES

The combination of pileipellis an epithelium, absence of pleuromacrocystidia and abundant cheilomacrocystidia of L. exilis X.H. Wang , sp. nov., is shared by L. castanopsidis and L. resinosus X.H. Wang , sp. nov. (described below). Those two species have spores with deeply winged zebroid ornamentations and brownish hyphae underlying the pileipellis. Lactarius exilis X.H. Wang , sp. nov., is similar to European L. obscuratus , L. cyathuliformis and L. omphaliformis and Thai L. crenulatulus Wisitrassameewong & Verbeken in the slender habit and the pileipellis an epithelium. The three European species have pleuromacrocystidia and ellipsoid spores (Heilmann-Clausen et al. 1998; Basso 1999). The Thai species lacks cheilomacrocystidia and has a more crenulate pileus and white pruinose stipe base ( Wisitrassameewong et al. 2014). Japanese L. cyathula f. japonicus Hongo looks similar. It has bigger ellipsoid spores and lacks macrocystidia ( Hongo 1971) .

The long INDEL in the ITS1 region in L. castanopsidis , L. exilis X.H. Wang , sp. nov., and L. resinosus X.H. Wang , sp. nov., is unique among the members of L. subg. Russularia . This long INDEL is also present in several species of L. subg. Lactarius with violeting latex [e.g. L. cascadensis Hesler & A.H. Sm. and L. luridus (Pers.) Gray ]. Using the whole ITS or ITS1 region to BLAST gave hits to these not closely related species.

KUN

KUN

HKAS

Cryptogamic Herbarium of Kunming Institute of Botany

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