Lactarius indoviolaceus I. Bera & K. Das, 2022
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.576.2.6 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7461310 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AA30D16D-DE7E-FFA0-90AB-FD04FB81F8D1 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Lactarius indoviolaceus I. Bera & K. Das |
status |
sp. nov. |
Lactarius indoviolaceus I. Bera & K. Das View in CoL sp. nov. Figs. 2 View FIGURE 2 , 3 View FIGURE 3
MycoBank:—MB 844780
GenBank:— ON951745 View Materials (nrITS, Holotype) and ON951747 View Materials (nrITS)
Diagnosis:—A medium-sized Lactarius that can be separated from its closest relative, L. pyriodorus with its non-zonate, greyish yellow pileus and yellowish white stipe which turn pale violet on bruising or exposure of the context, much thinner pileipellis, and growth under Castanopsis spp .
Type:— INDIA. Arunachal Pradesh, West Kameng district: Shergaon , N 27°07.810’ E 092°15.116’, Elev. 2243 m, 22 July 2019, I. Bera & K. Das, IB 19-015 ( CAL 1876 About CAL , holotype!) GoogleMaps .
Etymology:—The epithet refers to the basidiomata staining pale violet on bruising and occurring in India.
Description:— Pileus 65–75 mm diam., planoconvex with a deep central depression; surface moist, very greasy, finely and faintly rugulose in the centre, greyish yellow (4B3) at centre, lighter towards margin; margin regular, entire, smooth, incurved. Lamellae subdecurrent, close (10 L+l /cm at pilear margin), sometimes forked; lamellulae present, in 5 series; edge entire; yellowish grey (3–4B3), immediately turning pale violet (17A3) on bruising. Stipe 120–140 × 2–2.5 mm, central, cylindric with much broader base; surface viscid, finely rugulose, yellowish white (1–2A2) changing to pale violet on bruising, white mycelium present at the base. Context in pileus thin, pithy in stipe, yellowish white (1A2), almost immediately turning pale violet to greyish violet (17A–B3) on exposure, dull green (27E4) in KOH, brownish in guaiac and unchanging in FeSO 4. Latex moderate, watery white, turning cut lamellae pale violet. Taste very bitter. Odor pleasant. Spore print not obtained.
Basidiospores 6.0– 7.5 –9.5 × 5.0– 6.3 –8.0 μm, (n = 30, Q = 1.14– 1.26 –1.49), subglobose to ellipsoid; ornamentation amyloid, up to 0.8–1.1 µm high, composed of isolated or aligned warts and ridges to form an incomplete reticulum; suprahilar spot inamyloid. Basidia 44.2–59.0 × 11.7–12.5 µm, subclavate, 4-spored; sterigmata 4.0–5.0 × 1.2–1.4 µm. Pleuromacrocystidia abundant, 58.0–103 × 7.9–11.0 µm, emergent up to 40.3 µm, subcylindric with fusoid, subfusoid, mucronate, capitate, subcapitate to appendiculate apices, thin-walled; content dense, crystalline, needlelike. Pleuropseudocystidia scarce to abundant, up to 3 µm wide, emergent, cylindrical to slightly tortuous, with rounded apex. Lamellae edge fertile with basidia and basidioles. Cheilomacrocystidia not found. Subhymenium up to 10.5 µm thick, cellular. Hymenophoral trama composed of lactifers and nests of sphaerocytes connected with connecting hyphae. Pileipellis up to 173.5 µm thick, an ixocutis to ixotrichoderm composed of interwoven, septate, mostly ascending hyphae (8.6–29.2 × 2.0–3.0 μm) intermixed with lactiferous hyphae. Stipitipellis up to 70.2 μm thick, an ixocutis, composed of interwoven, septate hyphae (7.5–27 × 1.2–1.5 μm). Clamp connections absent in all tissues.
Habitat and distribution:—Growing solitary on soil in association with Castanopsis sp. in West Kameng district of Arunachal Pradesh.
Additional specimen examined:— INDIA. Arunachal Pradesh, West Kameng district: Shergaon , N 27°09.216’, E 092°16.174’, Elev. 2369 m, 26 July 2019, I. Bera & K. Das, IB 19-066 ( CAL 1877 About CAL ) GoogleMaps .
I |
"Alexandru Ioan Cuza" University |
K |
Royal Botanic Gardens |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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