Retiboletus ater Yan C. Li & T. Bau, 2020

Liu, Hai-Ying, Li, Yan-Chun & Bau, Tolgor, 2020, New species of Retiboletus (Boletales, Boletaceae) from China based on morphological and molecular data, MycoKeys 67, pp. 33-44 : 33

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.67.51020

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/BDC8EB8A-7B6E-5C4F-914A-3DE028DCE6E9

treatment provided by

MycoKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Retiboletus ater Yan C. Li & T. Bau
status

sp. nov.

Retiboletus ater Yan C. Li & T. Bau sp. nov. Figures 2a-c View Figure 2 , 3 View Figure 3

Etymology.

ater referring to the color of the basidiomata.

Type.

China. Yunnan Province: Jingdong County, Ailaoshan National Nature Reserve, alt. 2500 m, 14 July 2008, Y.C. Li 1215 (holotype: KUN-HKAS 56069!).

Description.

Basidiomata small to medium-sized. Pileus 3-5 cm in diameter, hemispherical to applanate, surface dry, densely subtomentose, black (4F3) to blackish (4E2) in the center and gray (3D1) or yellowish-gray (3C2-3) towards margin, context 2.5 cm thick in the center of the pileus, pallid gray (2D1) to cream (2C3-4), unchanging when bruised. Hymenophore adnate or slightly depressed around apex of stipe; pores angular, tubes up to 11 mm long, 0.3-1 mm wide, white (2B1) when young and yellowish (2A2) in age, becoming brownish-yellow (5C7-8) when injured. Stipe 4-6 × 0.8-1.2 cm, clavate to flexuous, solid; surface dry, blackish to gray, prominently and coarsely reticulate over the upper 1/3; context white (2A1) in the upper part and yellowish to cream yellow downwards, unchanging when injured; basal mycelium white (2A1). Taste and odor indistinct.

Basidia 26-38 × 6-10 μm, clavate, thin-walled, 4-spored, hyaline to yellowish in KOH. Basidiospores [60/3/2] (7)8-10.5(11) × 3-4.5(5) μm [Q = (1.89) 2-3.33 (3.67), Qm = 2.52 ± 0.42], subfusiform and inequilateral in side view with shallow suprahilar depression, elongate fusoid or narrowly oblong in ventral view, slightly thick-walled (up to 0.5 μm), brownish to yellowish-brown in KOH, olive-brown to brown in Melzer’s reagent, smooth. Hymenophoral trama boletoid; hyphae cylindrical, 3.5-9 μm wide, hyaline to yellowish in KOH, yellowish to brownish-yellow in Melzer’s reagent. Cheilo- and pleurocystidia 26-55 × 6-10 μm, abundant, subfusiform to fusiform, thin-walled, with yellowish-brown contents, surface without encrustations. Caulocystidia forming the reticulum over the stipe surface, similar to cheilo- and pleurocystidia. Pileipellis a trichoderm about 280 μm thick, composed of more or less vertically arranged, slightly interwoven, brown to dark brown hyphae, 5-15 μm wide; terminal cells 45-111 × 9-15 μm, narrowly clavate to subcylindrical or subfusiform, sometimes narrowly mucronate, rostrate, slightly thick-walled (up to 0.5 μm), hyaline to yellowish in KOH, yellowish to brownish-yellow in Melzer’s reagent. Pileal trama composed of thin- to slightly thick-walled (up to 0.5 μm) hyphae, 5-11 μm wide, hyaline to yellowish in KOH, yellowish to brownish-yellow in Melzer’s reagent. Clamp connections absent in all tissues.

Habitat, ecology and distribution.

Solitary on the ground in forests dominated by plants in the family Fagaceae ; currently known from southwestern China.

Additional specimens examined.

China. Yunnan Province: Jingdong County, Ailaoshan National Nature Reserve, alt. 2500 m, 14 July 2008, Y.C. Li 1224 (KUN-HKAS 56078).

Discussion.

Retiboletus ater is characterized by the black to blackish or gray to yellowish-gray pileus, the white to yellowish hymenophore, the gray to brownish-gray stipe, the prominent and coarse reticulum over the upper 1/3 of the stipe and the trichoderm pileipellis with hyphae 9-15 μm wide. It generally shares the same colored pileus and hymenophore with R. fuscus (Hongo) N.K. Zeng & Zhu L. Yang, R. griseus (Frost) Manfr. Binder & Bresinsky, R. nigrogriseus N.K. Zeng, S. Jiang & Zhi Q. Liang, and R. pseudogriseus N.K. Zeng & Zhu L. Yang. However, R. fuscus is characterized by an overall reticulate stipe, slight longer basidiospores (9-12 × 3.5-4.5 μm) and narrower pileipellis hyphae (4-8 μm wide) ( Zeng et al. 2016). Retiboletus griseus has a reticulum over the upper 2/3 of the stipe, a cream or grayish-brown stipe often with orange-yellow stains when hurt, and a distribution in North/Central America ( Smith and Thiers 1971; Ortiz-Santana et al. 2007). Retiboletus nigrogriseus is characterized by the white to olivaceous contex in the stipe, the entirely reticulate stipe and the cutis pileipellis with hyphae 4-10 μm wide. Retiboletus pseudogriseus has a grayish white pileus which is covered with brown to blackish brown squamules, white context becoming brown when injured, and a slender and completely reticulate stipe.

In the phylogenetic analysis (Fig. 1 View Figure 1 ), R. ater forms an independent lineage within Retiboletus , future studies would require more molecular sequence data to help fully resolve its evolutionary relationships to the other species.