Mutinus albotruncatus B.D.B. Silva & Baseia, 2015
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.236.3.4 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E846050B-3419-FFCF-FF5F-FCF024D6F834 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Mutinus albotruncatus B.D.B. Silva & Baseia |
status |
sp. nov. |
Mutinus albotruncatus B.D.B. Silva & Baseia View in CoL , sp. nov. ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 , 3 View FIGURE 3 and 4 View FIGURE 4 )
MycoBank no.: MB 812516
Etymology:— albotruncatus refers to the white pseudostipe and truncated apex.
Diagnosis:—Egg fabiform to reniform, 6–17 mm height × 5–8 mm in diameter. Pseudostipe cylindrical, 50–70 mm high, apically perforate, sterile portion white, straight, not chambered; fertile portion doliform, truncated, slightly rugulose, covering about 1/3 of the total length of pseudostipe. Gleba confined in the upper region of the pseudostipe, mucilaginous. Basidiospores 3.8–5.0 × 2.2–2.5 μm, ellipsoid, smooth.
Type:— BRAZIL. Ceará: Crato, Município Santana do Cariri , FLONA Araripe , 07°13.284’S, 39°31.445’W, 947 m, 24 January 2011, BDB Silva & BT Goto (holotype UFRN 2025 About UFRN , isotype UFRN 2589 About UFRN ) [GenBank accession numbers— LSU: KT183493 About LSU , atp 6: KT183490, ITS: KT202281; all from holotype] GoogleMaps .
Unexpanded basidiome (egg) fabiform to reniform to ellipsoid ( Fig. 2a View FIGURE 2 , 3b View FIGURE 3 ), 6–17 mm height × 5–8 in diameter, epigeous. Exoperidium membranaceous, smooth, white, orangy white (5A2) to greyish orange (6B3), with several white central rhizomorphs emerging from the base. Endoperidium gelatinous, hyaline. Expanded basidiome formed by pseudostipe and volva ( Fig. 3a View FIGURE 3 ). Pseudostipe cylindrical, 50–70 mm height × 4–6 mm diameter, apically perforate, hollow, spongy; sterile portion white, straight, not chambered ( Fig. 2f View FIGURE 2 ); fertile portion light brown (6D4), slightly thick, doliform to cylindrical, truncated ( Fig. 2b–2d View FIGURE 2 ), slightly rugulose ( Fig. 2e View FIGURE 2 ), 14–22 mm high, covering about 1/3 of the total length of pseudostipe. Gleba covering and confined to the upper region of the pseudostipe, mucilaginous, olive green (3E3) to olive grey (3E2).
Basidiospores 3.8–5.0 × 2.2–2.5 μm, ellipsoid ( Fig. 4a View FIGURE 4 ), smooth, hyaline to slightly greenish in 5% KOH. Pseudostipe composed of pseudoparenchymatous cells, hyaline, irregular shaped, 20.2–57.3 × 17.8–47.1 μm ( Fig. 4b View FIGURE 4 ). Volva formed by filamentous hyphae, septate, branched, hyaline, 2.2–4.5 μm diameter ( Fig. 4c View FIGURE 4 ). Rhizomorphs composed of filamentous hyphae, septate, hyaline, 1.4–3.6 μm diameter ( Fig. 4d View FIGURE 4 ).
Habitat: — growing on decaying wood.
Distribution: —S tate of Ceará, Brazil.
Remarks: — The presence of a white pseudostipe, a brown, doliform to cylindrical and truncated fertile portion, and the lignicolous habitat differentiate Mutinus albotruncatus from other species in the genus. The apical region of the pseudostipe of M. albotruncatus resembles species of the genus Phallus , due to the truncated region and the thick surface which give the appearance of a receptacle. However, an in-depth analysis of the morphology revealed that M. albotruncatus does not have a receptacle. The brownish color of the fertile portion resembles M. zenkeri Henn. E. Fischer (1900: 47) . However, M. zenkeri is differentiated by having an incomplete and brittle membrane on which the gleba is located ( Dring & Rose 1977, Degreef et al. 2013). Mutinus annulatus F. M. Bailey (1895: 10), M. borneensis , M. boninensis Lloyd (1908: 402) , M. caninus var. albus Zeller (1944: 263) and M. proximus Berkeley ex Massee (1891: 94) also have a pseudostipe with a white sterile portion. M. annulatus ( Lloyd 1909) is distinguished by an annulated base and red-ochre color of the fertile portion of the pseudostipe, M. borneensis ( Lloyd 1909, Grgurinovic 1997) has a shorter and salmon pink or red fertile portion, M. boninensis ( Lloyd 1909, Kobayasi 1937) has a fertile portion with pointed apex and it is completely annulated, M. caninus var. albus ( Zeller 1944) has a red and glabrous fertile portion and M. proximus has an obtuse and imperforate apex, as well as a pseudostipe with an orange-red fertile portion. Mutinus rugulosus (recorded from the state of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil ( Rick 1929, 1961)) also has a white pseudostipe but it is a species with little information in its protologue. The only information provided is a comparison to M. bambusinus , with M. rugulosus having larger basidiomes and a white pseudostipe ( Rick 1929).
Mutinus albotruncatus B.D.B. Silva & Baseia sp. nov.
Mutinus annulatus F.M. Bailey
≡ Floccomutinus annulatus (F.M. Bailey) Lloyd
≡ Phallus annulatus (F.M. Bailey) G. Cunn.
Mutinus bambusinus (Zoll.) E. Fisch.
= Mutinus ravenelii (Berk. & M.A. Curtis) E. Fisch.
= Mutinus curtisii (Berk.) E. Fisch.
Mutinus caninus var. albus Zeller
Mutinus caninus var. caninus (Huds.) Fr.
Mutinus caninus var. levonensis Noelli
Mutinus cartilagineus J.H. Willis
Mutinus curtisii (Berk.) E. Fisch.
= Mutinus elegans (Mont.) E. Fisch
Mutinus discolor (Kalchbr.) E. Fisch.
= Phallus aurantiacus var. discolor Kalchbr.
Mutinus elegans (Mont.) E. Fisch
Mutinus hardyi F.M. Bailey
= Lysurus mokusin (L.) Fr.
= Mutinus elegans (Mont.) E. Fisch
= Mutinus bambusinus (Zoll.) E. Fisch.
≡ Phallus papuasius (Kalchbr.) Kalchbr.
Mutinus pentagonus F.M. Bailey
= Lysurus mokusin (L.) Fr.
Mutinus pentagonus var. hardyi F.M. Bailey
= Lysurus mokusin (L.) Fr.
Mutinus pentagonus var. pentagonus F.M. Bailey
= Lysurus mokusin (L.) Fr.
Mutinus proximus Berk. ex Massee
Mutinus ravenelii (Berk. & M.A. Curtis) E. Fisch
Mutinus sulcatus Cooke & Massee
= Lysurus cruciatus (Lepr. & Mont.) Henn.
Mutinus watsonii (Berk.) E. Fisch.
≡ Xylophallus xylogenus (Mont.) E. Fisch.
Mutinus zenkeri (Henn.) E. Fisch.
There are many species of the genus Mutinus that need to be reviewed. Some features are lost when the material is dry and this complicates the analysis of the specimens. Moreover, as in M. rugulosus , there are some species with little information in their protologues: M. bicolor Léveillé (1855: 109) , M. coracoideus Kawamura (1929: 300) , M. granulatus E. Fischer (1927: 472) , M. proximus , M. quadrigenus Sawada (1931: 330) ; and, in some cases, they have been only recorded a single time from their type locality. Based on our survey, we accept 21 species in the genus Mutinus ( Table 2), including the new species here described.
A provisional key is provided for the Mutinus species, excluding M. coracoideus , M. granulatus , M. quadrigenus and M. rugulosus on account of the lack of information in their protologues and because it was not possible to review the types.
LSU |
Louisiana State University - Herbarium |
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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