Cortinarius atrotomentosus Harrower

Harrower, Emma, Bougher, Neale L., Winterbottom, Caitlin, Henkel, Terry W., Horak, Egon & Matheny, P. Brandon, 2015, New species in CortinariussectionCortinarius (Agaricales) from the Americas and Australasia, MycoKeys 11, pp. 1-21 : 13-14

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.11.5409

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A7DDD726-09A9-E096-84A1-C6950961A87E

treatment provided by

MycoKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Cortinarius atrotomentosus Harrower
status

sp. nov.

Taxon classification Fungi Agaricales Cortinariaceae

Cortinarius atrotomentosus Harrower sp. nov. Figs 1, 2c, 3g, 4g

Diagnosis.

Similar to Cortinarius violaceus (L.: Fr.) Gray but differs by having smaller spores and shorter basidia as well as an absence of caulocystidia. Unique molecular synapomorphies at pos. 71 (ITS1), and 606 (ITS2) are present in our alignment.

Type.

USA, Florida: Wakulla Co., Crawfordville, Apalachicola National Forest (30°12'06"N; 84°26'33"W), on soil under Quercus virginiana , 4 Dec. 2010, TFB 13848, (holotype: TENN 065527).

Etymology.

Meaning ’dark-tomentose’ in reference to the dark coloration of the fruiting body.

Description.

Pileus 26-91 mm wide, surface dry, tomentose to fine scaly, dark violet (17F3) to dark brown in age (7F3), red in KOH. Lamellae adnexed, not sinuate, close to subdistant, thin, ventricose, dark violet (17F3). Stipe 75-131 mm long, 8-18 mm thick at apex, 17-26 mm thick at base, ventricose, silky-glabrous, olive brown (4E6) to brownish grey in age (5D2). Basal mycelium lilac (16B4) to greyish magenta (14D3). Context purple grey (13E2) to reddish brown (10D4). Smell mild. Taste none. Basidiospores (9-) 10.5-13 (-14.0) µm × (6-) 7-8 µm, means = 10.5-12 µm × 6-8 µm, Q = 1.43-1.67, Q means = 1.50-1.53, (70 spores, three specimens), ellipsoid to amygdaloid, strongly verrucose, plage present under SEM. Basidia 4-spored, clavate, 20-30 × 10-12 µm. Cheilocystidia abundant, narrowly fusiform to lageniform, brown in KOH, 50-70 (-80) µm × 15-25 µm. Pleurocystidia abundant, narrowly fusiform to lageniform, brown in KOH, 43-65 (-70) × 15-20 µm. Caulocystidia not seen. Pileipellis a trichoderm, hyphae 6-20 µm wide, 185-370 µm high, multiseptate, brown content in KOH, terminal hyphae mainly blunt-ended, some lanceolate or aciculate. Clamp connections present.

Ecology and distribution.

Under Quercus virginiana . Known only from Apalachicola National Forest, Crawfordville, Florida, USA. Fruiting early December.

Other specimens examined.

USA. Florida: Wakulla Co., Crawfordville, Apalachicola National Forest (30°12'07"N; 84°26'33"W), ( Quercus virginiana ), 2 Dec. 2010, D.Lewis & B.Petty TFB 13840 (TENN 065527).

Discussion.

Cortinarius atrotomentosus sp. nov. was treated as ' Cortinarius sp. NA1' in Harrower et al. (2015). This species can be differentiated from Cortinarius violaceus by its dark violet to dark brown pileus and the olive brown to brownish grey stipe. The context of Cortinarius violaceus is violet to greyish, not mauve as is Cortinarius atrotomentosus sp. nov. Caulocystidia were not found on this species whereas they are present in Cortinarius neotropicus sp. nov. and Cortinarius violaceus . The current Gulf Coast geographic distribution of Cortinarius atrotomentosus sp. nov., where it associates with Quercus , does not overlap with the more northerly distribution of Cortinarius violaceus . The species differs from Cortinarius palatinus sp. nov., with which it appears to be most closely related (Fig. 1), by its location (Gulf Coast region) and its dark exterior. The basal mycelium is the only part of the fruiting body that could be described as pale violet.