Sclerotus Xavier de Lima, 2022

X, Vitor, Lima, avier de, T, Virton Rodrigo, Oliveira, argino de, C, Nelson, Lima-Júnior, orreia de, C., José Ribamar, Oliveira-Filho, Santos, Carla, Lima, Nelson & Gibertoni, Tatiana Baptista, 2022, Taxonomy and phylogenetic analysis reveal one new genus and three new species in Inonotus s. l. (Hymenochaetaceae) from Brazil, Cryptogamie, Mycologie 20 (1), pp. 1-21 : 10

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5252/cryptogamie-mycologie2022v43a1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7815256

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C887C1-A45E-F533-FEAD-F8EC16C3FB8F

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Sclerotus Xavier de Lima
status

gen. nov.

Sclerotus Xavier de Lima , gen. nov.

TYPE SPECIES. — Sclerotus extensus (Lév.) Xavier de Lima

MYCOBANK NUMBER. — MB833801.

ETYMOLOGY. — Scler-,(Greek) hard; otus (Greek) ear.

SUBSTRATE. — Dead angiosperm.

DESCRIPTION

Basidioma perennial, pileate, resupinate to effused-reflexed, hard; pilear surface, when present, initially finely tomentose, but tomentum soon wearing away exposing the black line in the context like a hard crust or cuticle, narrowly sulcated, covering all pileus surface. In section, basidioma applanate, context dark brown; crust glossy, thick. Hyphal system dimitic in context and tube trama. Generative hyphae simple septate. Hyphae darkening in 3% KOH. Hymenial setae present, strongly ventricose, dark, with a narrow lumen. Basidiospores ellipsoid to subglobose, pale yellow, slightly thick-walled, IKI-, CB-. On dead angiosperm.

REMARKS

This genus differs from other poroid Hymenochaetaceae by the combination of the presence of strongly ventricose and dark hymenial setae and a thick black line that is exposed after the tomentum wears away ( Fig. 5 View FIG ). The dimitic nature of tube trama and context, the pigmented thick-walled basidiospores and presence of hymenial setae makes this genus morphologically similar to Phellinus s.s., but it can be differentiated by the unique hymenial setae. This genus, so far, is represented by a single tropical species, S. extensus .

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