Calostoma tooteic Deloya-Olvera, Virgen-Vasquez, Xoconostle-Cázares & J. Pérez-Moreno, 2023

Deloya-Olvera, Miriam, Xoconostle-Cazares, Beatriz, Vasquez, Sofía Virgen, Pérez-Moreno, Jesús, Martínez-González, César Ramiro, J. Almaraz, Juan, Jimenez, Mario & Sánchez-García, Martín E., 2023, Two new neotropical species of the ectomycorrhizal gasteroid genus Calostoma (Sclerodermatineae, Boletales) used as a food source by the Ayuuk jä’äy ethnic group from Southern Mexico, Phytotaxa 612 (2), pp. 148-158 : 154

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.612.2.3

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8326615

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6A4B4D21-FFC6-FFDC-F38C-C078FE298615

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Calostoma tooteic Deloya-Olvera, Virgen-Vasquez, Xoconostle-Cázares & J. Pérez-Moreno
status

sp. nov.

Calostoma tooteic Deloya-Olvera, Virgen-Vasquez, Xoconostle-Cázares & J. Pérez-Moreno sp. nov.

Index fungorum number: IF556487, Mycobank number: MB 830882, GenBank MF521437 and MF521439

Etymology:— Refers to the name used by Ayuuk jä’äy people to designate the long stipe of this edible species, and the possibility to find this fungus in the rainy season; too teic (too = rain, teic =foot) literally meaning “the rain foot”.

Gasterocarp formed by a tall stipe with a globose spore-sac at the apex; stipe is formed by longitudinal anastomosed strands and is transparent reddish brown, cartilaginous when fresh and hard when dry, from 1.5 to 5 cm in height, × 1.8 to 2.20 cm in diameter. Spore-sac, globose, orange to red, 20–28 mm in diameter, initially covered by a thin gelatinous exoperidium containing small reddish “seeds” that fall embedded in the gelatine around the spore-sac, sliding down the stipe and leaving the pore-sac completely bare; ostiole apical, with five to six raised edges; basidiospores ellipsoid (11.3–) 12.2–18.0 (–19.2) × (8.5–) 8.8–12.4 (12.8) µm, Q= 1.11–1.81 μm; Qm=1.4 μm, ornamented with a reticulum (exospore) with internal and external layers ( Figure 2f View FIGURE 2 ). Spore sac formed by a network of hyphae from 2.2 to 5.8 μm that degrades ( Figure 2c–e View FIGURE 2 ).

Holotype:— MEXICO, Oaxaca, Santa Maria Tlahuitoltepec , on Quercus obtusata forest soil, 17°6’41.6”N, 96°3’33.7”W, 2327 m, 19 August 2015, Deloya-Olvera 57 ( MEXU29002 View Materials !, holotype designated here). GoogleMaps

Paratype — MEXICO, Oaxaca, Santa Maria Tlahuitoltepec , on Quercus obtusata forest soil, 17°6’59.7”N, 96°3’23.2”W, 2477 m, 20 August 2015, Deloya-Olvera 58 ( MEXU29009 View Materials !, paratype designated here) GoogleMaps .

Diagnosis: differing from other Calostoma species by exoperidium gelatinous, thin and ephemeral with age; size of spores: (11.3–)12.2–18.0(–19.2) × (8.5–)8.8–12.4(–12.8) µm, Q= 1.11–1.81 μm Qm=1.4 μm and stipe 1.5–5.0 cm high × 1.5–2.0 cm in diameter.

Notes: Calostoma tooteic differs from its closest phylogenetic species C. cinnabarinum due to: i) its greater globose spore-sac; the former species has a 20–28 mm spore-sac in diameter, while as pointed out above in the case of C. cinnabarinum smaller measures have been recorded: 10–20 mm; 10–15 mm; 8–10 mm and 8–12 mm by Masse (1888); Castro-Mendoza et al. (1983); Kim et al. (2007) and Baseia et al. (2010), respectively; ii) the narrower spores reported for C. cinnabarinum : 8–10 µm, 6.3–8.5 µm, 6.5–8.5 µm, 5–8 µm, 8–10 µm and 7.5–9 µm, by Masse (1888); Coker & Couch (1928); Castro-Mendoza et al. (1983); Kim et al. (2007) and Guzmán (1973), respectively, while our specimens have spores ranging from 8.8–12.4 µm in width; and iv) as mentioned for C. naaxtutus , there were robust genetic differences which showed that C. tooteic is included in a monophyletic clade (1 Bayesian Posterior Probability and 100% bootstrap proportion for Maximum likelihood), closer but different to that of C. cinnabarinum . Similarly than in the case of. C. naaxtutus , C. tooteic differs from the other two species of the genus previously recorded from Mexico, because C. lutescens has globose spores, (6–)7.7–10.5 µm in diameter; and C. ravenelii has a non-gelatinous exoperidium ( Guzmán, 1973).

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