Moniliophthora ticoi (Halling) Niveiro, Ramirez , Lodge & Aime, 2020

Niveiro, Nicolas, Ramirez, Natalia A., Michlig, Andrea, Lodge, D. Jean & Aime, M. Catherine, 2020, Studies of Neotropical tree pathogens in Moniliophthora: a new species, M. mayarum, and new combinations for Crinipellis ticoi and C. brasiliensis, MycoKeys 66, pp. 39-54 : 39

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.66.48711

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6CA5B267-9C23-504E-8146-A93CF8C6D779

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MycoKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Moniliophthora ticoi (Halling) Niveiro, Ramirez , Lodge & Aime
status

comb. nov.

Moniliophthora ticoi (Halling) Niveiro, Ramirez, Lodge & Aime View in CoL comb. nov. Figs 2B-F View Figure 2 , 4A-D View Figure 4

Crinipellis ticoi Halling, Mycotaxon 47: 379 (1993). Type: Bolivia. Beni, Iturralde, S of Rurrenabaque, Rio Tuichi near junction with Rio Beni, "Laguna del Tigre", 14°25'S, 67°30'W, 14 Apr 1990, R.Halling 6433 (Isotype: NY!).

Description.

Pileus 7-40(-62) mm, parabolic to convex when young, convex to plane with age, with a shallow umbilicus, surface bright orange (7A8-8A8) with reddish to dark brown center (7C7-7C8), with a narrow light yellowish margin (6A7-6B7 to near 5A6-5A7), dry or moist but not hygrophanous, tomentose or subtomentose in disc, pubescent margin in young specimens, striate disc in young specimens, more marked at the margin, in mature or driest basidiomes with reddish to dark brown sulcate margin (7C8-8C8). Lamellae subdistant, 1 per mm, adnexed to narrowly adnate, thick and broad, not intervenose, concolorous with the pileus surface (7A8-6A8); edge entire, concolorous with sides, with 2 tiers lamellulae inserted. Stipe 18-68 × 1-3.5 mm, central, cylindrical, equal or slightly thinner towards the middle, sometimes with a small basal bulb, solid, surface orange to reddish (7A7-7A8) in young specimens, light orange, yellowish orange to creamy yellow (5A6-5A7 to 4A8) and brown (6D8-6D7) toward base in older specimens, densely pubescent at apex when young, then fibrillose-pruinose, dry, insititious. Annulus absent, but forming a strongly pubescent zone where the veil is inserted in young specimens. Spore-print not observed, presumably white. Context pale orange (5A5) in pileus, thin, fleshy in the center and membranous towards the margins, orange white (5A2) in stipe. Odor and taste not tested. KOH and NaOH reactions on pileus surface negative.

Basidiospores (9.5-)10.5-13.7 × (3.8-)4.5-6.3 µm, x = 12.1 +/-0.8 × 5.4 +/-0.4 µm; Q= 2.11-2.67; Q x = 2.38 +/-0.1; n= 60; N=2; oblong to subcylindrical, phaseoliform in side view, thin-walled, smooth, hyaline, inamyloid, without germ-pore. Basidia 34.3-58 × 7.7-8.6 µm, subcylindrical to narrowly clavate, 4-spored. Pleurocystidia absent. Cheilocystidia 32-43 × 7-10 µm, subcylindrical to narrowly clavate, inconspicuous, thin-walled, smooth, hyaline. Hymenophoral trama subregular, hyphae 40-150 × 5-12 µm, smooth, thin-walled, with clamp-connections. Pileipellis a cutis of repent, more or less interwoven hyphae, 4-15 µm broad, occasionally with incrusted pigments, covered by clusters of dextrinoid hairs and chains of thin-walled monilioid, inamyloid hyphae. Hairs of the pileus surface setiform, scattered on the surface, distributed mainly towards the margin, arising from a pileipellis, 90-560 × 4.5-9 µm, dextrinoid, thick-walled, hyphal walls 1.5-3 µm diam, with basal clamp-connection, occasionally 1 or 2 septate, with obtuse apex. Stipitipellis a cutis of repent hyphae, 6-10 µm broad, with abundant dextrinoid hairs, 40-370 × 5-10 µm, setiform, thick-walled, with obtuse apex, basal clamp-connections.

Distribution.

This species is known from Bolivia ( Halling 1993) and northern Argentina (Yungas and Chaco region).

Ecology.

Gregarious. Parasitic on living roots and trunks of Myrcianthes pungens (O.Berg) D.Legrand, ( Myrtaceae ) Holocalix balansae Micheli ( Fabaceae ) and Pogonopus tubulosus (A.Rich.) K-Schum ( Rubiaceae ), in tropical and subtropical forest.

Specimens studied.

Argentina • Chaco, 1° de Mayo, Colonia Benitez Educational Reserve, interpretative trail; 27°19'04.12"S, 058°56'59.58"W, 64 m a.s.l.; on Guabiyú ( Myrcianthes pungens - Myrtaceae ) trunk and roots; 21.III.2014; N. Ramírez & N.Niveiro CB 23-65 (CTES). • Ibid., on trunk and roots of Alecrín ( Holocalix balansae - Fabaceae ); 22.III.2016; N. Ramírez & N.Niveiro 103, 105 (CTES). • Jujuy, Ledesma, Calilegua National Park, Guarani trail; 23°45'66.1"S, 064°51'15.0"W, 627 m a.s.l.; on montane forest, on Pogonopus tubulosus ( Rubiaceae ); 24.III.2011; N.Niveiro, E. Albertó, B.Lechner & T.Baroni 2249 (CTES). Bolivia • Beni, Iturralde, S of Rurrenabaque, Rio Tuichi near junction with Rio Beni, "Laguna del Tigre"; 14°25'S, 067°30'W; 14.IV.1990; R.Halling 6433 (Isotype: NY00511157!).

Observations.

This species was described by Halling (1993) from Bolivian specimens. It is characterized by its relatively large, bright orange basidiomes, covered with scattered dextrinoid setiform hairs. The most similar species is M. mayarum , which shares morphological characters such as the large basidiomes with bright orange coloration. These two species, however, differ clearly by the smaller spores and by the presence of ornamented cheilocystidia in M. mayarum . Another similar species is M. aurantiaca from American Samoa ( Kropp and Albee-Scott 2012). Both share the orange colored pileus surface with a narrow light yellowish margin. However, they differ in that M. aurantiaca has the smaller pileus (3-15 mm broad), smaller basidiospores (7.5-11 × 5-8 µm) and numerous cheilocystidia with several irregular apical appendages resembling fingers (Kroop and Albee-Scott 2012). Another similar species is C. hygrocybioides (Henn.) Singer from Africa ( Singer 1989), however this is a smaller fungus (pileus 6-11 mm broad) with an umbilicate to papilate pileus that is pilose at the margin ( Halling 1993). Based on its morphological characters such as the bright orange pileus surface, C. hygrociboides could be included in the genus Moniliphthora , but new collections are needed to elucidate its habitat and to obtain sequences and corroborate this hypothesis (currently there are not sequences available for C. hygrocybioides ).

Other known parasitic Neotropical species are M. perniciosa , C. trinitatis Dennis and C. siparunae Singer. Moniliophthora perniciosa , a destructive parasite of Theobroma cacao , differs in having smaller basidiomes (pileus up to 25 mm diam) with a red pileus surface and white stipe ( Singer 1976; Aime and Phillips-Mora 2005). Crinipellis trinitatis has a smaller, red pileus and smaller spores [5-7 × 2-4 µm ss. Dennis (1951) and 7-9 × 4-5 µm ss. Pegler (1983)].

Crinipellis siparunae is a widely distributed species that is microscopically similar to M. ticoi , especially regarding the range of spore size. However, C. siparunae is distinguished by its lilac to brownish lilac pileus surface and by its appendiculate cheilocystidia ( Singer 1942, 1976). A taxon thought to be closely related to C. siparunae , C. eggersii Pat. var. lilaciceps Singer and described from Amazonian Ecuador shares unornamented cheilocystidia with C. ticoi , but it differs from the latter in having a violet to lilac vs orange pileus, and broader basidiospores 6-6.5 × (3.8-)4.5-6.3 µm ( Singer 1976; Kerekes and Desjardin 2009). Crinipellis eggersii var. eggersii , which includes the facultative synonym Marasmius vinosus Speg. described from Argentina, has similar spore dimensions (mostly 11-13 × 5.5-6.3 μm) but differs in having a purple to violet purple pileus and a variety of cheilocystidia shapes (ampullaceous, fusiform, cylindrical or clavate and mostly forked, obtuse or mucronate, sometimes with a subcapitate or capitate apex).

Of the three recent collections in northern Argentina, the specimens of the Yungas forest (Niveiro et al. 2249) closely resemble the original description of M. ticoi , with specimens not exceeding 40 mm broad and having a bright red pileus surface ( Halling 1993). However, the specimens of the Chaco region differ in having larger basidiomes up to 60 mm broad, and a paler coloration (orange with a yellowish margin), differences that may be due to the drier weather conditions in the Chaco region. Another important difference observed in the Argentinean specimens is the habitat. Halling (1993) found this species growing on rotten wood, however, the new specimens examined were growing on tree trunks and roots of living trees, confirming a biotrophic habit for this species during at least part of its life history.

Kingdom

Fungi

Phylum

Basidiomycota

Class

Agaricomycetes

Order

Agaricales

Family

Marasmiaceae

Genus

Moniliophthora

Loc

Moniliophthora ticoi (Halling) Niveiro, Ramirez , Lodge & Aime

Niveiro, Nicolas, Ramirez, Natalia A., Michlig, Andrea, Lodge, D. Jean & Aime, M. Catherine 2020
2020
Loc

Crinipellis ticoi

Halling 1993
1993