Helicosporium luteosporum Y.Z. Lu, Boonmee & K.D. Hyde, 2017
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.319.3.3 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13696438 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C01287A1-3578-FFC8-34C3-02B8FAFDE142 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Helicosporium luteosporum Y.Z. Lu, Boonmee & K.D. Hyde |
status |
sp. nov. |
Helicosporium luteosporum Y.Z. Lu, Boonmee & K.D. Hyde View in CoL , sp. nov. FIGURES 4–5 View FIGURE 4 View FIGURE 5
Index Fungorum number: IF 552663; Facesoffungi number: FoF 02763
Etymology: ‘ luteosporum ’ referring to yellow colonies with masses of helicospores in natural woody substrate.
Saprobic on decaying wood, in terrestrial habitat. Colonies effuse, yellow, with masses of crowded conidia in natural habitat. Asexual morph: helicosporous hyphomycetes. Conidiophores 68–103 (–135) μm long × 2.5–4.0 μm wide (x = 87 × 3.5 μm, n = 20), macronematous, mononematous, erect, straight or slightly flexuous, septate, unbranched, tapering toward narrow subacute apex, brown, smooth-walled, arising directly on substrate. Conidiogenous cells holoblastic, monoblastic to polyblastic, each with tooth-like protuberance. Conidia 17–24.5 μm diam., with conidial filament 1.5–2.5 μm wide (x = 20 × 2 μm, n = 50), loosely coiled 1½–3 times, becoming loosely uncoiled in water, rounded at apical ends, multi-septate, guttulate, hyaline, becoming yellowish brown when aged, smooth-walled. Sexual morph: not observed.
Culture characteristics:— Conidia germinating in water agar (WA) within 24 h and germ tubes produced from conidium cells. Colonies growing slowly on malt extract agar (MEA), irregular, with rough surface, with undulate edge, reaching 10 mm in 2 weeks at 28 °C, initially brown and becoming dark brown when aged. Mycelium superficial and partly immersed, branched, septate, pale brown to brown, smooth-walled. Asexual sporulation on MEA, with erect, septate, brown conidiophores and helicosporous conidia occurring on tooth-like protuberant conidiogenous cells ( FIG. 5 View FIGURE 5 ).
Material examined:— THAILAND, Krabi, Watthumsua, on decaying wood in terrestrial habitat on a mountain, 15 December 2015, Saowaluck Tibpromma , KST02 ( MFLU 16–2871 View Materials , holotype; GZAAS 16–0152 , isotype) ; ex-type living culture, MFLUCC 16–0226 View Materials , GZCC 16–0115 .
Notes:— Helicosporium is characterized by macronematous conidiophores, with intercalary, lateral, minute, denticulate conidiogenous cells and tightly to loosely coiled, multi-septate, holoblastic conidia. Morphologically, H. luteosporum shares common characters with H. murinum and the representative type species, H. vegetum ( Zhao et al. 2007, Boonmee et al. 2014), but it is distinct from these species in having different sized conidiophores and conidia. The conidiophores of H. luteosporum is shorter than those of H. vegetum (68–103 μm vs. 107–220 μm) and conidia diameter (17–24.5 μm diam.) is larger than H. murinum (10–15 μm diam.) and H. vegetum (10–15 μm diam.). Moreover, the conidia of H. luteosporum will become yellow colored when matured while other two will not. Phylogenetically H. luteosporum formed a distinct clade from H. vegetum which also indicate this taxon is a new species.
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