Barssia guozigouensis L. Fan & Y.Y. Xu, 2018
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.374.2.4 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AA8346-4807-487A-FF6B-FE4EFD7C8E82 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Barssia guozigouensis L. Fan & Y.Y. Xu |
status |
sp. nov. |
Barssia guozigouensis L. Fan & Y.Y. Xu View in CoL , sp. nov. Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 .
Fungal Names : FN570586
Etymology: guozigouensis, Guozigou , fruit-valley, referring to locality where the type specimen was collected.
Holotype: China. Xinjiang Autonomous Region, Huocheng County, Guozigou Forest Park , alt. 1800m, in soil under Picea schrenkiana Fisch. & C.A. Mey. , 11 August 2003, W. P. Wu & M. S. Song 060 ( HMAS 97107 View Materials ).
Ascomata subglobose to irregularly globose, usually with some superficial or deep furrows, 4–16 × 4–14 mm in dry, brown to red brown, with an pale color apical depression, surface covered with distinctly pyramidal or round red brown warts of 200–260 μm wide and 100–140 μm high, odor and taste not recorded. Gleba whitish to yellow white at maturity, solid, marbled with large white vines radiating from apical depression, scattered with some small and irregular chambers. Peridium 250–450 μm thick, two-layered, outer layer 100–160 μm thick, pseudoparenchymatous, composed of polygonal cells with 4-6 sides, cells 15–30×10–20 μm, walls 1–2 μm thick, the ourtemost cells reddish-brown, and gradually light-yellow to nearly hyaline towards inner side; inner layer near hyaline, 150–250μm thick, composed of interwoven hyphae, that more or less parallel to the surface of peridium, hyphae hyaline, 2–5 μm wide. Paraphyses not well-defined, hyaline, cylindrical, straight or sometimes slightly curved, septate, longer than asci, 2.0– 5.0 μm wide. Asci irregularly clavate or broadly ellipsoid, with a protruding hump at the apex and a pleurorhynchous base, with a slender-stalk, 45–60 μm long, 5.5–8.5μm wide, inamyloid, 8-spored, 140–205 × 30–48 μm (including stalk), spores irregularly arranged in ascus. Ascospores ellipsoid, smooth, hyaline, inamyloid, 23.0–28.5 × 13.5–19.0 μm (av. 25.0 × 16.0 μm), Q (L/I) = 1.35–1.75 (Qm = 1.60) (n = 30), usually containing one large oil drop that almost occupied the entire spore.
Other materials examined: China. Xinjiang Autonomous Region, Huocheng County, Guozigou Forest Park, alt. 1800m, in soil under Picea schrenkiana Fisch. & C.A.Mey. , 11 August 2003, M. S. Song 067 ( HMAS 97104 View Materials ) ; ibid., M. S. Song & X. Z. Liu 070 ( HMAS 97119 View Materials ) ; ibid., M. S. Song & X. Q. Zhang 064 ( HMAS 97114 View Materials ) ; ibid., M. S. Song & W. P. Wu 056 ( HMAS 97128 View Materials ) ; ibid., M. S. Song 062 ( HMAS 97131 View Materials ) .
Note: Barssia guozigouensis is diagnosed by its distinctly warty ascomata and solid gleba scattered with some small and irregular chambers. Phylogenetically, it was closely related to B. luyashanensis ( Figs 1 View FIGURE 1 , 2 View FIGURE 2 ), but the latter differs in its ascomata with fine warts and gleba without chambers. Moreover, the ascospores of B. luyashanensis are larger (24.5–30.8 × 15.5–21.5 μm). The North African species B. maroccana is similar to B. guozigouensis in shape of ascospores, but differs in size (29–36 × 16–22 μm).
W |
Naturhistorisches Museum Wien |
P |
Museum National d' Histoire Naturelle, Paris (MNHN) - Vascular Plants |
M |
Botanische Staatssammlung München |
S |
Department of Botany, Swedish Museum of Natural History |
Z |
Universität Zürich |
Q |
Universidad Central |
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