Melanogaster cyaneus T. J. Yuan, Shu H. Li, & Raspé, 2024

Yuan, Tian-Jun, Luo, Hong-Mei, Su, Kai-Mei, Li, Shu-Hong & Raspé, Olivier, 2024, Three new Melanogaster species (Boletales, Paxillaceae) from southwestern China based on morphological and molecular evidence, MycoKeys 107, pp. 141-160 : 141-160

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3897/mycokeys.107.123565

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12938653

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B523B224-6487-50D1-B446-FD1EEFCA1849

treatment provided by

MycoKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Melanogaster cyaneus T. J. Yuan, Shu H. Li, & Raspé
status

sp. nov.

Melanogaster cyaneus T. J. Yuan, Shu H. Li, & Raspé sp. nov.

Fig. 3 a – d View Figure 3

Diagnosis.

Melanogaster cyaneus is diagnosed by its blue or bluish gleba, rhizomorphs on the base, thinner peridium (100–400 μm), and longer and wider basidiospores (6.2–15 × 4.6–9.0 μm).

Etymology.

The epithet cyaneus refers to the blue or bluish gleba.

Holotype.

China. Sichuan Province: Panzhihua City, Yanbian County, Shuanglong village , 26 ° 49 ' 12 " N, 101 ° 33 ' 7.1028 " E, elevation 1,970 m, in mainly reddish brown soils under Castanea mollissima Bl. , 16 Aug. 2020, collected by M. Yang ( KUN- HKAS 129200 View Materials , holotype; YAAS - TJ 75-1 , isotype) GoogleMaps .

Description.

Basidiomata 2.5–4.0 × 1.5–2.5 cm, hypogeous or semi-hypogeous, subglobose to ellipsoidal, occasionally elongate; light brown to yellowish brown, with mycelial strands attached in the base (Fig. 3 a View Figure 3 ). Peridium two-layered, outer layer 20–75 μm thick, composed of interwoven hyphae, orange-yellow to reddish, 2–4 μm broad, thick-walled, clamp connections present; inner layer 145–335 μm thick, composed of interwoven, strongly gelatinized hyphae, 2–5 μm broad, pale-yellow, intermixed with massive inflated cells, 6–12 μm broad, with clamp connections present. Gleba solid, gelatinous, milk-white when immature, blue or bluish at mature; trama plates pale-yellow, of gelatinized hyphae (Fig. 3 b View Figure 3 ); locules small, filled with black spores (Fig. 3 c View Figure 3 ). Basidia exhibit limited revival, appearing clavate, hyaline, 4 - spores, randomly distributed, gelatinized at maturity. Basidiospores subglobose to globose, 6.2–15 × 4.6–9.0 μm (L m × W m = 9.5 ± 3.0 × 7.0 ± 2.0, Q = 1.0–2.0, Q m = 1.4 ± 0.6, n = 75), smooth, hyaline when immature, light yellow to reddish at maturity, surfaces display distinctive spots, and optical microscopy reveals a notable hilar appendage, 0.5–1.0 μm in diam (Fig. 3 d View Figure 3 ).

Other material examined.

China, Sichuan province, Panzhihua City, Yanbian County, Shuanglong village , 26 ° 49 ' 12 " N, 101 ° 33 ' 7.1029 " E, elevation 2,000 m, under Castanea mollissima Bl. in evergreen hill forest, in mainly reddish-brown soils, 16 Aug. 2020, collected by M. Yang ( YAAS TJ 75-2 ) GoogleMaps .

Notes.

M. broomeanus Berk ( Türkoğlu and Castellano 2013; Uzun et al. 2014), M. shanxiensis and M. obovatisporus ( Liu et al. 1989) , are similar to M. cyaneus in morphology. M. cyaneus (basidiomata light brown to yellowish brown), M. broomeanus (basidiomata yellow-brown to deep brown), M. shanxiensis (basidiomata brown to rust-brown) and M. obovatisporus (basidiomata brown to brownish-black), but the specimens of M. cyaneus clustered in an independent clade with strong support (BS = 100 %, PP = 1.0; Fig. 2 View Figure 2 ), supporting it as a distinct species. Additionally, DNA analysis revealed M. cyaneus shared less than 92 % ITS similarity with other Melanogaster species.