Sarcpscypha mesocyatha F.A. Harr. Harvard Papers
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.245.2.8 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13677611 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CA87E9-8D72-7B21-FF50-FA40D313F847 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Sarcpscypha mesocyatha F.A. Harr. Harvard Papers |
status |
|
Sarcpscypha mesocyatha F.A. Harr. Harvard Papers in Botany 1 (10): 62, 1997. Fig. 2 D− G View FIGURE 2
Apothecia scattered, discoid, small, 8−10 mm diam., sessile to subsessile. Disc concave to flat, Scarlet Red to Peach Red (Ridgway), margin slightly raised, inrolled when dry. Receptacle whitish with a red tint, contracted below, sparsely covered by short hyphal hairs, base with white subiculum. Asci 8-spored, J-, cylindrical, 275−280 × 10−12 μm, base attenuated into a long stalk, without croziers. Ascospores uniseriate, ellipsoid with depressions at two ends, smooth, 20−25 × 9−12 μm, containing 2−3 large guttules when fresh. Paraphyses filiform, slightly exceeding the asci, apex 3−4 μm wide, sparsely septate. Conidia not seen.
Specimens examined: — TAIWAN. Miaoli: Kuanwu-Hsuehchieh , elev. 1900 m, on dead twigs, 2 September 1995, C.A. Chiu ; CCA 23 View Materials ( TNM F3688 About TNM ). Nantou, Tungpu, on dead branches, 10 August 1995, W.N. Chou, WAN 189 About WAN ( TNM F3460 About TNM ). Nantou, Wushe , on dead twigs, elev. 870 m, 4 July 1996, W.N. Chou, WAN 309 About WAN ( TNM F5134 About TNM ) .
Notes:— This species was originally reported from Hawaii, which is characterized by small to medium-sized apothecia, and ascospores with deep depressions at both ends ( Harrington 1997; Zhuang 2000). The ascospores of these specimens are slightly smaller than those in the holotype (21−27 × 9−10.5 μm, Harrington, 1997). It is a new record to the Taiwanese fungal flora.
TNM |
National Museum of Natural Science |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.