Abstract Abstract
Phylogenetic reconstruction revealed that Mycena stirps Amparoina, which is traditionally classified in sect. Sacchariferae, should be treated at section level. Section Amparoina is characterised by the presence or absence of cherocytes, the presence of acanthocysts and spinulose caulocystidia. Eight species referred to Mycenasect.Amparoinasect. nov. are recognised in China. Of these taxa, four new species classified in the new section are formally described: M.bicystidiatasp. nov., M.griseotinctasp. nov., M.hygrophoroidessp. nov. and M.miscanthisp. nov. The new species are characterised by the absence of both cherocytes and a basal disc, along with the presence of acanthocysts on the pileus, spinulose cheilocystidia and caulocystidia. Descriptions of the new species, accompanied by illustrations of morphological characters and comparisons with closely related taxa, are provided. A multi-locus analysis utilising the ITS + nLSU + SSU regions was carried out using maximum likelihood and Bayesian Inference. A key to the 12 species of sect. Amparoinasect. nov. and sect. Sacchariferae that are found in China is provided.
Keywords: Agarics, new taxon, systematics, taxonomy
Introduction
The genus Mycena (Pers.) Roussel is characterised by small basidiomata, thin and convex pileus with sulcate margin, non-deliquescent lamellae and hollow stipe (Persoon 1797). The genus comprises more than 500 species and is distributed worldwide (Kirk et al. 2008). Mycenasect.Sacchariferae Kühner ex Singer, which is one of the largest sections in the genus, was first published as a nomen nudum by Kühner (1938), who defined the section to include members that possess a granulose or “sugar coated” pileus. In 1958, Singer erected the monotypic genus Amparoina Singer to house Marasmiusspinosissimus Singer based on the collections from Argentina (Singer 1958). Later, Singer (1976) established Amparoinaceae with A.spinosissima (Singer) Singer as type species and introduced another species in Amparoina, A.heteracantha Singer. Meanwhile he suggested that Amparoina was similar to sect. Sacchariferae, but maintained the autonomy of the former due to inamyloid basidiospores and revised sect. Sacchariferae to be characterised by a pileipellis with acanthocysts, which remain as terminal cells overlaid by a universal veil (Singer 1976). The pileus of cherocytes and acanthocysts distinguish taxa of sect. Sacchariferae from all other Mycena species. Section Sacchariferae was subdivided by Desjardin (1995) into stirps Amparoina Desjardin, stirps Alphitophora Desjardin and stirps Adscendens Desjardin, with 55 epithets classified into 27 taxa, based on presence or absence of a basal disc, cherocytes, and diverse caulocystidia. Maas Geesteranus and de Meijer (1997) established a fourth stirps, named stirps Fuscinea Maas Geest. & de Meijer, in which the acanthocysts possess brown contents, a character similar to that of stirps Amparoina. Only two species have been classified in stirps Fuscinea, namely M.fuscinea Maas Geest. & de Meijer and M.fuliginea Maas Geest. & de Meijer (Maas Geesteranus and de Meijer 1998). The morphology-based infrasectional classification of Mycenasect.Sacchariferae, proposed by Desjardin (1995), has been widely adopted. However, no phylogenetic reconstruction of relationships in sect. Sacchariferae has been published to assess the validity of the infrasectional classification.
Previous studies of sect. Sacchariferae have focused on species distributed in Europe and North and South America, with more than 60 species studied in the past 30 years (Maas Geesteranus 1983, 1992a, 1992b; Lodge 1988; Takahashi 1999; Perry 2002; Grgurinovic 2003; Robich 2003, 2016; Tanaka and Hongo 2003; Nealel 2009; Robich and Hausknecht 2009; Zamora and Català 2013; Cortéspérez et al. 2015; Aronsen and Læssøe 2016). In contrast, studies of Asian taxa have been scanty until recent years. Aravindakshan and Manimohan (2015) described ten taxa, including six new species in sect. Sacchariferae from India. Only three species, M.anoectochili L. Fan & S.X. Guo, M.alphitophora (Berk.) Sacc. and M.cornephora Maas Geest., were formerly reported from China (Guo et al. 1997; Li et al. 2015). However, recently, three new taxa of sect. Sacchariferae were described, namely M.castaneicola T. Bau & Q. Na, M.hyalinostipitata T. Bau & Q. Na and M.substylobates T. Bau & Q. Na, from subtropical regions of China (Na and Bau 2019).
A phylogenetic reconstruction of Mycena was incongruous with the traditional classification of stirps Amparoina within sect.Sacchariferae and indicated that the taxonomic classification of the section should be reconsidered. During our ongoing research on Mycena, four new taxa without a basal disc and cherocytes, belonging to the new section, were found in southern China in Chongqing City, Guangdong Province, Henan Province, Hubei Province, Tibet Autonomous Region, Yunnan Province and Zhejiang Province. These species are described here. Based on the phylogenetic analyses, an identification key to the 12 species of sect. Sacchariferae and sect. Amparoina currently known from China is provided.
Materials and methods
Morphological study
Macroscopic characters were described from fresh specimens following conventional taxonomic methods. Colour terms and notations refer to those of Kornerup and Wanscher (1978). Microscopic characters were observed from dried specimens rehydrated in 5% potassium hydroxide (KOH) and stained with Congo red, using a Nikon 80i light microscope. Melzer’s reagent was used for testing amyloid and dextrinoid reactions of all tissues (Horak 2005). The spore shape quotient (spore length divided by spore width; Q = L/B) was calculated from 40 mature basidiospores; 90% of the numerical range is indicated outside parentheses and the 10% extreme values are enclosed in parentheses. Author abbreviations are based on those used in Index Fungorum (https://www.indexfungorum.org). Voucher specimens have been deposited in the Herbarium Mycology of Jilin Agricultural University (HMJAU).
DNA extraction, PCR amplification and DNA sequencing
Material for DNA isolation was taken from dried specimens. Genomic DNA was extracted from samples using the NuClean Plant Genomic DNA Kit (Kangwei Century Biotechnology Company Limited, Beijing, China). The internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region was amplified with the primer pair ITS1 and ITS4 (White et al. 1990). The nLSU and SSU regions were amplified using the primers LROR/LR7 and MS1/MS2, respectively (Ward et al. 1992; Hopple and Vilgalys 1999). The PCR cycling schedule for the ITS, nLSU and SSU region used a touchdown programme (Na and Bau 2018). All newly generated sequences were deposited in GenBank (Table 1).
Table 1.
Sequenced specimens used in phylogenetic analysis.
Taxa | Voucher | Locality | GenBank accession no. | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ITS | nLSU | SSU | |||
Infundibulicybegibba (Pers.) Harmaja | AFTOL-ID 1508 | USA | DQ490635 | DQ457682 | – |
I. gibba | FLAS-F-60947 | Unpublished | MH016906 | – | – |
Mycenaabramsii (Murrill) Murrill | HMJAU 43282 | Jilin: Jingyuetan National Scenic Area, Changchun City | MH396626 | MK629348 | MK629326 |
M. abramsii | HMJAU 43468 | Jilin: Jingyuetan National Scenic Area, Changchun City | MH396627 | – | MK629328 |
HMJAU 43523 | Jilin: Songjiang Town, Jiaohe City | MH396628 | MK629350 | MK629330 | |
HMJAU 43606 | Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region: Mangui Town, Hulunbeier City | MH396629 | MK629355 | MK629336 | |
M.adscendens Maas Geest. | Orstadius329-05 | Norway: Strengsdal Village, Vestfold | KT900141 | – | – |
M. adscendens | Aronsen061119 | Norway: Strengsdal Village, Vestfold | KT900142 | – | – |
Aronsen120826 | Norway: Strengsdal Village, Vestfold | KT900143 | – | – | |
M. alphitophora | HMJAU 43498 | Jilin: Shenglihe forest farms, Jiaohe City | MH136830 | – | MK629329 |
HMJAU 43686 | Yunnan: Zixi Mountain National Nature Reserve, Chuxiong City | MH136831 | – | MK629343 | |
M.arcangeliana Bres. | 252b | Italy: Venice Museum of Natural History, Venice | JF908401 | – | – |
M. arcangeliana | 252f | Italy: Venice Museum of Natural History, Venice | JF908402 | – | – |
M.bicystidiata T.Bau & Q.Na | HMJAU 43589 | Hubei: Yandongwan, Lichuan County | MK309774 | – | – |
M. bicystidiata | HMJAU 43593 | Hubei: Xingdou Mountain National Nature Reserves | MK309775 | MK629354 | – |
HMJAU 43648, Type | Chongqing: Dafengbao Scenic Regions, Huangshui Town | MK309773 | MK629359 | MK629341 | |
HMJAU 43744 | Zhejiang: Tianmu Mountain National Nature Reserves, Hangzhou City | MK309776 | – | – | |
M.castaneicola T.Bau & Q.Na | HMJAU 43578, Type | Henan: Jigong Mountain National Nature, Xinyang City | MH136826 | – | MK629334 |
M. castaneicola | HMJAU 43581 | Henan: Bolden National Forest Park, Xinyang City | MH136827 | – | – |
M.citrinomarginata Gillet | HMJAU 43563 | Shanxi: Wutai Mountain National Nature, Xinzhou City | MG654739 | MK629351 | MK629331 |
M. citrinomarginata | 317h | Italy: Venice Museum of Natural History, Venice | JF908416 | – | – |
AD4TN | Tunisia: Aïn Draham | KU973883 | – | – | |
M.corynephora Maas Geest. | HMJAU 43574 | Henan: Xinyang City | MH136832 | – | MK629332 |
M. corynephora | HMJAU 43576 | Henan: Xinyang City | MH136833 | – | MK629333 |
M.diosma Krieglst.&Schwöbel | 320f | Italy: Venice Museum of Natural History, Venice | JF908417 | – | – |
M.griseotincta T.Bau & Q.Na | HMJAU 43800, Type | Yunnan: Shangri-La Pudacuo National Park | MK309783 | MK629363 | MK629346 |
M. griseotincta | HMJAU 43805 | Yunnan: Shangri-La Pudacuo National Park | MK309782 | – | – |
HMJAU 43819 | Tibet: Zhuqudeng Village, Nyingchi City | MK309784 | – | – | |
M.heteracantha (Singer) Desjardin | HMJAU 43709, | Hunan: Yuelu Mountain, Changsha City | MK309785 | MK629362 | MK629345 |
M. heteracantha | HMJAU 43711 | Hunan: Xiaoxi National Nature Reserves | MK309786 | – | – |
HMJAU 43716 | Hunan: Gaowangjie National Nature Reserves | MK309787 | – | – | |
M.hyalinostipitata T.Bau&Q. Na | HMJAU 43693, Type | Yunnan: Yeyahu Scenic Spot, Kunming City | MH136828 | MK629361 | MK629344 |
M. hyalinostipitata | HMJAU 43701 | Yunnan: Yeyahu Scenic Spot, Kunming City | MH136829 | – | – |
M. hygrophoroides | HMJAU 43417, Type | Guangdong: Chebaling National Nature Reserve, Shaoguan City | MK309780 | MK629349 | MK629327 |
HMJAU 43421 | Guangdong: Shangxie Village, Shaoguan City | MK309781 | – | – | |
M.meliigena (Berk.&Cooke) Sacc. | 39 | Italy: Venice Museum of Natural History, Venice | JF908423 | – | – |
M. meliigena | 39d | Italy: Venice Museum of Natural History, Venice | JF908429 | – | – |
M.miscanthi T.Bau & Q.Na | HMJAU 43573 | Henan: Jinniu Mountain, Xinyang City | MK309777 | MK629352 | – |
M. miscanthi | HMJAU 43582 | Henan: Bolden National Forest Park, Xinyang City | MK309778 | – | – |
HMJAU 43584, Type | Henan: Jigong Mountain National Nature, Xinyang City | MK309779 | MK629353 | MK629335 | |
M.pearsoniana Dennis ex Singer | FCME25817 | USA: Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Tennessee | JN182198 | – | – |
M. pearsoniana | TENN61544 | USA: Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Tennessee | JN182199 | – | – |
TENN61384 | USA: Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Tennessee | JN182200 | – | – | |
M.pelianthina (Fr.) Quél. | 108b | Italy: Venice Museum of Natural History, Venice | JF908379 | – | – |
M. pelianthina | 108f | Italy: Venice Museum of Natural History, Venice | JF908380 | – | – |
CBH164 | Denmark: Jutland, Paderup Mose | FN394548 | – | – | |
M.pseudocorticola Kühner | 124a | Italy: Venice Museum of Natural History, Venice | JF908386 | – | – |
M.pura (Pers.) P. Kumm. | HMJAU 43121 | Liaoning: Ant Ridge, Dandong City | MK309793 | – | – |
M. pura | HMJAU 43179 | Heilongjiang: Shengshan National Nature Reserve | MK309794 | – | – |
TENN65043 | USA: Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Tennessee | JN182202 | – | – | |
M.rosea Gramberg | CBH409 | Germany: Baden-Württemberg, Schwarzwald | FN394551 | – | – |
M. rosea | TL12409 | Denmark: Jutland, Skivum Nørrekrat | FN394557 | – | – |
M.rosella (Fr.) P. Kumm. | 938a | Italy: Venice Museum of Natural History, Venice | JF908488 | – | – |
M. rosella | Champ-21 | JGI MycoCosm database | KX449424 | – | – |
M.seminau A.L.C.Chew&Desjardin | ACL136 | Malaysia: Ulu Gombak, Selangor | KF537250 | – | – |
M. seminau | ACL308 | Malaysia: Ulu Gombak, Selangor | KF537252 | – | – |
M.silvae-nigrae Maas Geest.&Schwöbel | 515 | Italy: Venice Museum of Natural History, Venice | JF908452 | – | – |
M. silvae-nigrae | CC 13-12 | USA: Great Smoky Mountains National Park | KF359604 | – | – |
M.substylobates T.Bau & Q.Na | HMJAU 43418, Type | Guangdong: Chebaling National Nature Reserve, Shaoguan City | MH216189 | – | – |
M. substylobates | HMJAU 43444 | Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region: Nonggang National Nature Reserve, Chongzuo City | MH216190 | – | – |
M.supina (Fr.) P. Kumm. | 128a | Italy: Venice Museum of Natural History, Venice | JF908388 | – | – |
M.tenerrima Maas Geest. | HMJAU 43646 | Chongqing: Huangshui Town | MK309795 | – | MK629340 |
M. tenerrima | HMJAU 43816 | Tibet: Bomi County, Nyingchi City | MK309796 | MK629364 | – |
M.zephirus (Fr.) P. Kumm. | CBS 270.48 | Netherlands: Microbial Biological Resource Centres | MH856339 | – | – |
M. zephirus | CBS 273.48 | Netherlands: Microbial Biological Resource Centres | MH856341 | – | – |
Sequence alignment and phylogenetic analysis
A dataset, comprising sequences for the ITS + nLSU + SSU region from 96 accessions with taxonomic coverage of Europe, North America, Australia, Africa and Asia, was compiled and analysed. Sequences for 32 accessions were downloaded from GenBank and 64 newly generated sequences obtained in this study were aligned and adjusted manually using BioEdit 7.0.4.1 and Clustal X (Thompson et al. 1997; Hall 1999). The alignment was deposited with TreeBase (submission ID, 24326; study accession URL: http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S24326). Infundibulicybegibba were chosen as the outgroup. The aligned dataset consisted of 817 ITS, 1530 nLSU and 620 SSU nucleotide sites (including gaps). The best-fit evolutionary model was identified using Modeltest 2.3 for each of the ITS, nLSU and SSU data partitions for Bayesian Inference (BI), which was implemented with MrBayes 3.2.6 (Ronquist and Huelsenbeck 2003; Nylander 2004). Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) chains were run for one million generations, sampling every 100th generation until the critical value for the topological convergence diagnostic was less than 0.01 (Ronquist and Huelsenbeck 2003). Maximum Likelihood (ML) analysis was performed in raxmlGUI 1.5b1, with a rapid bootstrapping algorithm involving 1,000 replicates (Stamatakis et al. 2004). Topology support values greater than 75% bootstrap support (ML) 0.95 and Bayesian posterior probabilities (BPP) are shown at each branch node.
Results
Phylogeny
Sect. Amparoina (Clade 5) formed a distinct clade separated from sect. Sacchariferae (Clade 4), sect. Calodontes (Clade 3), sect. Supinaae (Clade 2) and sect. Fragilipedes (Clade 1), as a sister group to all other clades within the ingroup with high statistical support (ML ≥ 75%, BPP ≥ 1.00) and should be elevated to section level.
Phylogenetic reconstructions obtained using BI and ML showed similar topologies. The best-scoring Maximum Likelihood (ML) tree was selected as a representative phylogeny (Fig. 1). The optimal evolutionary model for the 5.8S and nLSU partition were lset nst = 6, rates = invgamma and prset statefreqpr = dirichlet (1,1,1,1) and SSU was lset nst = 6, rates = gamma and prset statefreqpr = dirichlet (1,1,1,1). The phylogenetic tree contained six clades, five including species of Mycena. The latter clade was nested within the clades of Mycena species. Each of the five clades of Mycena species corresponded with a taxonomic section, circumscribed from morphological characters, with high statistical support (ML ≥ 75%, BPP ≥ 0.95).
Figure 1.
Maximum Likelihood and Bayesian tree concatenated ITS+nLSU+SSU dataset (ML ≥ 75%, BPP ≥ 0.95 are indicated). The tree is rooted with Infundibulicybegibba. The new species are marked by ●.
Samples of the four new species were placed in separate monophyletic lineages, each with high statistical support (M.bicystidiatum, ML = 99%, BPP = 1.00; M.griseotincta, ML = 99%, BPP = 1.00; M.hygrophoroides, ML = 98%, BPP = 0.99; M.miscanthi, ML = 100%, BPP = 1.00; Fig. 1). The phylogenetic tree resolved a strongly supported stirps Alphitophora comprising these species along with M.alphitophora (Berk.) Sacc., M.corynephora Maas Geest. in Clade 5 with ML = 100%, BPP = 1.00. Then stirps Amparoina, also located in Clade 5 as sister group with stirps Alphitophora, formed a monophyletic lineage with high statistical support in accordance with a basal disc in morphology. The distinction of the new taxa from the closely related species, M.alphitophora and M.corynephora, was also supported.
Taxonomy
Key to species of sect. Amparoina and sect. Sacchariferae in China
1 | Basal disc present, cherocytes absent, acanthocysts present, caulocystidia smooth or with few spines | (sect. Sacchariferae) 2 |
– | Basal disc present or absent, cherocytes present or absent, acanthocysts present, caulocystidia spinulose | (sect. Amparoina) 5 |
2 | Pileus grey-black | M. anoectochila |
– | Pileus white | 3 |
3 | Caulocystidia irregularly shaped | M. substylobates |
– | Caulocystidia fusiform | 4 |
4 | Cheilocystidia fusiform with spines in the middle part | M. tenerrima |
– | Cheilocystidia sphaeropedunculate with spines overall | M. hyalinostipitata |
5 | Basal disc and cherocytes present | (stirps Amparoina) 6 |
– | Basal disc and cherocytes absent | (stirps Alphitophora) 7 |
6 | Habitat on fruits of Castanea, pileus slightly pubescent | M. castaneicola |
– | Habitat on dead wood or humus layer, pileus with bran-like covering | M. heteracantha |
7 | Lamellae distant, L < 10, I < 3 | M. hygrophoroides |
– | Lamellae normal, L > 15, I > 6 | 8 |
8 | Basidiomata typically grey | M. griseotincta |
– | Basidiomata white | 9 |
9 | Caulocystidia of two types, sphaeropedunculate or clavate | M. bicystidiata |
– | Caulocystidia clavate | 10 |
10 | Basidiospores globose | M. corynephora |
– | Basidiospores ellipsoid | 11 |
11 | Acanthocysts of one type, sphaeropedunculate | M. miscanthi |
– | Acanthocysts of two types, globose or long-clavate | M. alphitophora |
Section. Amparoina
T.Bau & Q.Na sect. nov.
829096
Diagnosis.
Pileus densely pubescent to furfuraceous. Stipe arising from a well-developed basal disc or base swollen without a basal disc. Cheilocystidia with spines. Cherocystes present or absent. Acanthocysts present and overlying universal veil. Caulocystidia densely spinulose overall, never smooth.
Type species.
Mycenaspinosissima (Singer) Desjardin
Etymology.
Name refers to the name of stirps Amparoina.
Mycena bicystidiata
T.Bau & Q.Na sp. nov.
829097
Figure 2.
Basidiomata of sect. Amparoina species. stirps Alphitophora: a–bMycenaalphitophora (Berk.) Sacc. c–dMycenabicystidiata T.Bau & Q.Na eMycenacorynephora Maas Geest. f–gMycenagriseotincta T.Bau & Q.Na hMycenahygroporoides T.Bau & Q.Na iMycenamiscanthi T.Bau & Q.Na; stirps Amparoina: jMycenacastaneicola T.Bau & Q.Na k–mMycenaheteracantha (Singer) Desjardin. Basidiomata of sect. Saccariferae species n–oMycenahyalinostipitata T.Bau & Q.Na p–qMycenasubstylobates T.Bau & Q.Na rMycenatenerrima (Berk.) Quél. (=Mycenaadscendens Maas Geest.) Scale bars: 10 mm (a–g, i–m, r), 5 mm (h, n–q). Photographs a–r by Qin Na.
Figure 3.
Microscopic features of Mycenabicystidiata (HMJAU 43648, holotype) a Basidiomata b Basidiospores c Basidia d Universal veil acanthocysts e Cheilocystidia f Caulocystidia g Pileipellis. Scale bars: 5 mm (a); 10 μm (b–g). Drawing by Qin Na.
Diagnosis.
Pileus furfuraceous to pruinose. Stipe without basal disc. Basidiospores small, 6.1–7.9 × 3.7–4.6 μm. Cheilocystidia clustered, sphaero-pedunculate to utriform with numerous sharp excrescences. Cherocytes absent. Acanthocysts pyriform to vesicular. Caulocystidia of two types, sphaero-pedunculate or clavate covered with conic spines. Clamps present.
Holotype.
CHINA. Chongqing City, Dafengbao Scenic Regions, 15 Aug 2017, Qin Na, HMJAU 43648.
Etymology.
Name refers to its two types of caulocystidia.
Description.
Pileus 2.8–5.2 mm in diam., conical when young, becoming nearly hemispherical with age, pure white all over, sulcate, translucent-striate, pruinose, furfur-like scattered, margin entire first, then nearly plane and finally fissile. Context very thin and fragile, pure white. Lamellae 0.5 mm thick, narrowly adnate, off-white, concolorous with the sides. Stipe slender, 15–28 × 0.5–1.0 mm, cylindrical, hollow, fragile, pure white, densely pruinose on the whole surface, base swollen and not forming a basal disc, hirsute. Odour and taste inconspicuous.
Basidiospores (5.6-)6.1–7.9(-8.3) × (3.5)3.7–4.6(4.9) μm, Q=1.6–2.0, ellipsoid to oblong-ellipsoid, hyaline, with drops, thin walled, amyloid. Basidia 20–26 × 6–9 μm, clavate, hyaline, 4- or 2-spored. Cheilocystidia 19–32 × 12–18 μm, clustered, sphaero-pedunculate to utriform with numerous sharp spines, thin-walled and hyaline, inamyloid. Pleurocystidia absent. Pileipellis hyphae 4–7 μm wide, weakly dextrinoid; cherocytes absent; a cutis overlaid by elements of universal veil, not in chains; acanthocysts of one type, numerous, pyriform to vesicular, 29–62 × 24–51 μm, inamyloid. Hyphae of the stipitipellis 3–14 μm wide, smooth, dextrinoid; caulocystidia abundant, of two types, utriform, sphaero-pedunculate, 21–85 × 14–66 μm or clavate, long-elliptic, 21–85 × 11–26 μm, densely and evenly spinulose overall, hyaline, thin-walled, inamyloid. Clamps present in all tissues.
Habit and habitat.
Solitary to scattered on rotten wood in mixed forests, Bamboos, Cunninghamia, Ginkgo and Platycladus forests.
Other specimens examined.
CHINA. Hubei Province, Enshi Tujia and Miao Autonomous Prefecture, Lichuan County, Yandongwan, 19 Jul 2017, Qin Na, HMJAU 43589; Xingdou Mountain National Nature Reserves, 20 Jul 2017, Qin Na, HMJAU 43593; Zhejiang Province, Hangzhou City, Tianmu Mountain National Nature Reserves, 4 Jul 2018, Qin Na and Tolgor Bau, HMJAU 43774.
Remarks.
Mycenabicystidiata is unique in sect. Amparoina stirps Alphitophora because of the two types of caulocystidia covered with conic spines. Mycenaalphitophora, which is the most widely distributed species of sect. Amparoina, shows the most morphological similarities to M.bicystidiatum; however, the former differs in forming cylindric spores (7.5–10 × 4.5–5.5 μm), sphaero-pedunculate cheilocystidia and caulocystidia that are only clavate in shape (Desjardin 1995). Mycenadepilata Singer is easily mistaken for M.bicystidiata by the stipe without a basal disc and the similar shape and size of spores and cheilocystidia, but M.depilata is distinguished from M.bicystidiata by its small basidiomata (pileus < 0.3 mm), larger spores (8.5–10 × 4.5–5.2 μm), and long-cylindrical and larger caulocystidia (30–120 × 5–20 μm) (Desjardin 1995). In contrast to M.bicystidiata, basidiospores of M.corynephora, M.distincta (Manim. & Leelav.) Aravind. & Manim., M.globispora (Manim. & Leelav.) Aravind. & Manim. and M.yalensis Singer are globose or broadly ellipsoid (Desjardin 1995; Aravindakshan and Manimohan 2015). The bright or dark colour on the pileus distinguishes M.brunneospinosa Desjardin, M.incarnativelum Desjardin and M.roseotincta Aravind. & Manim. from M.bicystidiata (Desjardin 1995; Aravindakshan and Manimohan 2015). In addition, M.hemitrichialis Singer produces caulocystidia that are only partially spinulose (Singer 1989).
Mycena griseotincta
T.Bau & Q.Na sp. nov.
829098
Figure 4.
Microscopic features of Mycenagriseotincta (HMJAU 43800, holotype). a Basidiomata b Basidia c Basidiospores d Cheilocystidia e Universal veil acanthocysts f Pileipellis g Caulocystidia. Scale bars: 10 mm (a); 10 μm (b–g). Drawing by Qin Na.
Diagnosis.
Pileus, lamellae and stipe with greyish tint, especially when old. Stipe base swollen. Basidiospores pip-shaped. Pileipellis with two types of acanthocysts. Caulocystidia up to 200 μm long with spines.
Holotype.
CHINA. Yunnan Province, Diqing Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Shangri-La Pudacuo National Park, 14 August 2018, Qin Na, HMJAU 43800.
Etymology.
Name refers to the grey-tinted basidiomata.
Description.
Pileus 1.5–12.8 mm in diam., conical when young, campanulate with age, obtusely umbonate in the centre, translucent-striate, white, greyish-white when old (4B1), floccose, pubescent, pruinose, with crenate margin when young, then becoming nearly plane and finely torn. Context pure white, thin, fragile. Lamellae 0.2–0.5 mm thick, narrowly adnate or adnexed, pure white to slightly pale grey (4B1); edges finely torn, concolorous with the sides. Stipe 13–64 × 0.5–1.0 mm, central, terete, almost equal or slightly tapering to apex, hollow, greyish-white (5B1), pubescent or puberulous, with white, fine hairs, base swollen. Odourless, taste mild.
Basidiospores (5.6-)6.3–8.2(-8.5) × (3.5-)4.2–4.6(-5.2) μm, Q=1.5–1.9, Qav=1.7, pip-shaped, hyaline, guttulate, thin walled, amyloid. Basidia 19–23 × 7–9 μm, hyaline, clavate, 4-spored. Cheilocystidia 17–28 × 11–19 μm, oblong or clavate, with short and sharp spines, hyaline, inamyloid. Pleurocystidia absent. Pileipellis hyphae 6–10 μm wide, strongly dextrinoid; cherocytes absent; acanthocysts of two types, pyriform to vesicular, 8–22 × 7–18 μm or clavate to cylindric, 17–51 × 8–13 μm; universal veil composed of acanthocysts, globose, subglobose or sphaero-pedunculate, 28–67 × 26–58 μm, hyaline, covered with long, cylindrical excrescences or long and flexuous spinules, not in chains. Hyphae of the stipitipellis 2–7 μm wide, dextrinoid; caulocystidia abundant, clavate or long cylindrical, 77–216 × 9–11 μm, covered with densely conic spines, inamyloid. Clamps not seen.
Habit and habitat.
Scattered to gregarious on litter layer in Quercus, Picea, Abies, Pinus mixed forests.
Other specimens examined.
Yunnan Province, Diqing Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Shangri-La Pudacuo National Park, 15 August 2018, Qin Na, HMJAU 43805; Tibet Autonomous Region, Nyingchi City, Zhuqudeng Village, 20 August 2018, Qin Na, HMJAU 43819.
Remarks.
Mycenagriseotincta is considered a new species in sect. Amparoina stirps Alphitophora on account of the absence of both a basal disc and cherocytes on the pileal surface (Desjardin 1995). Five species have ellipsoid basidiospores, caulocystidia covered with excrescences and a universal veil composed of acanthocysts: M.alphitophora, M.brunneospinosa, M.depilata, M.hemitrichialis and M.incarnativelum. Mycenaalphitophora most resembles M.griseotincta, but the former differs in having pure white lamellae, a white and shorter stipe (< 50 mm), sphaero-pedunculate or obovoid cheilocystidia and larger spores (8.1–9.7 × 4.5–5.5 μm), as reported in the original description (Maas Geesteranus 1980, 1992b). Mycenabrunneospinosa, a taxon named by Desjardin (1995), is readily identified by its dull brown or purplish-brown pileus, globose acanthocysts forming chains and broadly ellipsoid spores. Mycenaincarnativelum is a unique species in sect. Sacchariferae, distinguished by the absence of cheilocystidia and deep pink basidiomata when young (Desjardin 1995). Mycenadepilata is closely allied to M.griseotincta, but differs in the convex pileus less than 1 mm in diameter and short and broadly clavate caulocystidia (Singer 1989). Mycenahemitrichialis can be mistaken for M.griseotincta on account of its grey or pallid pileus and ellipsoid spores, but is distinguished from M.griseotincta by its white stipe, free lamellae and pilose stipe forming a flattened ring of mycelium (Desjardin 1995). Mycenacorynephora is widely distributed worldwide and is recognised by its tiny basidiomata (pileus < 2.4 mm), absence of a basal bulb or basal disc and large globose to subglobose basidiospores, typical of stirps Alphitophora (Desjardin 1995; Robich 2003; Aronsen and Læssøe 2016). The same spore shape occurs in M.yalensis of which the holotype was collected from Argentina (Singer 1973). Aravindakshan and Manimohan (2015) reported one new species and two others newly combined in Mycena, collected from India. The new taxon, M.roseotincta, differs from M.griseotincta in its pink pileus and universal veil, subcylindrical spores and smaller caulocystidia (Aravindakshan and Manimohan 2015). Mycenaglobispora and M.distincta are mainly distinguished in macromorphology from M.griseotincta by their white basidiomata and, in micromorphology, by the globose spores and subcylindrical spores, respectively (Aravindakshan and Manimohan 2015).
Mycena hygrophoroides
T.Bau & Q.Na sp. nov.
829099
Figure 5.
Microscopic features of Mycenahygrophoroides (HMJAU 43417, holotype) a Basidiomata b Basidia c Basidiospores d Cheilocystidia e Universal veil acanthocysts f Caulocystidia g Pileipellis. Scale bars: 2 mm (a); 10 μm (b–g). Drawing by Qin Na.
Diagnosis.
Pileus concave with slight pruinose. Lamellae distant. Stipe with dense white fibrils and swollen base. Acanthocysts forming two types. Caulocystidia long-elliptic with conical excrescences, up to 120 μm long.
Holotype.
CHINA. Guangdong Province, Shaoguan City, Chebaling National Nature Reserve, 8 May 2017, Qin Na, HMJAU 43417.
Etymology.
Name refers to its sparse lamellae.
Description.
Pileus 1.5–2.5 mm in diam., campanulate to hemispherical, applanate or slightly concave at centre, white with greyish shade (6B1), shallowly sulcate, translucent-striate, slightly pruinose, pubescent. Context white, thin and very fragile. Lamellae distant, sparse, white, concolorous with the sides. Stipe 4.5–8.2 × 0.5–0.8 mm, cylindrical, hollow, fragile, pure white (5A1) with a greyish (5B1) base, covered with dense white fibrils, base swollen and not forming basal disc, hirsute. Odour and taste indistinctive.
Basidiospores (6.9-)7.2-8.9(-9.3) × (5.3-)6.4-6.7(-7.1) μm, Q=1.2–1.5, Qav=1.31, broadly-ellipsoid, hyaline in water and 5% KOH, amyloid, smooth. Basidia 15–21 × 7–9 μm, 4- or 2-spored, clavate, hyaline. Cheilocystidia 23–37 × 19–28 μm, subglobose, sphaero-pedunculate to utriform with numerous sharp spines, thin-walled and hyaline, inamyloid. Pleurocystidia absent. Pileipellis hyphae 3–9 μm wide, dextrinoid; cherocytes absent; a cutis overlaid by elements of universal veil, not in chains; acanthocysts forming two types, pyriform to vesicular, 13–29 × 11–24 μm, clavate to ovoid or obovoid, 29–42 × 14–20 μm, inamyloid. Hyphae of the stipitipellis 3–7 μm wide, smooth, dextrinoid; caulocystidia abundant, clavate, long-elliptic, 32–122 × 8–11 μm, with numbers of conical spines, inamyloid. Clamps present in all tissues.
Habit and habitat.
Scattered on rotten wood of coniferous trees, ex. Cunninghamia.
Other specimens examined.
Guangdong Province, Shaoguan City, Liangjiang Town, Shangxie Village, 7 May 2017, Qin Na, HMJAU 43421.
Remarks.
Mycenahygrophoroides could be considered to be a member of Hemimycena Singer owing to the tiny basidiomata and sparse lamellae, but the absence of a basal disc, amyloid spores and spinulose cheilocystidia, acanthocysts and caulocystidia are diagnostic characters for M.hygrophoroides, which should be placed in Mycenasect.Amparoina stirps Alphitophora. Mycenaacanthophila J.C.Zamora&Català, of which the holotype was collected from Spain growing on dead branches of Leguminosae, most resembles M.hygrophoroides, but differs in having a yellow pileus, smaller cheilocystidia (13.5–22 × 8.5–12 μm) and diverse caulocystidia (Zamora and Català 2012). Mycenadepilata, a species of stirps Alphitophora, shows some morphological similarities to M.hygrophoroides in possessing white and tiny basidiomata, distant lamellae (L = 7–9) and globose-pedicellate acanthocysts with hyaline contents. However, M.depilata differs in producing ellipsoid spores (Q = 1.64 ± 0.11), broadly clavate cheilocystidia and shorter caulocystidia (16–50 × 5–16 μm; Singer 1989). Mycenahemitrichialis is difficult to distinguish from M.hygrophoroides, but M.hemitrichialis has free to subfree lamellae, longer caulocystidia (100–300 × 5–15 μm) and ellipsoid spores (Singer 1989). In comparison with M.hygrophoroides, M.alphitophora and M.distincta have larger basidiomata and longer caulocystidia of more than 400 μm and 300 μm, respectively (Desjardin 1995; Aravindakshan and Manimohan 2015). Their noticeably pigmented pileus enables discrimination of M.brunneospinosa, M.incarnativelum and M.roseotincta from M.hygrophoroides (Desjardin 1995; Aravindakshan and Manimohan 2015). The significantly larger basidiomata and globose spores can be used to distinguish M.corynephora, M.globispora and M.yalensis from M.hygrophoroides.
Mycena miscanthi
T.Bau & Q.Na sp. nov.
829100
Figure 6.
Microscopic features of Mycenamiscanthi (HMJAU 43584, holotype) a Basidiomata b Basidiospores c Basidia d Universal veil acanthocysts e Cheilocystidia f Pileipellis g Caulocystidia. Scale bars: 10 mm (a); 10 μm (b–g). Drawing by Qin Na.
Diagnosis.
Growing on dead stem of Miscanthus. Pileus sparsely pruinose. Basidiospores cylindric. Cherocytes absent. Acanthocysts forming two types. Caulocystidia sphaero-pedunculate covered with spines. Clamps present.
Holotype.
CHINA. Henan Province: Xinyang City, Jigong Mountain, 16 Jul 2017, Qin Na and Tolgor Bau, HMJAU 43584.
Etymology.
Name refers to the substratum where the new species was found.
Description.
Pileus 3.5–7.8 mm in diam., hemispherical, broadly conical to convex, occasionally ± centrally depressed when young, sulcate, translucent-striate, pure white, pubescent to inconspicuously puberulous, margin nearly plane, undulate. Context white, thin, very fragile, about 1.0 mm thick at centre. Lamellae narrowly adnate or adnexed, off-white, concolorous with the sides. Stipe 26–38 × 0.5–1.0 mm, pure white, central, terete, hollow, equal, surface covered with slight white pubescent, base swollen but not discoid, pruinose. Odour and taste not distinctive.
Basidiospores (6.2-)6.7–8.6(-9.1) × (3.1)3.3–4.2(4.5) μm, Q=1.8–2.3, Qav=2.07, cylindric to narrow-ellipsoid, hyaline, guttulate, thin walled, amyloid. Basidia 18–24 × 6–9 μm, clavate, hyaline, 4-spored. Cheilocystidia 13–26 × 9–14 μm, abundant, lageniform, utriform or sphaero-pedunculate, with short and conical spines. Pleurocystidia absent. Pileipellis hyphae 3–8 μm wide, strongly dextrinoid; cherocytes absent; universal veil composed of acanthocysts, forming two types, pyriform, vesicular or clavate, 12–32 × 10–17 μm, inamyloid. Hyphae of the stipitipellis 2–8 μm wide, with coarse excrescences, 0.9–2.8 × 0.5–0.9 μm, strongly dextrinoid; caulocystidia abundant, elliptic, utriform, sphaero-pedunculate, 15–37 × 7–15 μm, with conical or cylindrical spines inamyloid. Clamps present in all tissues.
Habit and habitat.
Solitary to scattered on dead stem of Miscanthus.
Other specimens examined.
Henan Province, Xinyang City, Jinniu Mountain, 14 Jul 2017, HMJAU 43573; Xinyang City, Bolden National Forest Park, 17 July 2017, Qin Na and Tolgor Bau, HMJAU 43582.
Remarks.
The distinctive features of Mycenamiscanthi include a white, granulose pileus, a pubescent stipe without forming a basal disc, narrow-ellipsoid spores, two types of acanthocysts and growth on dead stems of Miscanthus species. In combination, these features support the placement of M.miscanthi in sect. Amparoina stirps Alphitophora. Similar to M.miscanthi, M.alphitophora and M.depilata produce pure white basidiomata, cylindric spores and sphaero-pedunculate and spinulose cheilocystidia (Desjardin 1995; Aravindakshan and Manimohan 2015). However, the two types of acanthocysts and longer caulocystidia can be used to distinguish M.alphitophora and M.depilata from M.miscanthi (Desjardin 1995). Mycenahemitrichialis is closely allied to M.miscanthi, but differs in producing caulocystidia up to 400 μm in length that lack spinulae or with a few spinulae in the upper half (Singer 1989). Mycenadistincta, which was originally described as M.alphitophoravar.distincta, was elevated to species level by Manimohan and Leelavathy (1989). It differs from M.miscanthi in producing broadly ellipsoid spores and caulocystidia up to 300 μm in length (Aravindakshan and Manimohan 2015). The pigmented pileus present in M.brunneospinosa, M.incarnativelum and M.roseotincta readily distinguishes these species from M.miscanthi (Desjardin 1995; Aravindakshan and Manimohan 2015). Mycenacorynephora, M.globispora and M.yalensis of stirps Alphitophora are characterised by globose to subglobose spores (Maas Geesteranus 1980; Robich 2003; Aravindakshan and Manimohan 2015; Aronsen and Læssøe 2016).
Discussion
The present phylogenetic analysis showed that sect. Amparoina formed a distinct clade independent from sect. Sacchariferae with high BPP and BS support. This finding suggests that the presence of caulocystidia with dense spines is the most important character to separate sect. Amparoina from sect. Sacchariferae. However, in the presence of a basal disc, the species of sect. Sacchariferae are similar to stirps Amparoina and, in the acanthocysts on the pileus sect. Amparoina stirps, resembles sect. AmparoinaSacchariferae. It can be concluded that the difference in caulocystidia can be used to distinguish sect. Amparoina and sect. Sacchariferae and the basal disc and cherocytes are the basis of an infrasectional classification of sect. Amparoina. Thus, the circumscription of sect. Sacchariferae should be revised, for which the diagnostic characters are a well-developed basal disc, cherocytes absent, pileipellis a cutis not overlaid by elements of a universal veil composed of acanthocysts and caulocystidia smooth overall.
In morphology, sect. Amparoina and sect. Sacchariferae are closely allied with sect. Polyadelphiae Singer ex Maas Geest. and sect. Basipedes (Fr.) Quél (Desjardin et al. 2003). Species of sect. Polyadelphiae lack both ornamented pileipellis elements and a stipe with a basal disc and thus differ from species classified in sect. Amparoina and sect. Sacchariferae. Section Basipedes shares the same habitat and a stipe forming a developed basal disc, but the cheilocystidia are covered with rounded and few excrescences. Morphological characters distinguish sect. Polyadelphiae and sect. Basipedes from sect. Amparoina and sect. Sacchariferae and only one ITS sequence for M.stylobates (Pers.) P. Kumm. (JF908439) is currently deposited in GenBank.
Morphological characters and molecular evidence support the classification of the four new Mycena species as members of sect. Amparoina stirps Alphitophora. The four species share the same furfuraceous or farinose pileus, swollen stipe base without a basal disc, universal veil composed of acanthocysts and absence of both cherocytes and spinose caulocystidia. Mycenabicystidiatum is distinguished from M.griseotincta, M.hygrophoroides and M.miscanthi by producing two types of caulocystidia covered with conic spines. Mycenagriseotincta is readily discriminated from M.bicystidiatum, M.hygrophoroides and M.miscanthi based on the greyish basidiomata and acanthocysts forming a universal veil with long, cylindrical excrescences. Compared with M.bicystidiatum, M.griseotincta, and M.miscanthi, M.hygrophoroides is distinct on account of the sparse lamellae and broadly ellipsoid basidiospores. Mycenamiscanthi differ from M.bicystidiatum, M.griseotincta and M.hygrophoroides in growing on stems of Miscanthus and, in addition, the basidiospores are narrow ellipsoid.
It is worth mentioning that the placement of M.echinocephala (G.F. Atk.) Desjardin and M.cylindrospora A.H. Sm. remains unclear. The species are tentatively placed in stirps Alphitophora because of the lack of a basal disc on the stipe, but their caulocystidia are extraordinary in being smooth, terminated by a spinulose apex or smooth with an amorphous apex (Atkinson 1902; Smith 1947; Desjardin 1993). Both species show obvious differences to the four newly described taxa. Furthermore, M.cryptomeriicola Imazeki & Toki is distinctive in producing inamyloid spores and a basal disc, which is unusual for specimens of sect. Sacchariferae from Japan (Imazeki and Toki 1995). An additional unusual species, M.minya Grgur., which lacks caulocystidia, was reported from Australia (Grgurinovic 2003). No species similar in morphology to M.cryptomeriicola and M.minya are classified in sect. Sacchariferae, so the two species are tentatively accepted in sect. Sacchariferae.
Supplementary Material
Acknowledgements
This study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 31770010). We sincerely thank Prof Ping Zhang (Hunan Normal University, Changsha), Mrs Xiao-yan Wang (Hunan Normal University, Changsha), Mr Wen-fei Lin (Zhejiang University, Hangzhou), Mr Wei Zhou (Xinyang Agriculture and Forestry University, Xinyang), Mr Tsering Tamdrin (Nyingchi Municipal Science and Technology Bureau, Nyingchi), Drs Ming Zhang (Guangdong Institute of Microbiology, Guangzhou), Drs Feng-jian Wang (Hanjiang Normal University, Shiyan), Drs Zhu-xiang Liu (Jishou University, Jishou), Mr Zhong-yun Li (Shutterbug, Jishou), Mr Bing Xiao (Shutterbug, Jishou), Ya He (Hunan Normal University, Changsha), Jun Yan (Hunan Normal University, Changsha), Zong-ping Song (Guangdong Institute of Microbiology, Guangzhou), Xi-shen Liang (Guangdong Institute of Microbiology, Guangzhou), Li-qiang Wu (Jishou University, Jishou), Xue-qian Yi (Jishou University, Jishou) and Juan-juan Wang (Jishou University, Jishou) for their kind help during field work. We also thank Drs Yu-peng Ge (Ludong University, Yantai) and Drs Jun-qing Yan (Jiangxi Agricultural University, Nanchang) for their suggestions in writing this article.
Citation
Na Q, Bau T (2019) Recognition of Mycena sect. Amparoina sect. nov. (Mycenaceae, Agaricales), including four new species and revision of the limits of sect. Sacchariferae. MycoKeys 52: 103–124. https://doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.52.34647
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