4.4 Article

Octospora conidiophora (Pyronemataceae) - a new species from South Africa and the first report of anamorph in bryophilous Pezizales

Journal

MYCOKEYS
Volume -, Issue 54, Pages 49-76

Publisher

PENSOFT PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.3897/mycokeys.54.34571

Keywords

Afromontane forests; bryosymbionts; conidia; cryptic biodiversity; muscicolous parasites; Sematophyllum; Trichosteleum; South Africa

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministry of Agriculture of the Czech Republic [MZE-RO0418]
  2. Palacky University [IGA_PrF_2019_004]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Octospora conidiophora is described as a new species, based on collections from South Africa. It is characterised by apothecia with a distinct margin, smooth or finely warted ellipsoid ascospores, stiff, thick-walled hyaline hairs, warted mycelial hyphae and growth on pleurocarpous mosses Trichosteleum perchlorosum and Sematophyllum brachycarpum (Hypnales) on decaying wood in afromontane forests. It is the first species of bryophilous Pezizales in which an anamorph has been observed; it produces long, claviform, curved, hyaline and transversely septate conidia. Three other cryptic species of Octospora were detected using three molecular markers (LSU and SSU nrDNA and EF1 alpha), but these could not be distinguished phenotypically. These are not described formally here and an informal species aggregate O. conidiophora agg. is established for them. The new species and finds of Lamprospora campylopodis growing on Campylopus pyriformis and Neottiella albocincta on Atrichum androgynum represent the first records of bryophilous Pezizales in South Africa.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available