4.6 Article

Lanspora dorisauae, a new marine fungus from rocky shores in Taiwan

Journal

PEERJ
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PEERJ INC
DOI: 10.7717/peerj.15958

Keywords

Ascomycota; Marine fungi; Phylogeny; Sordariomycetes; Taxonomy

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A new marine fungus, Lanspora dorisauae, was discovered on trapped wood collected in coastal sites of Taiwan. Through morphological examination and phylogenetic study, this new fungus was classified within the Phomatosporales order. Lanspora dorisauae was found to be closely related to the type species, Lanspora coronata. The importance of sequencing Phomatospora berkeleyi to validate the Phomatosporales order and the Phomatosporaceae family was also emphasized.
This article reports a new marine fungus, Lanspora dorisauae (Phomatosporales, Sordariomycetes, Ascomycota), on trapped wood collected in coastal sites of Taiwan. This new fungus was subjected to a morphological examination and a phylogenetic study based on a combined analysis of the 18S, 28S, ITS rDNA, TEF1-a and RPB2 genes. Lanspora dorisauae is characterized by dark-coloured ascomata with a short neck, periphysate ostioles, subclavate, deliquescing asci without an apical ring, presence of wide paraphyses, striated wall ascospores with crown-like appendages on one pole of the ascospores. Phylogenetically, L. dorisauae grouped with Lanspora coronata (type species) with strong support. Lanspora coronata lacks paraphyses and appendages occur on both ends of the ascospores, while paraphyses are present and ascospore appendage is unipolar in L. dorisauae. Lanspora cylindrospora formed a sister clade with L. coronata and L. dorisauae, but it significantly differs in morphology with the latter two species in having cylindrical asci with an apical J -ring, smooth ascospore wall and no ascospore appendages, and may be better referred to a new genus. Lanspora, together with Phomatospora and Tenuimurus, belong to the Phomatosporaceae, Phomatosporales. Phomatospora berkeleyi should be sequenced to test the validity of the order Phomatosporales and the family Phomatosporaceae.

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