Tricholoma sinopardinum Zhu L Yang, X.X. Ding, G. Kost & Rexer, 2017

Yang, Zhu L., Ding, Xiao-Xia, Kost, G. & K. - H, 2017, New species in the Tricholoma pardinum complex from Eastern Himalaya, Phytotaxa 305 (1), pp. 1-10 : 6-7

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.305.1.1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC87EB-FF8F-3526-FF6B-FA41FA89FEE2

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Tricholoma sinopardinum Zhu L Yang, X.X. Ding, G. Kost & Rexer
status

 

2. Tricholoma sinopardinum Zhu L Yang, X.X. Ding, G. Kost & Rexer , sp. nov. Figs. 2b View FIGURE 2 , 4a–4f View FIGURE 4

MycoBank MB 819726

Etymology:— sinopardinum is proposed because of the Chinese mushroom’s similarity to T. pardinum .

Type:— China. Xizang Autonomous Prefecture (Tibet): Jiangda County, Jiangda Town, alt. 3500 m, in forest dominated by Picea sp. and Populus sp. , 8 August 2013, B. Feng 1427 (HKAS 82533!).

Description:— Basidiomata medium-sized to large. Pileus 5–11 cm diam, conico-convex when young, becoming convex to applanate with age, broadly umbonate; surface dry, white to dirty white to grayish [2A2, 2B2], with brown to dark brown to blackish [6D 3, 6E 3, 6F3], somewhat reflexed fibrillose squamules; margin incurved or not. Lamellae adnexed to sinuate, white to dirty white to cream-colored [2A2-3], moderately crowded; lamellulae attenuate, arranged in 2–3 tiers, evenly distributed; edges often brownish to yellow-brown, denticulate. Stipe 5–18 × 1–3 cm, clavate to subcylindrical, often tapering upward, dry, white to dirty white, greyish to yellowish to brownish [4A2-4, 5A2, 5B2, 5C2], covered with brownish, brown to dark brown fibrillose to reflexed squamules, exannulate, without drops. Context white solid. Taste and Odour indistinct or farinaceous or fishlike.

Basidiospores [115/6/5] (8–)8.5–10.5(–11.5) × (5.5–)6.5–7.5 (–8) μm [mean length = 9.3 μm, mean width = 6.9 μm, Q = (1.20–)1.25–1.50(–1.62), Q = 1.36 ± 0.09], mostly ellipsoid, sometimes broadly ellipsoid, non-amyloid, colorless, hyaline, thin-walled, smooth; apiculus relatively large. Basidia 45–55(–65) × 9–11(–15) μm, clavate, 4-spored, rarely 2-spored, hyaline; sterigmata 4–5 μm long; basal septa often with clamps. Pleurocystidia absent. Cheilocystidia 40– 75 × 15–25 μm, scattered along the lamellar edge, conspicuous, clavate, thin- to slightly thick-walled (≤ 0.5 μm), colorless and hyaline or sometimes brownish or yellowish vacuolar pigment. Lamellar trama regular, composed of colorless, thin-walled hyphae 3–30 μm in diam, branching, sometimes anastomosing; clamps present and common. Subhymenium 15–20 μm thick, composed of 2.5–4 μm wide filamentous hyphal segments; clamps common. Pileipellis a cutis with transition to a trichoderm at regular intervals, composed of loosely and more or less radially arranged, 3–10(15) μm wide, thin-walled, filamentous hyphae, often with fine brownish granular incrustations and yellowish to brownish vacuolar pigments; terminal elements subcylindrical, 40–70 × 3–10 μm, with round apex. Stipitipellis composed of thin-walled, 3–6 μm wide filamentous hyphae often with brown to yellowish brown vacuolar pigments; terminal elements subcylindrical with round apex. Clamps common in all parts of basidioma.

Habit, habitat, and distribution:—Solitary to scattered on calcareous soil in forests dominated by Picea spp ., and sometimes mixed with Betula spp ., Populus spp ., or Quercus spp .; fruiting in summer in southwestern China in alpine areas between 3300 and 4100 m altitude. It may also occur in mixed forests of Tsuga and Abies in Nepal.

Additional specimens examined:— CHINA. Xizang Autonomous Prefecture (Tibet): Jiangda County, Jiangda Town, Baizong Mountain, alt. 4100 m, in forest dominated by Picea spp . and Betula sp. , 4 August 2009, Z. L. Yang 5459 (HKAS 58001); Jiangda County, Tongpu Town, alt. 3300 m, in forest dominated by Picea spp ., 2 August 2004, Z. W. Ge 261 (HKAS 46041); Mangkang County, on the way to Sichuan, in forest dominated by Picea likiangensis , 16 July 2009, B. Feng 470 (HKAS 57199); Xiangcheng County, Reda Town, alt. 3600 m, in forest dominated by Picea spp . and Quercus spp ., 16 July 2004, Z. L. Yang 4143 (HKAS 45529, regarded as T. pardinum in Li et al. 2015).

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