Paraboeremia truiniorum Hern.-Restr., L. W. Hou, L. Cai & Crous, 2020
publication ID |
https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.65.47704 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F8B7455D-5AFD-5C69-B571-5DDF3CE976C5 |
treatment provided by |
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scientific name |
Paraboeremia truiniorum Hern.-Restr., L. W. Hou, L. Cai & Crous |
status |
sp. nov. |
Paraboeremia truiniorum Hern.-Restr., L. W. Hou, L. Cai & Crous sp. nov. Figure 8 View Figure 8
Etymology.
truiniorum refers to Cuno & Tygo Truin who collected the soil sample from which the ex-type strain was isolated.
Typus.
The Netherlands. Gelderland province, Barneveld, Voorthuizen, isolated from garden soil, Mar. 2017, C. Truin & T. Truin (holotype designated here CBS H-24108, living ex-type culture CBS 144952 = JW 47002).
Conidiomata pycnidial, superficial, scattered or aggregated, most solitary, globose or subglobose, confluent and irregularly-shaped with age, pale brown, thick-walled, covered with abundant mycelial outgrowths, 160-420 × 135-430 μm; 1-papillate or non-papillate ostioles, sometimes elongated to a short neck; pycnidial wall pseudoparenchymatous, 7-11 layers, 40-70 μm thick, outer layers composed of brown, flattened polygonal cells of 22-45.5 μm diam. Conidiogenous cells phialidic, hyaline, smooth, globose, subglobose, ampulliform or doliiform, 4.5-8.5 × 4-7 μm. Conidia ellipsoidal to oblong, thin- and smooth-walled, hyaline, aseptate, 3.5-5 × 2-3 μm, with (1-)2 large guttules. Conidial matrix whitish.
Culture characteristics.
Colonies after 7 d at 25 °C, on OA reaching 70-75 mm diam, aerial mycelium floccose, vinaceous buff to hazel, margin regular; reverse buff to olivaceous. On MEA reaching 65-70 mm diam, aerial mycelium felty, whitish, pale mouse grey toward periphery, margin regular; reverse dark brick to dark brown, with pale brown edge. On PDA reaching 75-80 mm diam, aerial mycelium felty, olivaceous buff to pale mouse grey, olivaceous toward periphery, margin irregular; reverse mouse grey, olivaceous toward periphery. NaOH spot test negative on OA.
Additional specimens examined.
The Netherlands, Gelderland province, Culemborg, isolated from garden soil, Mar. 2017, R. Fuld, JW 182014; The Netherlands. South Holland province, Alphen aan den Rijn, isolated from garden soil, Mar. 2017, K. Boutwell, CBS 144961 = JW 203021; The Netherlands. South Holland province, Gorinchem, isolated from garden soil, Mar. 2017, L. van Rosmalen, JW 270002; The Netherlands. Utrecht province, Utrecht, isolated from garden soil, Mar. 2017, L. van Rijnberk, JW 147025; The Netherlands. Utrecht province, Woerden, isolated from garden soil, Mar. 2017, L. Borsboom, JW 192003.
Notes.
Based on the phylogenetic analyses, P. truiniorum is represented by six isolates, forming a distinct lineage (Figure 1 View Figure 1 ). Paraboeremia truiniorum is characterised by the dense mycelial outgrowths on its pycnidia. Both P. truiniorum and P. rekkeri are phylogenetically close to the well-known soil-borne species, P. putaminum . However, P. putaminum is distinguished from these two new species by producing smaller conidia (3.2-4.2 × 2-2.6 μm) with greenish guttules ( Boerema et al 2004).
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