Conidiobolus variabilis B. Huang & Y. Nie, 2020

Nie, Yong, Cai, Yue, Gao, Yang, Yu, De-Shui, Wang, Zi-Min, Liu, Xiao-Yong & Huang, Bo, 2020, Three new species of Conidiobolus sensu stricto from plant debris in eastern China, MycoKeys 73, pp. 133-149 : 133

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.73.56905

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/68BD96CB-9D9F-5C96-AB12-2C8B36A9DC86

treatment provided by

MycoKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Conidiobolus variabilis B. Huang & Y. Nie
status

sp. nov.

Conidiobolus variabilis B. Huang & Y. Nie sp. nov. Figure 4 View Figure 4

Typification.

China, Anhui: Ma’anshan City, Hexian County, Jilongshan National Forest Park, 31°48'1"N, 118°12'19"E, from plant debris, 23 Dec 2017, Y. Nie (holotype HMAS 248723, ex-holotype culture CGMCC 3.16015 (= RCEF 6540), GenBank: nucLSU = MT250085; TEF1 = MT274289; mtSSU = MT250087).

Etymology.

variabilis (Lat.), referring to producing various shapes of primary conidia.

Ecology and distribution.

Plant debris from Anhui Province, China.

Description.

Colonies on PDA at 21 °C after 3 d white, reaching ca. 41-48 mm in diameter. Mycelia colourless, 6-11 μm wide, rarely branched at the colony edge. Primary conidiophores unbranched and producing a single globose conidium, colourless, 60-200 × 9-15 μm, without an upward widening near the tip. Primary conidia forcibly discharged, globose, subglobose, pyriform to oboviod, 31-55 × 25-40 μm, with tapering and pointed papilla, 3.5-9 × 8-13 μm. Secondary conidia arising from primary conidia, similar to, but smaller than primary ones, forcibly discharged. On 2% water agar, microconidia rarely observed, globose, subglobose to ellipsoidal, 10-12 × 9-14 μm. Resting spores not observed.

Notes.

Considering the large size of primary conidia, Conidiobolus variabilis sp. nov. is allied to C. coronatus (Cost.) Batko (14.5-38.5 × 17-48.5 μm), C. macrosporus Srin. & Thirum. (38-45 × 48-54 μm) and C. utriculosus Brefeld (25-35 × 37.5-51 μm). It is distinguished from C. coronatus by its various shapes of primary conidia and the absence of villose spores. It differs from C. macrosporus by its longer primary conidiophores and the absence of resting spores ( Batko 1964, Srinivasan and Thirumalachar 1967). It is differentiated from C. utriculosus by the shapes of primary conidia and the absence of zygospores. Phylogenetically, C. variabilis sp. nov. is basal in clade I and distantly related to C. coronatus and C. macrosporus .