Bimuria omanensis Wijesinghe, Wanas., Al-Sadi, K.D. Hyde & Maharachch., 2020
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.449.2.1 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5752599 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2A1787FC-FFE1-FFDB-90EA-FE1CFB29F988 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Bimuria omanensis Wijesinghe, Wanas., Al-Sadi, K.D. Hyde & Maharachch. |
status |
sp. nov. |
Bimuria omanensis Wijesinghe, Wanas., Al-Sadi, K.D. Hyde & Maharachch. , sp. nov.
Index Fungorum number: IF557436; Facesoffungi number: FoF 07928; FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 2 .
Etymology:—Name reflects the county Oman, from where the species was isolated.
Holotype:— SQU H-115
Asexual morph: Coelomycetous. Conidiomata pycnidial, arise on mycelia as black spore mass, aggregated clusters are scattered, irregular and superficial to semi-immersed. Conidiomatal wall composed of thick-walled, pale to dark brown cells of textura angularis. Conidiogenous cells 8–9 × 7–8 µm (x̄ = 8.36 × 7.6 µm, n=10), enteroblastic, phialidic, ampulliform or short cylindrical, determinate, sometimes cylindrical, with elongate neck, rough and hyaline. Conidia 7–10 × 3–4.5 µm (x̄ = 8.84 × 3.94 µm, n = 25) oblong to cylindrical, 1- septate, smooth and thin walled, hyaline to pale brown.
Culture characteristics:—Colonies on PDA reaching 60 mm diam. after 14 days at 24 °C, dark grey to brown in upper surface.
Known distribution:— Oman (this study)
Material examined:— OMAN, The Jebel Akhdar , Dakhiliyah Governorat, on decaying leaves of unidentified plant, July 2016, SSN Maharachchikumbura OM09 ( SQU H-115 , holotype) , ex-type living culture SQUCC 15280 .
Gene sequence data: ITS ( MT274326 View Materials ), LSU ( MT271820 View Materials ), TEF-1α ( MT279046 View Materials )
Notes:—In our DNA sequence analysis, Bimuria novae-zelandiae (CBS 107.79) and B. omanensis (SQUCC 15280) are monophyletic with strong bootstrap support ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 ). Morphological comparison between these taxa are currently impossible as B. novae-zelandiae is known from its sexual morph and only the asexual morph is known for B. omanensis . Comparison of the 570 ITS (+ 5.8S) nucleotides of these strains reveals 70 (12.3%) nucleotide differences. This could be due to ITS polymorphisms ( Stadler et al. 2020) and it is not surprising that these strains appear to belong to the same species. A comparison of the 852 nucleotides across the TEF-1α region revealed 32 bp (3.75%) differences between these strains suggesting these are distinct species ( Jeewon & Hyde 2016). Bimuria novae-zelandiae was isolated from soil of a barley field in New Zealand (Hawksworth et al. 1979). Bimuria omanensis was collected from a decaying leaf of a desert shrub in Ad Dakhiliyah Governorate, Oman. Therefore, based on the molecular data and habitat differences, we conclude that these two taxa are distinct species. Didymosporina aceris , Gordonomyces mucovaginatus and Lichenodiplis lecanorae share similar conidial morphology to Bimuria omanensis ( Wijayawardene et al. 2016) . Phylogenetically Gordonomyces mucovaginatus and Lichenodiplis lecanorae are not closely related to Bimuria omanensis (data not shown) and sequence data are unavailable for Didymosporina aceris .
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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