Phlegmacium paracephalixum (Bohus) Niskanen & Liimat., Fungal Divers., 2022

Liu, Fei-Fei, Wu, Gang & Yang, Zhu L., 2023, A new species and new records of Phlegmacium (Cortinariaceae) from China based on molecular and morphological evidence, Phytotaxa 578 (2), pp. 141-157 : 152

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.578.2.1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14201245

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/BE2A3C7B-3B62-FFA3-FF27-EE981D34F5F9

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Phlegmacium paracephalixum (Bohus) Niskanen & Liimat., Fungal Divers.
status

 

Phlegmacium paracephalixum (Bohus) Niskanen & Liimat., Fungal Divers. View in CoL 112: 149, 2022 Figs. 2E View FIGURE 2 , 3E View FIGURE 3 1–E View FIGURE 1 4.

Cortinarius paracephalixus Bohus, Annls View in CoL hist.-nat. Mus. natn. hung. 68: 51, 1978

MycoBank: MB 559009 View Materials

Description:— Pileus 4–5 cm, hemispherical to convex, always with a broad umbo when young, later flat, viscid to glutinous, very finely fibrillose, center pale orange to ochraceous yellow, whitish towards the margin. Lamellae emarginate, 3–4 mm broad, crowded (L = 100–110, l = 1–2), first whitish with a pinkish tint, then becoming brown. Stipe 12–14 cm long, 1.3–1.5 cm thick at apex, 2 cm wide at the base, cylindrical to clavate, whitish to ochraceous yellow, very finely fibrillose with white fibrillose girdles; basal mycelium white. Context white in pileus and stipe, sometimes pileus context with a reddish tint.

Basidiospores [40/2/1] (11–)12–14(–15) × 6–8 μm, av. 12.61–12.66 × 6.96–7.06 μm, Q = 1.57–1.91(–2.15), Qav. = 1.80–1.81, subamygdaliform, strongly verrucose. Basidia 35–45 × (7–)9–10(–11) μm, 4-spored, clavate, colorless to yellow, always with small granules. Cystidia absent. Lamellar trama hyphae 3–6 μm wide, colorless to yellowish, smooth. Stipe hyphae 4–7 μm wide, colorless to yellowish, sometimes spirally incrusted. Pileipellis duplex, the upper layer (120–160 μm thick) gelatinous, composed of narrow, colorless to pale yellowish, spirally incrusted, thin-walled, long-celled hyphae measuring 3–7 μm wide; lower layer composed of interwoven to parallel cylindrical, mostly amber yellow, thin-walled hyphae measuring 4–9 μm wide. Clamp connections common in all parts of basidioma.

Habitat and distribution:—Solitary to scattered on soil in a temperate forest or mixed forests with Pinaceae and Salicaceae . Summer. Currently known from Hungary ( Bohus 1976), Italy ( Campo 2015) and northeastern China (this study).

Specimen examined:— CHINA. Jilin Province: Antu County, Changbaishan , in a temperate forest, altitude 751 m, 28 August 2015, Qing Cai 1439 ( KUN-HKAS92058 ) .

Notes:— Phlegmacium paracephalixum is mainly characterized by its viscid, ochraceous yellow pileus with a wide central broad umbo when young, soon flattened, cylindrical to clavate stipe with white fibrillose girdles, and subamygdaliform basidiospores measuring (11–)12–14(–15) × 6–8 μm. The species was found in mixed forests with Pinus and Populus , and the context was white, yellowing when bruised, and later becoming slightly pink ( Campo 2015).

Based on morphological and molecular data, P. rioussetiae (Chevassut & Rob. Henry) Niskanen & Liimat. (2022: 151) is a sister species of P. paracephalixum . Some mycologists considered it a synonym of P. paracephalixum ( Brandrud 1996, Brandrud et al. 1998, Campo 2015). However, P. rioussetiae is separated from P. paracephalixum by its grayish lilac lamellae and the absence of the redness of the context ( Henry 1986).

Phlegmacium patrickense View in CoL and P. rosargutum (Chevassut & Rob. Henry) Niskanen & Liimat. (2022: 151) View in CoL are close relatives of P. paracephalixum View in CoL . However, P. patrickense View in CoL has a whitish to pale brown basidioma and larger basidiospores (12.2–14.7 × 7–8.4 μm, Q = 1.62–1.84), while P. rosargutum View in CoL has a shorter stipe, more abundant universal veil remnants on the pileus surface, and smaller basidiospores (9.5–12 × 6.5–7.5 μm, Q = 1.43–1.59) ( Brandrud 1996, Liimatainen et al. 2014).

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