Download Copy a link to this page Cite this record

Pirottaea horoeka P.R. Johnst. 1998

Scientific name record
Names_Fungi record source
Is NZ relevant
This is a synonym
This record has collections
This record has descriptions
Threat status: Data deficient

Click to collapse Details Info

Pirottaea horoeka P.R. Johnst., New Zealand J. Bot. 36 648 (1998)

Click to collapse Nomenclature Info

P.R. Johnst.
P.R. Johnst.
1998
648
ICN
Pirottaea horoeka P.R. Johnst. 1998
NZ holotype
species
Pirottaea horoeka

Click to collapse Classification Info

horoeka

Click to collapse Associations Info

Click to collapse Descriptions Info

Pirottaea horoeka P.R. Johnst. 1998

ADDITIONAL SPECIMENS EXAMINED: AUCKLAND: Waitakere Ranges, Anawhata Rd, Pole Line Track, on Pseudopanax crassifolius fallen leaves, P.R. Johnston D8, 8 Feb 1982 (PDD 41947). SOUTHLAND: Catlins, Tautuku Bay, Lake Wilkie, on Pseudopanax crassifolius fallen leaves, P.R. Johnston D1343, 24 May 1990 (PDD 68333).

Apothecia developing on fallen leaves of Pseudopanax crassifolius (Araliaceae). Apothecia 0.4-0.7 mm diam., about 0.5 mm high, urceolate with short, narrow stipe. Receptacle translucent whitish or yellowish beneath dense covering of stiff, black, appressed setae, setae most numerous around margins of ascoma; hymenium white.

Ectal excipulum up to 20 µm wide at sides of receptacle in vertical section, comprising rows of globose to angular cells 6-10 µm diam., with thin, brown walls. Cells becoming brick-shaped to rectangular near margin of ascoma, and ending in more or less free, hair-like elements. Setae arising directly from excipular cells, 50-70 x 5.5-7.5 µm, fusoid, tapering to more or less acute apex, more or less straight, 1-3-septate, with walls very dark and very thick, and septa often difficult to see. Medullary excipulum up to 10 µm wide, of 3 or 4 layers of narrow-cylindric cells 2.5-3 µm diam., with hyaline walls, thin-walled at sides of receptacle, the walls thicker and possibly gelatinised in stipe, these thicker-walled cells dextrinoid in Meltzer's reagent. Ends of medullary elements more or less free and inward projecting in portion of apothecial wall extending above hymenium.

Paraphyses 1.5 µm diam., expanding slightly to 2.5-3 µm diam. at subclavate apex, about same length as the asci. Asci 45-55 x 6.5-7 µm, cylindric to subclavate, apex rounded, wall thickened at apex with small, intense amyloid ring, 8-spored. Ascospores 7-9 x 2-2.5 µm, oblong-elliptic to elliptic, slightly wider in upper half, 0-septate, hyaline.

Apothecia 0.4-0.7 mm diam., urceolata, stipite brevi. Excipulum ectale crassum 20 µm, cellulae 6-10 µm diam., globosae vel angulares, parietibus brunneis, tenuibus. Excipulum medullosum partim in iodo porphyrescentes. Setae 50-70 x 5.5-7.5 µm, fusiformes, rectae, apice acuto, parietibus atrobrunneis. Asci 45-55 x 6.5-7 µm, apice rotundato, poro in iodo caerulescentes. Ascosporae 7-9 x 2-2.5 µm, ellipticae vel oblong-ellipticae, 0-septatae.
ETYMOLOGY: the Maori name for the host plant.

NOTES: P. horoeka is distinguished from the other New Zealand species by the shape and size of the setae and the ascospores, as well as host substrate.

New Zealand: AUCKLAND: Waitakere Ranges, Rangemore Track, on fallen leaves of Pseudopanax crassifolius, P.R. Johnston D934, 14 Sep 1993 (PDD 62703).

Click to collapse Taxonomic concepts Info

Pirottaea horoeka P.R. Johnst. 1998
Pirottaea horoeka P.R. Johnst.
Pirottaea horoeka P.R. Johnst. 1998
Pirottaea horoeka P.R. Johnst. (1998)
Pirottaea horoeka P.R. Johnst. 1998
Pirottaea horoeka P.R. Johnst. (1998)
Pirottaea horoeka P.R. Johnst. 1998
Pirottaea horoeka P.R. Johnst. (1998)

Click to collapse Collections Info

Pirottaea horoeka P.R. Johnst. 1998
New Zealand
Auckland
Pirottaea horoeka P.R. Johnst. 1998
New Zealand
Chatham Islands
Pirottaea horoeka P.R. Johnst. 1998
New Zealand
Southland
Pirottaea horoeka P.R. Johnst. 1998
New Zealand
Stewart Island

Click to collapse Metadata Info

1cb19b88-36b9-11d5-9548-00d0592d548c
scientific name
Names_Fungi
24 June 1999
2 January 2020
Click to go back to the top of the page
Top