Catillaria japonica

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Catillaria japonica
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Lecanoromycetes
Order: Lecanorales
Family: Catillariaceae
Genus: Catillaria
Species:
C. japonica
Binomial name
Catillaria japonica
Zhurb. & Hafellner (2020)
Holotype: Shiiba Research Forest, Kyushu University, Japan

Catillaria japonica is a species of lichenicolous (lichen-dwelling) ascomycete fungus in the family Catillariaceae.[1] The fungus produces small blackish fruiting bodies up to 0.6 mm across on the surface of its host lichens, with reddish-brown internal pigments that are unusual for the genus Catillaria. It grows specifically on soil- or wood-inhabiting baeomycetoid lichens, particularly species of Dibaeis and Pseudobaeomyces, in cool- to warm-temperate montane forests. The species is known only from Japan, where it has been recorded from Hokkaido, Honshu, Kyushu, and Yakushima Island at elevations typically between 500 and 1,600 m.

Catillaria japonica was described as a new species in 2020 by Mikhail Zhurbenko and Josef Hafellner during a study of fungi associated with baeomycetoid lichens. The type material was collected in the Shiiba Research Forest (Miyazaki Prefecture, Kyushu, Japan) at about 1,140 m elevation, where the fungus grows on the thallus of Dibaeis sorediata. It was placed in Catillaria on account of its Catillaria-type asci, small ascospores with zero or one septum, and apothecial structure, even though its reddish-brown pigmentation and lichenicolous habit are unusual for the genus. It differs from the similar lichenicolous species Catillaria stereocaulorum in having more frequently branched and anastomosing paraphyses without dark apical caps, a medium reddish-brown hypothecium, and a preference for species of Dibaeis and Pseudobaeomyces rather than Stereocaulon as hosts.[2]

Description

Habitat and distribution

References

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