Multiclavula petricola

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Multiclavula petricola
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Cantharellales
Family: Hydnaceae
Genus: Multiclavula
Species:
M. petricola
Binomial name
Multiclavula petricola
H.Masumoto & Y.Degawa (2020)

Multiclavula petricola is a saxicolous (rock-dwelling) basidiolichen in the family Hygrophoraceae.[1] It is known only from a single subalpine site in central Japan, where minute, white, needle-like fruit bodies emerge directly from wet volcanic rock and are accompanied by a globular algal–fungal thallus. Microscopic characters, a distinctive globose photobiont association, and molecular data together justify its recognition as a separate species within Multiclavula.

Multiclavula petricola was discovered during a survey of basidiolichens in the subalpine zone of Katashina (Gunma Prefecture, Honshū). The holotype, collected in September 2019 at 1,757 m (5,764 ft) on wet andesite, was formally described in 2020 by Hiroshi Masumoto and Yousuke Degawa.[2] The epithet petricola (Latin for 'rock-dweller') reflects its strictly saxicolous habit, while the Japanese vernacular name イワノシラツノ (Iwano-shiratsuno) literally means 'white horns on rock'.[2][3]

Molecular phylogenetic analyses of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) and large-subunit ribosomal DNA place M. petricola in a well-supported clade with other lichenised Multiclavula species. In maximum-likelihood and Bayesian reconstructions, it is sister to M. ichthyiformis, with that clade falling as sister to all other Multiclavula species.[2] However, the relationship between M. petricola and M. ichthyformis lacks significant support. The combination of a saxicolous substrate, 4–6-spored basidia, and relatively large, narrowly cylindrical basidiospores distinguishes the taxon from all other recognised members of Multiclavula.[2]

Description

Habitat and distribution

References

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