Login / Signup

Didymium azorellae, a new myxomycete from cushion plants of cold arid areas of South America.

Diana Wrigley de BasantaArturo Estrada-TorresIván García-CunchillosAsunción Cano EchevarríaCarlos Lado
Published in: Mycologia (2018)
A new species of Didymium (Myxomycetes), D. azorellae, isolated from plant debris in a moist chamber, collected during studies of cold arid areas of Argentina and Peru, is described. It can be distinguished by its small size, the tightly packed layer of lime crystals on the peridium, the very scant, or absent, capillitium, and the unique spore ornamentation, especially by scanning electron microscopy. The species developed on dead leaves of cushion plants growing in the extremely harsh environments of the central Andean puna at almost 5000 m elevation and the Andino-Patagonian steppe. Morphology was examined with scanning electron microscopy and light microscopy, and micrographs of relevant details are included here. In order to confirm the identity of the new species described in this paper, a molecular study was conducted based on partial sequences of both the 18S rRNA and the elongation factor 1-alpha gene. Phylogenetic analysis including two specimens from different countries of the newly described species, Didymium azorellae, strongly supports the grouping of these specimens as a separate clade from the rest of the analyzed species.
Keyphrases
  • electron microscopy
  • genetic diversity
  • single molecule
  • high resolution
  • genome wide
  • optical coherence tomography
  • dna methylation
  • room temperature
  • transcription factor
  • genome wide identification