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Type: Article
Published: 2017-11-17
Page range: 127–139
Abstract views: 36
PDF downloaded: 1

Delimitation of European Crepidotus stenocystis as different from the North American species C. brunnescens (Inocybaceae, Agaricales)

Comenius University in Bratislava, Faculty of Natural Sciences, Department of Botany, Révová 39, SK-811 02 Bratislava, Slovakia
Plant Science and Biodiversity Centre, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Department of Cryptogams, Dúbravská cesta 9, SK-845 23 Bratislava, Slovakia
University of Tennessee, Department of Ecology and Evolution Biology, 332 Hesler Biology Building, Knoxville, TN 37996-1610, USA
Plant Science and Biodiversity Centre, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Department of Cryptogams, Dúbravská cesta 9, SK-845 23 Bratislava, Slovakia
Slovak University of Technology in Bratislava, Centre STU for Nanodiagnostic, University Science Park Bratislava Centre, Vazovova 5, SK-812 43 Bratislava, Slovakia
Comenius University in Bratislava, Faculty of Medicine, Institute of Medical Physics, Biophysics, Informatics and Telemedicine, Sasinkova 2, SK-813 72 Bratislava, Slovakia
Research Associate, Manaaki Whenua Landcare Research, Private Bag 92170, Auckland, New Zealand 
Institute of Forest Ecology, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Branch for Woody Plants Biology, Akademická 2, SK-949 01 Nitra, Slovakia
ITS LSU nrDNA morphology phylogeny type studies Fungi

Abstract

Crepidotus stenocystis and C. brunnescens are morphologically similar species defined by globose to subglobose spores, the presence of clamp connections in all tissues and bottle-like or flask-like cheilocystidia. They are also similar in the pileal aspect which is hygrophanous, glabrous or white-fibrillose, at first white but becoming brownish with age. Each are described from separate continents and have only been reported from their respective continents, C. stenocystis from Europe and C. brunnescens from North America. The phylogenetic analysis of ITS and LSU nrDNA regions from original type material confirms the existence of two distinct species, C. brunnescens that is more closely related to C. malachioides, and C. stenocystis that is more closely related to C. applanatus. Crepidotus stenocystis differs from C. brunnescens by its more prominent spore ornamentation and longer cheilocystidia that are frequently narrowly utriform. Based on the studied material and published data, it seems that C. stenocystis is distributed throughout all of Europe and does not occur in North America, whereas C. brunnescens is only known from Michigan in the USA.