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Eros-Honti, Z; Jakucs, E. 2009. Characterization of beech ectomycorrhizae formed by species of the
Pachyphloeus-Amylascus lineage. MYCORRHIZA. 19(5):337-345.
The hypogeous genus Pachyphloeus forms a common phylogenetic lineage
with the epigeous Scabropezia and the hypogeous Amylascus, within the
Pezizaceae (Ascomycota). Though the ectomycorrhiza- (EM) forming
ability of this group was proposed previously, no detailed description
has been published up to now, except for the characterization of EM
related to P. virecens. During our several-year-long survey on the EM
community of a beech forest reserve in Hungary, we found ten EM
specimens belonging to the Pachyphloeus-Amylascus lineage. All of them
share common morphological and anatomical characters. The densely
ramifying whitish-yellow to light-brown mycorrhizal systems are
pyramidal with short, stout ends. The EM surface is densely wooly with
white or brown, curly hyphae. All mantle layers are
pseudoparenchymatous angular, covered by a thick-walled hyphal network.
Frequent emanating hyphae are densely septate without clamps. The EM
can be sorted into three different morphotypes (Mt) according to their
color, specific morphometric traits (cell-wall thickness, diameter of
emanating hyphae, septal distance), and certain anatomical characters
(structure of the surface net). Molecular identification was
accomplished by the phylogenetic analysis of the ITS and LSU regions of
the nrDNA, what proved that the sequences clustered into three clades
corresponding to the three Mt. With the aid of fruitbody-derived
sequences, obtained from GenBank, one of the Mt can be identified as
Pachyphloeus melanoxanthus and another one as Pachyphloeus citrinus.
The third Mt, together with another unidentified EM sequence of the
GenBank, forms a distinct branch, which is a sister group to the
Pachyphloeus-Scabropezia-Amylascus lineage. In addition to presenting
the first detailed anatomical and molecular comparison of the EM
related to P. melanoxanthus and P. citrinus, we call the attention to
the need for further microscopical investigations amended by molecular
taxonomical analyses.
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