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Articles

The Radiomycetaceae (Mucorales; Zygomycetes). III. A New Species of Radiomyces, and Cladistic Analysis and Taxonomy of the Family; with A Discussion of Evolutionary Ordinal Relationships in Zygomycotina

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Pages 713-735 | Accepted 10 Jun 1991, Published online: 29 Aug 2018
 

ABSTRACT

The family Radiomycetaceae, which includes two genera, Hesseltinella and Radiomyces, is based, in part, on the production of a unique sporangiolum-bearing structure consisting of a once-septate stalk terminated by a vesicle bearing one or many uni- or multispored sporangiola. Zygospores, where known, have in common a smooth zygosporangial wall and opposed, appendage-bearing suspensors. Hesseltinello vesiculosa, the only known species of the genus, produces its stalked sporangiolum-bearing structures in lateral, subterminal, or terminal clusters. Only one sporangiolum is formed per fertile vesicle; sporangiolar appendages are acicular with flattened, hexagonal bases, and zygospores are unknown. The fungus is presumably heterothallic. In Radiomyces the sporangiolum-bearing branches always arise terminally on the enlarged apex of the sporangiophore and many sporangiola are formed per fertile vesicle; sporangiolar appendages are capitate or spathulate; zygospores are as described above, and the taxa are homothallic. A new species, Radiomyces mexicana, is described. This species resembles R. embreei but differs in having: 1) somewhat smaller spore-bearing structures, 2) globose to obpyriform (not sphaeroidal) fertile vesicles, 3) relatively thick-walled sporophore vesicles and fertile vesicles, 4) a slower rate of sporangiospore germination, and 5) a lower upper temperature range for good growth. On certain media a variable percentage of zygosporangia are ovoid to ellipsoid and the sporophore often has a pronounced subsporangial constriction. A cladistic analysis revealed that the genera of Radiomycetaceae and the family are each monophyletic. Radiomyces embreei and R. mexicana are more closely related to one another than to R. spectabilis because they are unispored (a synapomorphy). Radiomyces embreei and R. mexicana are characterized by autapomorphies and are considered monophyletic. Keys to the genera and species are provided.

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