Abstract

Six cultures of an Echinostelium sp. slime mold were isolated from cholla cactus detritus collected in Death Valley National Park, California. All six isolates are heterothallic and belong to a single, multiple-allelic mating series with four known mating types. Although the spores, stalks and columella of these isolates resembled a reduced E. minutum, the nearly complete absence of a capillitium prevents a definitive identification. A seventh isolate from cholla collected near Tucson, Arizona and identified as a small desert form of E. minutum, also is heterothallic, but does not cross with the first mating series. This is the first detailed description of a heterothallic mating system in the Echinosteliales.

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