Abstract
A new ectomycorrhizal species was discovered during the first survey of fungal diversity at Brijuni National Park (Croatia), which consists of 14 islands and islets. The National Park is located in the Mediterranean Biogeographical Region, a prominent climate change hot-spot. Inocybe brijunica sp. nov., from sect. Hysterices (Agaricales, Inocybaceae), is described based on morphology and multilocus phylogenetic data. The holotype collection was found at the edge between grassland and Quercus ilex forest with a few planted Pinus pinea trees, on Veli Brijun Island, the largest island of the archipelago. It is easily recognized by a conspicuous orange to orange–red–brown membranaceous surface layer located at or just above the basal part of the stipe. Other distinctive features of I. brijunica are the medium brown, radially fibrillose to rimose pileus; pale to medium brown stipe with fugacious cortina; relatively small, amygdaliform to phaseoliform, and smooth basidiospores, measuring ca. 6.5–9 × 4–5.5 µm; thick-walled, utriform, lageniform or fusiform pleurocystidia (lamprocystidia) with crystals and mostly not yellowing in alkaline solutions; cheilocystidia of two types (lamprocystidia and leptocystidia); and the presence of abundant caulocystidia only in the upper 2–3 mm of the stipe. Phylogenetic reconstruction of a concatenated dataset of the internal transcribed spacer region (ITS), the nuclear 28S rRNA gene (nrLSU), and the second largest subunit of RNA polymerase II (rpb2) resolved I. brijunica and I. glabripes as sister species.
Highlights
The Brijuni archipelago consists of 14 islands and islets located in the Adriatic Sea, near the southwestern coast of the Istrian peninsula
Basidiomata of I. brijunica were found at ca. 70 m from the sea, epigeous on the soil covered with a shallow layer of oak and pine litter intermixed with scattered short grasses
The topology is mostly congruent with Matheny and Kudzma [26], support has improved for certain nodes
Summary
The Brijuni archipelago consists of 14 islands and islets located in the Adriatic Sea (northern Mediterranean, Europe), near the southwestern coast of the Istrian peninsula. The archipelago is home to Brijuni National Park [1], which covers 33.9 km of protected area, including the surrounding sea. The islands’ surface area covers 7.4 km; Veli Brijun is the largest island with 5.7 km and is devoid of permanent inhabitants. The National Park was established in 1983 to protect valuable marine and coastal (land) ecosystems and their biodiversity. The Brijuni archipelago is characterized by a northern Mediterranean climate [1] with an average annual temperature of 13.9 ◦C, annual average precipitation of 817 mm, and a relatively high average air humidity of 76%
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