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Lactarius megalopterus, a new angiocarpous species from a tropical rainforest in Central Africa,shows adaptations to endozoochorous spore dispersal
Authors:Ludwig Beenken  Moses N. Sainge  Alexander Kocyan
Affiliation:1.ETH Zurich, Institute of Integrative Biology,Zurich,Switzerland;2.Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research WSL,Birmensdorf,Switzerland;3.Tropical Plant Exploration Group (TroPEG),Mundemba, Ndian,Cameroon;4.Department of Environmental and Occupational Studies, Faculty of Applied Science,Cape Peninsula University of Technology,Cape Town,South Africa;5.Institute of Biochemistry and Biology, Biodiversity Research/Systematic Botany,University of Potsdam,Potsdam,Germany
Abstract:A new sequestrate Lactarius species was found in a humid evergreen tropical rainforest dominated by Fabaceae of the subfamily Caesalpinioideae in Cameroon, Central Africa. It is described here as new to science and is named Lactarius megalopterus, referring to its spore ornamentation of extraordinarily high wings. Anatomical characters and molecular systematic analyses confirm its relationship to Lactarius subgenus Plinthogali. Phylogenetic analyses based on two nuclear DNA regions revealed its close relationship to Lactarius angiocarpus, which is also an angiocarpous species from Zambia in Africa. Molecular studies have shown that tuber-like, sequestrate sporocarps evolved independently in several lineages of Basidiomycota. The findings of sequestrate fungi in tropical rainforests raise questions regarding the evolutionary benefit of enclosing the spore-producing hymenium. The enclosure of spore-producing tissue has often been associated with the protection of the delicate hymenium against desiccation in arid habitats or against frost in cold habitats. However, these cannot be the selective factors in warm and humid areas like the tropics. This controversy is exemplarily studied and discussed in the family of Russulaceae, especially in the genus Lactarius. Characters shown by the angiocarpous sporocarp of the new Lactarius, such as thick-walled statismospores, an aromatic smell and mild taste, can be interpreted as adaptations to endozoochorous spore dispersal by mammals. Therefore, here we prefer the alternative hypothesis that sequestrate sporocarps are the result of adaptation to endozoochorous spore dispersal.
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