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Morphology/Development

A new epiphyllous fly-speck fungus from the Early Cretaceous Potomac Group of Virginia (125–112 Ma): Protographum luttrellii, gen. et sp. nov.

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Pages 504-518 | Received 22 Jul 2019, Accepted 15 Jan 2020, Published online: 13 Mar 2020
 

ABSTRACT

Fly-speck fungi reproduce via thyriothecia that consist of sporogenous tissue appressed to cuticle surfaces of plant leaves and covered by a shield-like scutellum. Thyriothecial scutella likely evolved repeatedly in Dothideomycetes (Ascomycota), and their morphology varies by lineage. Fly-speck fungi have an exceptionally good fossil record that begins in the Mesozoic. The interpretation of scutellum characters in fossils may provide insights into origins of Dothideomycetes and help calibrate the timing of ascomycete evolution. From sediments of the Lower Cretaceous (125–112 Ma) Potomac Group of Virginia, from Dutch Gap Canal, lower Zone 1, we found scutella similar to those of extant Aulographaceae (Dothideomycetes), attached to a single piece of dispersed coniferous cuticle. We analyze hyphae and scutellum development among four extant Aulographaceae species for comparison with the fossil. The excellent preservation of fungi on the leaf cuticle surface allows us to infer a developmental sequence for the fossil. Scutellum development begins with coordinated growth of multiple neighboring generator hyphae and continues with hyphae producing two-dimensional pseudomonopodial, dichotomous, radial growth. Asci and ascospores were not found. We coded states for seven morphological characters using direct observations of the fossil and eight extant taxa, and using the literature for 28 others. We inferred a phylogeny using nuclear 18S and 28S rDNA of 36 extant taxa, 34 Dothideomycetes and two Arthoniomycetes. The phylogeny includes newly determined sequences from five species, two from Aulographaceae. With a branch-and-bound search, we inferred the most parsimonious placements of the fossil given the molecular tree topology. The parsimony analysis constrained by the rDNA phylogeny places the fossil taxon among stem lineages near Aulographaceae or among the known living members of Aulographaceae. We describe the fossil morphotype as Protographum luttrellii, gen. et sp. nov. The fossil provides the oldest evidence of morphological characters restricted among extant fungi to Aulographaceae.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank Dr. Randal A. Mindell (Qualicum Beach Museum) for his suggestions and assistance in modifying fossil cuticle extraction protocol, Dr. Rolf W. Mathewes (Simon Fraser University) for processing fossil samples with hydrofluoric acid and for his suggestion for handling dispersed phytodebris, and Dr. Gar W. Rothwell (Oregon State University) for advice in assembling illustrative plates for comparative anatomy. Drs. Wayne Maddison and Sean Graham (both from University of British Columbia) provided comments that improved the text, as did Mycologia Associate Editor Priscila Chaverri, reviewer Prof. Michael Krings, and an anonymous reviewer.

Supplemental Material

Supplemental data for this article can be accessed on the publisher’s Web site.

Additional information

Funding

Funding for this research was provided by a Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Discovery Grant (RGPIN-2016–03746) to M.L.B.

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