Massarina carolinensis
Massarina carolinensis is a species of fungus in the Lophiostomataceae family. The species is found exclusively on the lower parts of the culms of the saltmarsh Juncus roemerianus on the Atlantic Coast of North Carolina.
Taxonomy, classification, and naming
The species was first described by mycologists Jan Kohlmeyer, Brigitte Volkmann-Kohlmeyer, and Ove Eriksson in a 1996 Mycological Research publication. The specific epithet carolinensis is the Latinized name of the state where it was first discovered. The species was tentatively assigned to Massarina, although this genus is poorly known.Description
The roughly spherical fruit bodies are 130–160 μm high by 145–175 μm wide, and immersed in the cortex of the plant. Although initially covered by the plant cuticle, the fungus is later exposed when the cuticle peels off to reveal an ostiolate, leathery ascomata. The ascomata grow singly or in groups, and are clypeate. Their color is blackish-brown in the upper parts, and light brown in the lower parts. A brown pseudoparenchyma covers the top of immature ascomata and rips apart at maturity; the tips of the pseudoparaphyses extend into the ostiole. The peridium is 9–13 μm thick, made of 4–5 layers of ellipsoidal cells, occluded by melanin, especially around the ostiole, to form a textura angularis—a parenchyma-like tissue of densely packed cells that appear angular in cross section. The hamathecium is dense, containing many septate, and branched; the pseudoparaphyses anastomose in a gelatinous matrix. The asci measure 75–90 by 13–16 μm, with a short stalk; they are eight-spored, cylindrical, bitunicate, thick-walled, and lack any specialized apparatus at the tip. The ascospores mature successively on the tissue at the bottom of the locule. The ascospores are ellipsoidal, hyaline, and measure 16.5–21 by 4-5–65 μm. The spores have three speta, and are strongly constricted at these septa. They are enclosed by a gelatinous sheath that swells strongly in water after the membrane around the outer covering of the spore bursts.M. carolinensis is similar in ascospore and fruit body morphology to the species M. ricifera, which grows on the same host plant. M. ricifera latter can be distinguished by the presence of a neck on the fruit body, the sparse pseudoparaphyses, and slightly larger ascospores measuring 19–25 by 5.5–7 μm. Additionally, it is a marine species, found between above the rhizome.