Multiclavula ichthyiformis
Multiclavula ichthyiformis is a rare terricolous basidiolichen in the family Hygrophoraceae. The lichen produces small, flesh-coloured fruit bodies with flattened, fishtail-shaped tops that grow directly from the soil surface and bear spherical spores on their undersurface. Endemic to a high-elevation bog in Costa Rica, it was discovered in 2007 during a biodiversity survey and remains known only from this single mountain location.
Taxonomy
The lichen was discovered during the TICOLICHEN biodiversity inventory and formally described in 2007 by Matthew Nelsen and colleagues. The type material was gathered at elevation on the Talamanca Ridge. Its epithet, ichthyiformis, alludes to the dorsal outline of the basidiocarp, whose widening lamina evokes a fish's tail. Morphologically the species departs from other Multiclavula taxa in several ways: the hymenium is restricted to the ventral surface rather than being amphigenous; the stipe is densely tomentose and cloaked in minute, scalelike bulbils; and the spherical basidiospores contrast with the predominantly ellipsoid spores of others in the genus.Molecular analysis of the internal transcribed spacer region places M. ichthyiformis within the Clavulinaceae and as sister to the three previously sequenced species of Multiclavula. Various statistical methods both recover the taxon on a well-supported branch inside the cantharelloid clade, confirming that its unusual morphology evolved within the established Multiclavula lineage.
A 2020 study describing the rock-dwelling Multiclavula petricola produced an internal transcribed spacer-based phylogeny that again recovered a strongly supported Multiclavula clade. In that tree M. ichthyiformis emerged on a basal branch together with M. petricola, although their pairing itself lacked statistical backing. Only limited identity between their ITS sequences were identified, emphasizing that the Costa Rican bog lichen and the Japanese rock species are genetically well separated.
Description
The thallus of M. ichthyiformis forms a thin, greenish film—rarely more than across—composed of densely packed cells of the unicellular green algal genus Coccomyxa. Each alga is ensheathed by a single hyphal layer, creating microscopic bulbils that also appear on the stipe and lamina. cells are broadly ellipsoid and frequently divide by autospory. Fungal hyphae within the thallus are hyaline, thin-walled, and sparsely branched.Basidiocarps occur singly on the soil surface. The stipe, 2–5 mm tall and up to 0.7 mm thick, is flesh-coloured when moist and turns translucent white on drying; its surface is lined with pointed scales 0.1–0.4 mm long that incorporate algal cells. Above the stipe the lamina abruptly widens to 0.9–1.9 mm, forming a flat, blade 0.6–4 mm high. The sterile upper face carries a thin gelatinised overlain by orange-brown crystalline aggregates, which impart an ochraceous hue in the dry state, whereas the lower face bears the hymenium. Basidia are somewhat urn-shaped and usually six-spored; basidiospores are smooth, thin-walled, spherical, and hyaline. Hyphae in the context are tightly parallel and agglutinated, measuring 3–4 μm wide in the lamina and 1.5–2 μm in the scales and outer stipe.