Species

Uredo chathamica

Etymology

chathamica: From the Chatham Islands

Common Name(s)

None

Qualifiers

2009 - OL

Authority

McKenzie

Family

(Order Uredinales), Basidiomycetes

Flora Category

Fungi - Native

Distribution

This fungus has been found only in the Chatham Islands. However, one host, Carex trifida, is indigenous to the South Island and the subantarctic islands of New Zealand, and also occurs in Chile and the Falkland Islands. Five specimens of the rust were collected incidentally along with the plant specimens.

Features

Only one kind of spore is produced. These are formed in pustules (uredinia) that are found on both surfaces of the leaves, but are mainly on the lower (abaxial) surface. The pustules, which are surrounded by the ruptured leaf epidermis, are cinnamon-brown and powdery (pulverulent). They are up to 1 mm long or become longer when individual pustules merge into one another. The urediniospores are (28–)33–39(–46) x (24–)26–31(–35) µm, and are globose or broadly ellipsoidal with 3–4 equatorial germ pores. The spore wall is echinulate, (1.5–)2–3.5(–4) µm thick, and golden-brown. There are no four species of rust fungi recorded on Carex in New Zealand, all belonging to the genus Puccinia. Urediniospores of Uredo chathamica differ from those of the four Puccinia spp. in size and number of germ pores.

Fruiting

Found on Carexcollected between December and March.

Substrate

Carex chathamica

Where Held

PDD (holotype)

Extant Collections

6


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This page last updated on 18 Jan 2010