Tomeki

The "red Hypoxylons" of the temperate and subtropical Northern hemisphere

The "red Hypoxylons" of the temperate and subtropical Northern hemisphere

By Marc Stadler

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Publish Date

2008

Publisher

Pacific Northwest Fungi Project

Language

eng

Pages

125

Description:

Selected taxa of Hypoxylon from the Northern Hemisphere were compared with numerous type and authentic specimens of H. fuscum, H. rubiginosum, and presumably related taxa. Besides morphological analyses, we used secondary metabolite profiles based on high performance liquid chromatography, coupled with diode array detection and mass spectrometry (HPLC-DAD/MS). Chemotaxonomic studies on the Nitschke and Persoon types of the above names and further ancient type specimens turned out to be rather conclusive. Along with the information provided in the world monograph of Hypoxylon by Ju and Rogers, the results of our HPLC profiling studies are regarded as key asset to provide a better overview on the diversity and biogeography of these species complexes. The utility of this approach is demonstrated by a study on Hypoxylon in the Canary Islands. From a comparison of morphological and chemical traits with the above mentioned material, we recognize two new species (H. canariense and H. urriesii). The predominantly tropical H. anthochroum and H. subrutilum were also found from this archipelago, but representatives of these taxa from different parts of the world showed heterogeneous HPLC profiles. The number of accepted species in Hypoxylon might increase substantially, once an inventory of their tropical representatives, based on holomorphic morphology and considering the importance of their stromatal extrolites, has been completed.