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Research Article
Haplodontium altunense (Bryaceae, Bryopsida), a new moss species from Northwest China
expand article infoXiao-Rui Wang, Min Li§, John R. Spence|, Jian-Cheng Zhao§, Sulayman Mamtimin
‡ Shijiazhuang University, Shijiazhuang, China
§ Hebei Normal University, Shijiazhuang, China
| California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco, United States of America
¶ Xinjiang University, Urumqi, China
Open Access

Abstract

Haplodontium altunense X.R.Wang & S.Mamtimin, a new moss species of the family Bryaceae from Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, China is described and illustrated. Genetic analysis based on ITS sequences shows that this species is a member of the Bryaceae and in the same clade as Anomobryum. Particularly distinctive features of the new species include: double peristome; the exostome has raised and membranous chomata with united lamellae between two teeth proximally; the endostome is poorly developed and all the endostomial material tightly adherent to the exostome.

Keywords

Altun Mountain, Bryum, ITS, Plagiobryoides, Ptychostomum

Introduction

Haplodontium Hampe, classified in the family Bryaceae, has been confused with the genus Mielichhoferia Hornsch. Shaw and Crum (1984) transferred all species in the genus to Mielichhoferia because of the similar peristome. Genetic research (Cox et al. 2000; Goffinet et al. 2001; Pedersen et al. 2003, 2007; Holyoak and Pedersen 2007) has clearly shown that some species originally in Haplodontium are nested within Bryaceae. Spence (2005) resurrected the genus Haplodontium and transferred two North American species of Mielichhoferia to Haplodontium. In addition, the genus Mielichhoferia has been accommodated in the family Mielichhoferiaceae (Shaw 2009). Pedersen et al. (2007) showed that Haplodontium, Acidodontium Schwägr. and Anomobryum Schimp. are sister taxa and Haplodontium should be included in the family Bryaceae.

Materials and methods

Morphological observations

Microscopic examination was carried out using traditional methods. The collections of Haplodontium and relevant species of Bryaceae in the herbarium of Hebei Normal University (HBNU), Institute of Applied Ecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences (IFP), Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences (KUN), Institute of Botany, the Chinese Academy of Sciences (PE) and Xinjiang University (XJU) were examined.

Authors observed the plants under the dissecting microscope and examined the leaves, capsules and peristome under the compound light microscope and scanning electron microscope. Light micrographs were photographed using a Nikon E-800 microscope with a Nikon DXM1200F digital camera. The peristome and spores were mounted on double sided sticky tape on aluminium stubs, gold-coated and viewed using a Hitachi S-4800 field emission SEM. All line drawings were made using the drawing tube attachments of these optical microscopes.

Phylogenetic analyses

Twenty-one samples were used for the analyses (Table 1). To evaluate the systematic position of Haplodontium altunense, 20 representatives of allied genera in the family Bryaceae, including Anomobryum, Bryum, Gemmabryum, Plagiobryum and Ptychostomum, were also sampled as part of the ingroup (Cox et al. 2000; Goffinet et al. 2001; Pedersen et al. 2003, 2007; Kato et al. 2013). Bryum argenteum was selected as an outgroup. In addition to 10 sequences from GenBank, 11 sequences newly produced for the present study were included.

Table 1.

Voucher information and GenBank accession numbers of taxa used in the phylogenetic analyses.

Taxon Voucher (Herbarium) Origin GenBank No. Source
Anomobryum auratum 1 L.B. Li 20073626 (HBNU) China MZ470251 This study
Anomobryum auratum 2 L.B. Li 20073628 (HBNU) China MZ470252 This study
Anomobryum julaceum L.B. Li 20072925 (HBNU) China FJ796895 Wang et al. 2011
Bryum argenteum X.R. Wang 20150512031 (HBNU) China MZ470253 This study
Bryum paradoxum J.C. Zhao 0610067 (HBNU) China EU878207 Wang et al. 2011
Bryum recurvulum W.Q. Li 040900 (HBNU) China EU878217 Wang et al. 2011
Gemmabryum caespiticium X.R. Wang 20156001 (HBNU) China MZ470254 This study
Haplodontium altunense S. Mamtimin 16752 (XJU) China MZ470255 This study
Plagiobryum zierii W.Q. Li 000514 (HBNU) China EU878219 Wang et al. 2011
Ptychostomum arcticum S. Mamtimin 15457 (HBNU) China MZ470256 This study
Ptychostomum bimum L. Hedenas B90015 (S) Sweden DQ381780 Holyoak and Hedenas 2006
Ptychostomum cernuum YL Niu 110002 (HBNU) China MZ470257 This study
Ptychostomum inclinatum N. Cao 20050085 (HBNU) China EU878227 Wang et al. 2011
Ptychostomum lonchocaulon N. Cao 20050187 (HBNU) China FJ796878 Wang et al. 2011
Ptychostomum neodamense L. Hedenas B65900 (S) Sweden DQ381772 Holyoak and Hedenas 2006
Ptychostomum pallens M.X. Xiao 20091246 (HBNU) China MZ470258 This study
Ptychostomum pallescens S. Mamtimin 15265 (HBNU) China MZ470259 This study
Ptychostomum pendulum J.C. Zhao 20060463 (HBNU) China FJ796811 Wang et al. 2011
Ptychostomum pseudotriquetrum D.T. Holyoak B90021 (S) Ireland DQ381774 Holyoak and Hedenas 2006
Ptychostomum purpurascens Y.L. Niu 110045 (HBNU) China MZ470260 This study
Ptychostomum turbinatum S. Mamtimin 15095 (HBNU) China MZ470261 This study

Genomic DNA was extracted from freshly collected and silica gel-dried plants using a Plant Genomic DNA Kit (TIANGEN Biotech (Beijing) Co., Ltd.) according to the manufacturer’s protocol. One nuclear marker ITS was chosen. The following primers were used to amplify the marker: ‘18SF’ and ‘26SR’ for the ITS region, or sometimes ‘18SF’ and ‘5.8SR’ for ITS1, and ‘5.8SF’ and ‘26SR’ for ITS2 (Hartmann et al. 2006). PCR cycles used an initial denaturation step of 3 minutes at 95 °C, followed by 35 cycles of 30 seconds at 95 °C, 30 seconds at 50 °C, 90 seconds at 72 °C, and a final elongation of 5 minutes at 72 °C. PCR products were purified with a Gel Extraction Kit (Cwbio, Shanghai, China) following the instruction manual. These purified PCR products were sequenced by Life Technologies Inc., China (http://www.lifetechnologies.com).

Sequence chromatograms were compiled using SeqMan II (DNASTAR Inc., Madison, WI, USA) and then aligned manually in PhyDE 0.9971 (Müller et al. 2010). Regions of partially incomplete data at the beginnings and ends of sequences were identified and excluded from subsequent analyses. Gaps were treated as missing data. The aligned ITS dataset was composed of 1213 bp.

The maximum likelihood (ML) method was performed using RAxML v.8.2.12 on the CIPRES Science Gateway (http://www.phylo.org/), and inferred under the default settings (Stamatakis 2014). The fast bootstrap option was used with 1000 replicates. TreeGraph 2 (Stöver and Müller 2010) was used to summarize the topologies and support values from the analyses.

Results

Taxonomic treatment

Haplodontium altunense X.R.Wang & S.Mamtimin, sp. nov.

Figs 1, 2, 3

Type

China. Xinjiang, Ruoqiang County, Altun Mountain National Nature Reserve, 37°0.42'N, 88°36.35'E, 4290 m a.s.l., 22 July 2011, S Mamtimin 16752 (holotype: HBNU!; isotype: XJU!).

Figure 1. 

Haplodontium altunense A plant (wet) B capsule (wet) C capsules (dry) D leaves E transverse section of leaf F superficial stoma G annulus growing on the capsule mouth H dorsal views of peristome I transverse section of stem J apical laminal cells and margin K apical laminal cells L median laminal cells M basal laminal cells. Drawn by Xiaorui Wang from the holotype (HBNU!).

Diagnosis

Particularly distinctive features of the new species including: double peristome; the exostome has raised and membranous chomata with united lamellae between two teeth proximally; the endostome is poorly developed and all the endostomial material tightly adherent to the exostome.

Figure 2. 

Light micrographs of Haplodontium altunense A–C plants (dry) D Capsule (dry) E capsule (wet) F annulus growing on the capsule mouth G annulus falling off the capsule mouth H dorsal views of median peristome showing the large papillae along the horizontal and median vertical lines I dorsal views of distal peristome showing adherent endostomial material and exostome teeth J transverse section of stem K transverse section of midleaf L transverse section of costa M leaf apex N median laminal cells O basal laminal cells P leaves. Photographed by Xiaorui Wang from the holotype (HBNU!).

Description

Plants small, soft and dull, brown-green. Stems short, 2.5–6 mm high, weakly julaceous, branched, circular or pentagonal circular in transverse section with small and thick-walled peripheral cells surrounding 2–3 layers gradually larger and thin-walled cortical cells, central strand weakly developed. Leaves imbricate when dry, erect when moist, enlarged towards stem apex, ovate to broadly ovate, concave, 0.5–1.1×0.3–0.7 mm; base not decurrent; margins plane or recurved medially, 1-stratose, limbidium absent, smooth or finely serrulate distally; apex broadly acute; costae not reaching apex, guide cells weakly developed, 2–4 in one layer in costal transverse section, ventral and dorsal stereid bands present; alar cells not differentiated from juxtacostal cells; laminal cells lax; distal laminal cells rhomboidal, 30–44×11–21 μm, with slightly thickened walls; medial laminal cells long rhomboidal to rectangular, 37–69×12–20 μm, somewhat narrower in 2 or 3 rows toward the margins but not forming a distinct border; proximal laminal cells long rectangular, 37–56×20–28 μm. Dioicous(?). Perigonia not seen. Perichaetia at the end of short, inconspicuous stems, appearing laterally because of well-developed innovations; perichaetial leaves larger than vegetative leaves. Setae single, light brown, 15–19 mm long. Capsules nutant and symmetric, reddish brown, obovoid, 1.5–2 mm, neck short and indistinct, mouth small, stomata abundant in the neck, superficial; opercula long-conic with short rostrate; annulus present, consisting of two rows of cells, revoluble and cells with slit-like lumen; peristome double, exostome inserted below the mouth, teeth lanceolate, red-brown and pored, raised and membranous chomata with united lamellae between two teeth proximally, pale yellow to hyaline and largely papillose along horizontal and median vertical lines distally; endostome poorly developed, basal membrane smooth, segments and cilia rudimentary, all the endostomial material strongly adhere to the exostome. Spores spherical, 20–22 μm in diameter, minutely papillose.

Figure 3. 

Scanning electron micrographs of Haplodontium altunense A dorsal views of peristome B dorsal views of peristome with annulus C dorsal surface of exostome teeth proximally showing the pores and the raised and membranous chomata horizontal lines with united lamellae between two teeth D dorsal surface of exostome teeth distally showing the large papillae along the median vertical lines E dorsal surface of exostome teeth distally showing the endostomial material adherent to the teeth F ventral views of peristome G ventral surface of peristome proximally showing the smooth endostome basal membrane H ventral views of peristome distally I, J ventral surface of peristome medially and distally showing the endostomial material adherent to the teeth K spore L exine ornamentation of spore. Photographed by Xiaorui Wang from the holotype (HBNU!).

Etymology

The specific epithet altunense refers to the type locality in Altun Mountain National Nature Reserve in the Northwestern China.

Distribution and habitat

China (Xinjiang). Only known from the type locality, on soil substrates at 4290 m in the Altun Mountain National Nature Reserve. The population grows in a dry, cold, and windy habitat with intense evaporation. The companion species include some xerophytic mosses of the family Pottiaceae.

Chinese name

阿尔金拟缺齿藓 (ā ěr jīn nĭ quē chĭ xĭan)

Phylogenetic analyses

The present phylogenetic analysis, based on the nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer region ITS1–5.8S–ITS2 (hereafter, ITS) region, included 20 species from six genera, as well as Bryum argenteum Hedw. as outgroup (Fig. 4). The only sample of Haplodontium altunense is sister to the Anomobryum clade (81 MLBS), which is monophyletic with three members. Twelve samples of Ptychostomum Hornsch. formed a monophyletic clade (91 MLBS), in which Gemmabryum caespiticium (Hedw.) J.R. Spence was nested. Plagiobryum zierii (Hedw.) Lindb. is closely related to the Ptychostomum clade. The Bryum Hedw. clade (100 MLBS) with three species were basal to the main clades.

Figure 4. 

Phylogenetic relationships of Haplodontium altunense sp. nov. from ITS rDNA with related genera in Bryaceae based on Maximum Likelihood analysis. Support values are given above branches. Bryum argenteum was served as an outgroup.

Discussion

Pending a careful examination of Bryaceae in the Altun Mountains, we discovered an unusual collection with distinctive morphological features of the peristome: endostome poorly developed and strongly adherent to the exostome. We thought this collection could belong to the genus Synthetodontium Cardot at first sight based on its fused peristome. Phylogenetic analysis showed that this collection was nested into Bryaceae clade. It is genetically distinct from the closely related Anomobryum group (Fig. 4). Further examination revealed that it has morphological characters of Haplodontium such as stems nearly julaceous, leaf margins entire, distal and medial laminal cells laxly rhomboidal to rectangular. However, the collection is distinguished from the other previously recognized species in the region by its double peristome, and raised and membranous chomata with united lamellae between two exostome teeth proximally. We thus describe it as a new species of the genus Haplodontium.

The gametophytes of Haplodontium species are similar to those of Plagiobryum and Plagiobryoides J.R.Spence (Spence 2015). Genetic research has shown that the type species of Haplodontium is closely related to Acidodontium and Anomobryum (Cox and Hedderson 2003; Pedersen et al. 2007). Peristome reduction is common and complex in Haplodontium, from double to single to absent (Spence 2005).

The gametophyte characters of Haplodontium altunense are similar to Plagiobryoides brachyneura (Kindberg) J.R.Spence (Spence 2015). At the same time, both species have double, reduced and fused peristome. In P. brachyneura, setae are red-brown and 5–15 mm long, capsules are inclined to nutant, elongate-pyriform and 2–4 mm long with elongate-neck, opercula are weakly convex, exostome teeth are short and irregular in shape. However, those characters of H. altunense are as follows: setae are light brown and 15–19 mm long, capsules are nutant, pyriform to obovoid and 1.5–2 mm long with indistinct short-neck, opercula are long-conic with short rostrate, exostome teeth are regular long lanceolate.

Haplodontium altunense is also similar to Ptychostomum pendulum Hornschuch (Spence 2015) (≡Bryum algovicum Sendtner ex Müller Hal. (Li 2006; Zhang et al. 2007) in that the endostome adheres to the exostome teeth. While the former species differ from the latter one in length of stems (2.5–6 mm vs. 5–20 mm), leaf apex (broadly acute or obtuse vs. acuminate), leaf margin (indistinct bordered vs. strong limbidium), costae (ending at or near the apex vs. long-excurrent in denticulate awn), exostome teeth (united at the base, large papillose above vs. separate, smooth above), endostome (segments reduced vs. segments with ovate perforations).

Wang et al. (2017) reported one new species, Haplodontium zangii X.R.Wang & J.C.Zhao, from Tibet, China and transferred two Chinese species in Mielichhoferia to Haplodontium as new combinations: H. himalayanum (Mitt.) X.R.Wang & J.C.Zhao and H. sinensis (Dix.) X.R.Wang & J.C.Zhao. The most significant difference among the four species of Haplodontium in China is that the first three species all have single peristome, while H. altunense has double and fused peristome.

Key to the Haplodontium species in China

1 Peristome double, exostome teeth lanceolate, raised and membranous chomata with united lamellae between two teeth proximally, endostome reduced, all the endostomial material strongly adhere to the exostome H. altunense
Peristome single, exostomial 2
2 Leaves lanceolate; costae excurrent, ending in long denticulate awns, awns 140–310 μm long H. himalayanum
Leaves ovate to oblong-ovate; costae subpercurrent to ending in short awns, awns 0–130 μm long 3
3 Leaf apex cucullate; capsules pyriform; exostome teeth regularly lanceolate, not perforate, vertically striped on dorsal surface, smooth on ventral surface H. sinensis
Leaf apex plane; capsules subglobose to short pyriform; exostome teeth irregularly linear-lanceolate, sometimes perforate, smooth or finely papillose H. zangii

Acknowledgements

We thank the curators and staff of IFP, KUN and PE for specimen loaning. We are grateful to Dr. Ning-Ning Yu from Institute of Botany, The Chinese Academy of Sciences for providing literature. Thanks are also extended to Mr. Jim Shevock for constructive comments and suggestions on the manuscript. This research was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (32060050, 31660052), the Natural Science Foundation of Hebei Province (D2019106006, C2019205115), the Initial Scientific Research Foundation for Doctoral Teachers of Shijiazhuang University (20BS027), the Key Scientific Research Fund Project of Hebei Normal University (L2019Z06).

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