Recent records of myxomycetes from New Brunswick, Canada

Authors

  • Virginia F. Zoll
  • Amanda M. Bremner New Brunswick Museum
  • Stephen R. Clayden
  • Kendra E. Driscoll
  • Alfredo Justo
  • Bruce W. Malloch
  • David W. Malloch

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22621/cfn.v137i1.3081

Keywords:

Slime moulds, Ceratiomyxomycetes, Amoebozoa, protected natural area, PNA, Atlantic Maritime Ecozone, herbarium, moist chamber, New Brunswick Museum, NMB, BiotaNB, Campobello mycological foray

Abstract

Studies of the diversity of myxomycetes or plasmodial slime moulds (Amoebozoa) in New Brunswick are lagging behind those of many other groups of terrestrial organisms. Here, we summarize the myxomycetes of the province as documented by recently collected specimens held by the New Brunswick Museum (NBM). Between 2007 and 2019, 264 specimens were collected, representing 80 species in 29 genera. Most of these records result from targetted searching during NBM-led biodiversity surveys (the BiotaNB project) in provincial protected natural areas between 2014 and 2019 and a mycological foray on Campobello Island in 2016. Previously, only seven species had been reported for the province. Consistent with their worldwide distributions and abundance, Arcyria cinerea, Fuligo septica, Ceratiomyxa fruticulosa, and Lycogala epidendrum were the most collected species, whereas the globally rare species Paradiacheopsis microcarpa has been collected in New Brunswick six times. Forty-two species were found only once, and five of these (Comatricha mirabilis, Fuligo laevis, Hemitrichia chrysospora, Lepidoderma neoperforatum, Listerella paradoxa) are rare worldwide.

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Published

2024-01-15

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Section

Articles