@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref31544,
author = {Kohei Yamamoto and Naoki Endo and Muneyuki Ohmae and Takamichi Orihara},
title = {Balsamia oblonga (Helvellaceae), a new species from a subalpine forest in Japan},
year = {2021},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {http://jats-truffles.org/truffology/vol_4/},
pmid = {},
journal = {Truffology},
volume = {4},
number = {1},
pages = {1--7},
abstract = {Balsamia is a member of the family Helvellaceae, and all but one of the 25 species form subterranean truffle-like ascomata. This genus is broadly distributed across the Northern Hemisphere, i.e., Europe, North America, and Asia (China). However, this genus had not been found in Japan. In September 2013, an unidentified truffle-like fungus was collected in a subalpine forest in Gunma Prefecture, Japan. Morphological observations and molecular phylogenetic analyses revealed that this fungus belongs to the genus Balsamia. Here, we describe the new species B. oblonga. This species is characterized by large, oblong ascospores (up to 33.5 ?m) with a large lengthto-width ratio (up to 3.3). Phylogenetic analyses resolved this species as a distinct species-level branch.}
}
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Citation title:
"Balsamia oblonga (Helvellaceae), a new species from a subalpine forest in Japan".

Study name:
"Balsamia oblonga (Helvellaceae), a new species from a subalpine forest in Japan".

This study is part of submission 27402
(Status: Published).
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