Consortium of
North American Lichen Herbaria
- building a Global Consortium of Bryophytes and Lichens as keystones of cryptobiotic communities -
Login New Account
  • Home
  • Search
    • Specimen Search
    • Map Search
    • Exsiccatae
    • Dynamic Species List
    • Dynamic Identification Key
    • Taxonomic Explorer
  • Images
    • Image Browser
    • Image Search
  • Species Checklists
    • Global Checklists >
      • Global Checklists of Lichens & Lichenicolous Fungi
      • Global Checklists IUCN Red-Lists
    • North America
    • Canada
    • US States: A-L >
      • Alaska
      • Arizona
      • Arkansas
      • California
      • Colorado
      • Florida
      • Georgia
      • Hawai'i
      • Idaho
      • Illinois
      • Indiana
      • Iowa
      • Kansas
      • Kentucky
    • US States: M-Q >
      • Maine
      • Maryland
      • Massachusetts
      • Michigan
      • Missouri
      • Montana
      • Minnesota
      • Mississippi
      • Nebraska
      • Nevada
      • New Jersey
      • New Mexico
      • New York
      • North Carolina
      • North Dakota
      • Ohio
      • Oklahoma
      • Oregon
      • Pennsylvania
    • US States: S-Z >
      • South Carolina
      • South Dakota
      • Tennessee
      • Texas
      • Utah
      • Virginia
      • Washington, D.C.
      • Washington
      • West Virginia
      • Wisconsin
      • Wyoming
    • US National Parks
    • Arctic Lichens
    • Southern Subpolar Region
  • Crowdsourcing
  • Associated Projects
    • Bryophyte Portal (CNABH)
    • Líquenes en América Latina (CHLAL)
    • GLOBAL Bryophytes and Lichens Network
    • MyCoPortal
  • More Information
    • Symbiota Help
    • Partners
    • Data Usage Policy
    • Links
  • Sitemap
  • Help & Resources
Xanthoparmelia
Family: Parmeliaceae
Xanthoparmelia image
Frank Bungartz
  • Greater Sonoran Desert
  • Greater Sonoran Desert
  • Resources
Nash, T.H., Ryan, B.D., Gries, C., Bungartz, F., (eds.) 2002. Lichen Flora of the Greater Sonoran Desert Region. Vol 1.
Life habit: lichenized Thallus: foliose to subcrustose, lobate, tightly to loosely attached or sometimes totally unattached lobes: narrow and linear to broader and rounded, eciliate, with or without isidia, soralia unknown (although pustular isidia are not uncommon), without true pseudocyphellae upper surface: usually some shade of brown, less often greenish black, lacking atranorin, the pigment usually HNO3+ blue-green or (rarely) HNO3+ violet, occasionally HNO3-; plane to rugose, dull to shiny, lightly or not pruinose upper cortex: with pored epicortex, paraplectenchymatous to palisade plectenchymatous medulla: white or rarely pigmented, cell wall containing Xanthoparmelia-type lichenan lower surface: tan to dark brown or black, usually moderately rhizinate, but rhizines sparse or missing in some species, the rhizines usually concolorous with the lower surface, not or very little branched Ascomata: apothecial, laminal, with thalline exciple, the asci: clavate, 8-spored ascospores: simple and hyaline, ellipsoid to almost globose, 7-12.5 x 3.5-6.5 µm Conidiomata: pycnidial, laminal, blackened and immersed conidia: bifusiform to acerose, 4-7.5 (-9) x c. 1 µm Secondary metabolites: upper cortex with unidentified brown pigments (glomellifera brown), medulla with various orcinol depsides or depsidones, ß-orcinol depsides or depsidones, aliphatic acids, or scabrosin derivatives Geography: temperate regions of both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres, with centers of diversity in the south, particularly South Africa Substrate: rocks (usually acidic ones) or soil, very rare on wood or bark.
Nash, T.H., Ryan, B.D., Gries, C., Bungartz, F., (eds.) 2004. Lichen Flora of the Greater Sonoran Desert Region. Vol 2.
Life habit: lichenized Thallus: usually foliose but occasionally with an areolate center and appearing subcrustose, when growing free over soil appearing almost fruticose, continuous, irregularly or dichotomously lobate lobes: usually subirregular to sublinear, lobe tips usually subrotund but sometimes subtruncate, cilia absent upper surface: yellow-green to yellow (rarely green to blue-green) and sometimes darkening centrally, smooth, plane to subconvex or highly convex, smooth to rugulose, shiny or dull, usually emaculate but sometimes with well developed maculae, epruinose, often with isidia, more rarely sorediate or pustulate, pseudocyphellae absent upper cortex: pored epicortex, palisade plectenchymatous medulla: white, sometimes lower part pigmented, cell wall containing lichenan photobionts: primary one a chlorococcoid Trebouxia, secondary photobiont absent lower surface: black, medium to dark brown or tan to light reddish brown, plane to sometimes rugulose and rarely canaliculated, sparsely to densely rhizinate; rhizines: black or some shade of brown, almost always simple but occasionally furcated or tufted, rarely branched; cyphellae, pseudocyphellae and tomentum absent Ascomata: apothecial, absent or present, imperforate, laminal on thallus, orbicular, cup-shaped, sessile; margin: prominent, with thalloid rim, smooth or sometimes isidiate ascomata anatomy: exciple: gray or hyaline; epithecium: brown or brownish yellow; hypothecium: hyaline asci: lecanoral, wall layers apically thickened, amyloid, with wide, axial body divergent towards apex, 8-spored ascospores: simple, ellipsoid, 7-13 x 4-7 µm; wall: thin, hyaline Conidiomata: absent or present, pycnidial, laminal on thallus, immersed conidia: bacilliform, bifusiform or fusiform, 5-8 x 0.5-1 µm Secondary metabolites: upper cortex with usnic acid or atronorin; medulla with some combination of orcinol depsides, ß-orcinol depsides, ß-orcinol depsidones, (higher) aliphatic acids, antraquinones or other quinones, secalonic acids or amino acid derivatives Geography: cosmopolitan in at least partially open habitats outside of polar regions Substrate: mostly non-calciferous rock, sometimes on soil and rarely on tree bases when impregnated with dust. Notes: Currently Xanthoparmelia is the most species rich genus in the Parmeliaceae, a fact that reflects a wide array of secondary metabolite variation as well as considerable morphological variation, particularly with regards to the production of asexual propagules. Currently over 600 species are recognized, as the Southern Hemispheric genus Paraparmelia was recently synonymized with it (Elix 2003). Within this vast array of species, some similar morphologies with different chemistries are recognized as species within the genus, whereas in other genera (e.g. Niebla, this volume) a wider chemical circumspection of species is currently accepted. Support of the recognition of these species in Xanthoparmelia comes from investigations demonstrating habitat segregation in both low and intermediate elevation populations (Nash and Zavada 1977; Benedict and Nash 1990). In addition, chemosyndromic variation within Xanthoparmelia has been recognized (C. Culberson et al. 1979). Eventually, however, extensive molecular investigations will be required to help resolve appropriate phylogenetic clades within the group. Here the term "lobulae" is used in an equivalent manner to "lacinae" in other Xanthoparmelia treatments (e.g. Elix et al. 1986). Several species reported as occurring within the Sonoran region are no longer accepted. Xanthoparmelia barbatica (Elix) Egan, reported in (Egan 1982) and in Ryan et al. (2000), is now regarded as an Australian endemic, and the barbatic acid-containing species in North America is designated X. eganii (see below). Xanthoparmelia arsenana (Gyeln.) Hale was used as the narrow-lobed, very adnate Xanthoparmelia with a brown lower cortex, stictic acid and without isidia or soredia (Nash 1974b; Hale personal communication); however, Hale (1990) found that that the type of the species was a synonym of X. novomexicana due to its different chemistry (fumarprotocetraric acid). Herein that southwestern species is now treated as X. subcumberlandia Elix & T.H. Nash. Most but not all specimens reported as X. plittii (Gyeln.) Hale (Nash 1974b) have been transferred to X. subplittii Hale (see also below). Hale (1990) treated X. tinctina (Maheu & Gillet) Hale as strictly a European species, although he had previously agreed with the use of that name for our isidiate, salazinic acid species with a black lower cortex (Nash 1974b). Subsequently, we used the name X. australasica D.J. Galloway for this taxon, but that species is more loosely adnate, broadly lobed and has more narrow, taller isidia; consequently we reuse X. tinctina herein for most of the material based on comparisons with European material. The following reports from Nash et al. (1998) for Arizona have been redetermined as follows: X. australasica, as X. isidiigera; X. consociata, as X. pseudocongensis; and X. tegeta, as X. planilobata. The following reports from Ryan et al. (2000) for Mexico have been redetermined as follows: X. congensis and X. consociata, as X. pseudocongensis; X. diadeta, as X. substenophylloides; X. hypomelaena, as X. tuberculata; X. iniquita, as X. novomexicana; X. subconvoluta, as X. commonii or X. digitiformis; X. suberadicata, as X. neowyomingica; and X. wrightiana, as X. amableana.
Species within checklist: Lichen-forming, lichenicolous and allied fungi of the continental US & Canada (Version 22) || << 51 - 83 taxa >>
Xanthoparmelia nigroweberi
Image of Xanthoparmelia nigroweberi
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia norchlorochroa
Image of Xanthoparmelia norchlorochroa
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia norhypopsila
Images
not available
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia novomexicana
Image of Xanthoparmelia novomexicana
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia occidentalis
Image of Xanthoparmelia occidentalis
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia oleosa
Image of Xanthoparmelia oleosa
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia piedmontensis
Image of Xanthoparmelia piedmontensis
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia planilobata
Image of Xanthoparmelia planilobata
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia plittii
Image of Xanthoparmelia plittii
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia pseudocongensis
Image of Xanthoparmelia pseudocongensis
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia psoromifera
Image of Xanthoparmelia psoromifera
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia pustulosa
Image of Xanthoparmelia pustulosa
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia schmidtii
Image of Xanthoparmelia schmidtii
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia standaertii
Image of Xanthoparmelia standaertii
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia stenophylla
Image of Xanthoparmelia stenophylla
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia stenophylloides
Images
not available
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia subcumberlandia
Image of Xanthoparmelia subcumberlandia
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia subdecipiens
Image of Xanthoparmelia subdecipiens
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia subhosseana
Image of Xanthoparmelia subhosseana
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia subplittii
Image of Xanthoparmelia subplittii
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia subramigera
Image of Xanthoparmelia subramigera
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia substenophylloides
Image of Xanthoparmelia substenophylloides
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia subtasmanica
Image of Xanthoparmelia subtasmanica
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia tegeta
Image of Xanthoparmelia tegeta
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia tinctina
Image of Xanthoparmelia tinctina
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia tuberculata
Image of Xanthoparmelia tuberculata
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia tuckeriana
Image of Xanthoparmelia tuckeriana
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia tucsonensis
Image of Xanthoparmelia tucsonensis
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia vagans
Image of Xanthoparmelia vagans
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia verruculifera
Image of Xanthoparmelia verruculifera
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia viriduloumbrina
Image of Xanthoparmelia viriduloumbrina
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia weberi
Image of Xanthoparmelia weberi
Map not
Available
Xanthoparmelia wyomingica
Image of Xanthoparmelia wyomingica
Map not
Available

 

This project made possible by National Science Foundation Awards: #1115116, #2001500, #2001394
Powered by Symbiota