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Pseudocyphellaria
Family: Peltigeraceae
Pseudocyphellaria image
Troy McMullin
  • 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, dorsiventral, lobed, often very large, spreading, orbicular and ± rosette-forming and radiate, or irregularly laciniate, or ± dichotomously or irregularly branched, or polyphyllous, rarely ± monophyllous, loosely to tightly adnate lobes: narrow and strap-shaped or broad, ± dichotomously branching with distinctly bifurcate apices which may be rounded, pointed or truncate, often imbricate; margins: entire or variously incised or folded, often free and ascending upper surface: blackish, brown, olive, green, blue-green, gray, ochraceous, yellow, or white, continuous, smooth or wrinkled, sometimes ± scabrid or hairy, sometimes shallowly foveolate, with faint or marked reticulum of interconnecting ridges, shiny or matt, often conspicuously maculate, with or without pseudocyphellae, isidia, phyllidia or soredia; cephalodia present or absent; goniocysts absent; margins often with conspicuous, elongate or verruciform pseudocyphellae upper cortex: paraplectenchymatous, anticlinally arranged, ± isodiametric, thick-walled cells medulla: loose, white or yellow photobiont: primary photobiont a cyanobacterium (Nostoc), or chlorococcoid alga (Dictyochloropsis or Chlorella-like); accessory photobiont (Nostoc) present in some green algal species lower cortex: paraplectenchymatous, anticlinally arranged, ± isodiametric, thick-walled cells lower surface: glabrous or usually ± tomentose, the tomentum pale to dark, thick and felted to indistinctly pubescent, always pseudocyphellate; pseudocyphellae: white or yellow, sparse to frequent, ± immersed in tomentum to raised-conical, round to irregular, the margins distinct or indistinct; attached to substrate by rhizoids which often form a mat Ascomata: apothecial, often absent but abundant in a few species, roundish, emergent, becoming sessile to substipitate, marginal or laminal, hemiangiocarpic; disc: brown or red-brown, dull or shining, sometimes white-pruinose, round, usually concave; thalline exciple: well developed, prominent or slightly prominent, entire or crenate-striate, phyllidiate, isidiate or sorediate in some species, smooth to verrucose or areolate-scabrid, hairy or maculate; true exciple: hyaline to yellow-brown; hymenium: hyaline and brown or olivaceous above; hypothecium: pale or dark, hyaline to ochraceous, brown or violet; paraphyses: unbranched, not anastomosing asci: clavate, Peltigera-type, unitunicate, with amyloid (I+ blue) cap in tholus, 8-spored ascospores: oblong-fusiform, fusiform, fusiform-ellipsoid, obtuse or apiculate at the poles, simple then polarbilocular to transversely 1-3 (-5)-septate, wall hyaline becoming pale to dark brownish, grayish, or blackish, smooth, 20-38 (-43) x 6-11 µm Conidiomata: pycnidial, laminal-lateral, immersed, Lobaria-type, globose or ovoid, 0.2-0.6 mm diam., walls dark brown at ostiole, paler below conidia: straight, cylindrical, bacilliform, or bifusiform, 3-5 x 0.7-1 µm Secondary metabolites: orcinol depsides, ß-orcinol depsides (including atranorin) or depsidones, terphenylquinones, pulvinic acid derivatives, usnic acids; triterpenoids (hopanes, stictanes, lupanes, and fernenes) Geography: temperate (primarily Southern Hemisphere) to tropical Substrate: on bark, wood, soil, detritus, or non-calciferous, siliceous rock, in humid, sheltered, oceanic woodlands. Notes: It is characterized by the presence of pseudocyphellae on lower (and sometimes upper) surface, emergent apothecia with colorless or brown, 1-3 septate or polarbilocular spores, and a diverse chemistry.
Species within checklist: Snares Islands
Pseudocyphellaria crocata
Image of Pseudocyphellaria crocata
Map not
Available
Pseudocyphellaria faveolata
Image of Pseudocyphellaria faveolata
Map not
Available
Pseudocyphellaria physciospora
Image of Pseudocyphellaria physciospora
Map not
Available

 

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