Consortium of 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 IUCN Red-Lists
    • Arctic
    • North America
    • Canada
    • Mexico
    • US States: A-L >
      • Alaska
      • Arizona
      • Arkansas
      • California
      • Colorado
      • Florida
      • Georgia
      • Hawai'i
      • Idaho
      • Illinois
      • Indiana
      • Iowa
      • Kansas
      • Kentucky
    • US States: M-N >
      • Maine
      • Maryland
      • Massachusetts
      • Michigan
      • Missouri
      • Minnesota
      • Mississippi
      • Montana
      • Nebraska
      • Nevada
      • New Jersey
      • New Mexico
      • New York
      • North Carolina
      • North Dakota
    • US States: O-Z >
      • Ohio
      • Oklahoma
      • Oregon
      • Pennsylvania
      • South Carolina
      • South Dakota
      • Tennessee
      • Texas
      • Utah
      • Virginia
      • Washington, D.C.
      • Washington
      • West Virginia
      • Wisconsin
      • Wyoming
    • US National Parks
    • Central America
      • Panama
    • South America
      • Ecuador
    • US National Parks
    • Southern Subpolar Region
  • Crowdsourcing
  • Associated Projects
    • Consortium of Bryophyte Herbaria
    • GLOBAL Bryophytes and Lichens Network
    • MyCoPortal
  • More Information
    • Partners
    • Data Usage Policy
  • Sitemap
  • Help & Resources
    • Consortium Resources
    • Symbiota Help
Dirinaria confluens (Fr.) D. D. Awasthi  
Family: Caliciaceae
[Dimelaena confluens (Fr.) Trevis., moreDirinaria confluens var. confluens (Fr.) D.D. Awasthi, Parmelia confluens Fr., Physcia confluens (Fr.) Nyl.]
Dirinaria confluens image
Stephen Sharnoff
  • Greater Sonoran Desert
  • Resources
Nash, T.H., Ryan, B.D., Gries, C., Bungartz, F., (eds.) 2004. Lichen Flora of the Greater Sonoran Desert Region. Vol 2.
Thallus: foliose, appressed to agglutinated, loosely appressed or firmly agglutinated at the lobe tips, 3-6(-10) cm in diam., pinnately or subpinnately lobate lobes: radiating, confluent, flat or convex but sometimes concave towards the lobe tips, 0.5-2.5 mm wide, distinctly flabellate towards the lobe tips upper surface: gray, lead-gray, bluish gray, yellowish gray, or almost white, with a punctiform or powdery, rarely patchy white pruina or not pruinose, without soralia, isidia or polysidiangia pseudocyphellae: often distinct, marginal and laminal, usually restricted to the peripheral parts of the lobes, sometimes reticulately confluent medulla: white, the lowest part sometimes orange, especially towards the lobe tips lower surface: black in center, paler towards lobe tips, erhizinate Apothecia: very common, laminal on thallus, 0.5-1 mm wide disc: jet-black, usually not or only slightly gray pruinose ascospores: brown, 1-septate, narrowly ellipsoid, 15-19 x 6-7 µm Pycnidia: immersed in warts conidia: bacilliform, 4-5 x 0.8-1.1 µm Spot tests: upper cortex K+ yellow, C-, KC-, P+ yellow; medulla upper and lower part K-, C-, KC-, P- Secondary metabolites: upper cortex with atranorin; medulla with divaricatic acid and few terpenes in low concentration. Substrate and ecology: on bark, wood and rocks, from sea level to the edges of montane rain forests World distribution: in all tropical regions of both hemispheres with few collections from subtropical parts of Japan Sonoran distribution: especially in thorn forests and desert transition areas of Baja California, Baja California Sur, Sinaloa and Sonora. Notes: Most collections of Dirinaria confluens from the Sonoran region, especially those growing on smaller twigs of Fouquieria, have concrete, convex, more agglutinated (like in Hyperphyscia syncolla) and narrower lobe tips (0.3-0.5 mm broad) than specimens from other tropical countries. Transitional forms are seldom, and eventually the Sonoran population may require recognization as a separate species.
Dirinaria confluens
Open Interactive Map
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Dirinaria confluens image
Click to Display
55 Total Images

 

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