New pyrenocarpous lichens from NE Argentina

2014 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 95-102 ◽  
Author(s):  
André APTROOT ◽  
Lidia Itatí FERRARO ◽  
Marcela Eugenia da Silva CÁCERES

AbstractFive new species of corticolous pyrenocarpous lichens are described from tropical and subtropical forests in the Chaco and Misiones provinces in NE Argentina: Aspidothelium submuriforme with globose, grey ascomata and ascospores mostly 7-septate with 0–2 oblique longitudinal septa, 25–28×8–10 µm; Pyrenula inspersoleucotrypa, characterized by a thallus without pseudocyphellae, aggregated ascomata, an inspersed hamathecium, and ascospores of 17–20×6·5–8·0 µm with diamond-shaped lumina; Pyrenula punctoleucotrypa, which has a thallus with pseudocyphellae, aggregated ascomata in a conical pseudostroma, with fused ostioles, not inspersed hamathecium, and ascospores of 10–12×4–5 µm with rounded lumina; Strigula muriconidiata, containing immersed pycnidia with hyaline, densely muriform, ellipsoid conidia, 90–103×32–35 µm; Trypethelium globolucidum, forming sessile pseudostromata with black and whitish parts, an inspersed hamathecium, ascospores 13–19-septate, (65–)83–97×11·5–14·5 µm, lumina rounded to lentiform and containing lichexanthone.

Brunonia ◽  
1987 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 225
Author(s):  
DK Upreti ◽  
A Singh

Two taxa of pyrenocarpous lichens with brown, muriform spores, previously included in the genus Anthracothecium, are trans- ferred to the genus Polyblastiopsis. An emended description of Polyblastiopsis is given. A new species, Polyblastiopsis muelleri, is described and a new combination, Polyblastiopsis monosporum, is made.


Phytotaxa ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 382 (2) ◽  
pp. 182 ◽  
Author(s):  
YI YANG ◽  
LI CHEN ◽  
HUA PENG

Ilex formosana and I. tetramera, both occurring in subtropical forests of China, are easily confused in morphology and distribution. To unravel their identities, phylogenetic analyses of multiple accessions of the two species and their possible relatives using two nuclear DNA loci (ITS and ETS) are conducted in present study. Our results show that I. formosana (sampled from type locality) is closest to I. matanoana and I. mertensii, and I. tetramera (sampled from type locality) is sister to I. nuculicava, while the remaining samples, which were originally identified as I. formosana or I. tetramera, form a strongly supported clade sister to I. cinerea, representing a cryptic new species, which is named here as I. shukunii. Despite the homogeneity in morphology, the divergence in the distribution of I. formosana, I. shukunii, and I. tetramera also supports our phylogenetic results. Insulated by the Taiwan Strait, the re-defined I. formosana is restricted to Taiwan Island. Separated by the Tanaka-Kaiyong Line, a major phytogeographic boundary of Sino-Himalayan and Sino-Japanese Floras, I. shukunii occurs from southeast Yunnan to southeast mainland of China, whereas the re-defined I. tetramera is endemic to southwest Yunnan.


Phytotaxa ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 350 (1) ◽  
pp. 51 ◽  
Author(s):  
YANG GAO ◽  
SHU-ZHEN YAN ◽  
GAO-WEI WANG ◽  
SHUANG-LIN CHEN

Two new myxomycetes from subtropical forests of China, Arcyria aeruginosa sp. nov. and Diderma subochraceum sp. nov., are described and illustrated. Arcyria aeruginosa occurred on rotten stem of bamboo and differs from all known species of the genus in having dense spines on inner surface of cups. The diagnostic feature of D. subochraceum is single-layered peridium which dehisces by longitudinal or stellate slit. Preliminary phylogenetic analyses based on partial 18S rDNA sequences support the establishment of the two new species. Additionally, Didymium saturnus H.W. Keller and Fuligo luteonitens L.G. Krieglst. & Nowotny are reported from China for the first time.


Phytotaxa ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 319 (3) ◽  
pp. 271
Author(s):  
GOPAL KRISHNA ◽  
K. KARTHIGEYAN ◽  
W. ARISDASON ◽  
T. CHAKRABARTY

A new species, Drypetes kalamii, collected from the subtropical forests of two different Protected Areas, Buxa National Park and Jaldapara National Park in the state of West Bengal, India, is described and illustrated. This new species closely resembles Drypetes ellisii, but differs in being small shrub (female plants) or scrambling shrub (male plants) with corrugated branches and puberulous branchlets, longer petioles, laminae abruptly acuminate with pointed apices, slender and puberulent fruiting pedicels with bracts and bracteoles and smaller, ovoid-globose drupes.


Mycotaxon ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 135 (4) ◽  
pp. 861-868
Author(s):  
Xu-Gen Shi ◽  
Zhao-Huan Xu ◽  
Wen-Xiu Sun ◽  
Ji-Wen Xia ◽  
Xiu-Guo Zhang ◽  
...  

Three specimens of Bactrodesmium were collected on dead branches of unidentified plants from subtropical forests in Jiangxi, China. Two represent new species: B. chinense is distinguished by its ellipsoidal to broadly fusiform 9–11-euseptate verrucose reddish brown conidia with pale brown to subhyaline end cells; B. lushanense is characterized by its variably shaped (obovoid, clavate, ellipsoid) verrucose dark brown to black conidia with 3–6 dark-banded eusepta and paler basal cells. The third specimen represents, B. novageronense, a new record for China. The three species are described, illustrated, and compared with similar taxa.


Phytotaxa ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 197 (3) ◽  
pp. 197 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andre Aptroot ◽  
DANNYELLY SANTOS ANDRADE ◽  
CLÉVERTON MENDONÇA ◽  
EDVANEIDE LEANDRO DE LIMA ◽  
Marcela Eugenia da Silva CÁCERES

Ten corticolous pyrenocarpous lichens are newly described from different forest biomes in NE Brazil. All were collected in the past two years in Atlantic rain forest or Caatinga vegetation in Pernambuco or Sergipe. The following species are described: Anisomeridium globosum, Pyrenula abditicarpa, P. albonigra, P. aurantiacorubra, P. celaticarpa, P. cinnabarina, P. inspersicollaris, P. musaespora, P. rubrolateralis, and Thelenella lateralis.


2013 ◽  
Vol 45 (6) ◽  
pp. 763-785 ◽  
Author(s):  
André APTROOT ◽  
Marcela Eugenia da Silva CÁCERES

AbstractThe following new species of pyrenocarpous lichens are described from Rondônia: Agonimia tenuiloba: corticolous, thallus with minute flabellate lobes developing goniocysts; ascomata smooth, grey, ellipsoidal; ascospores densely muriform, 30–50(–76)×20–35 µm. Anisomeridium lateriticum: saxicolous; conidiomata sessile, pyriform, ostiole with brown and hyaline septate setae; conidia simple to 1-septate, 8–11×2·0–2·5 µm. Anisomeridium triseptatum: corticolous, ascomata with lateral ostioles; ascospores (1–)3-septate, 25–30×7·5–10·0 µm, often with gelatinous appendages. Mycomicrothelia megaspora: ascospores ornamented, 1-septate, (27–)29–35(–40)×8–12 µm, often with a gelatinous layer 6–15 µm thick. Porina linearispora: corticolous; thallus green, shiny; ascomata immersed, 0·2–0·3 mm; ascospores filiform, (7–)9(–13)-septate, 75–90×1·5–2·0 µm. Porina maxispora: corticolous; thallus green, matt; ascomata immersed, 0·5–0·7 mm; ascospores filiform, (17–)23–35-septate, 95–110×4·5–5·5 µm. Porina novemseptatoides: saxicolous; thallus very thin, brown, glossy; ascomata superficial, 0·1–0·2 mm; ascospores fusiform, (7–)9-septate, 21–24×4·5–5·0 µm, with a c. 5 µm thick gelatinous layer. Porina termitophila: terricolous; thallus greyish green; ascomata emergent, 0·15–0·20 mm; ascospores fusiform, 1–3-septate, 13–15×2·5–3·0 µm. Pyrenula bispora: corticolous, thallus whitish, ascomata dispersed; hamathecium inspersed; ascospores 2 per ascus, muriform, 55–75×19–23 µm. Pyrenula leptaleoides: corticolous; thallus green to pale brown; ascomata deeply immersed in bark, with long necks fused in joint ostioles visible as brown dots on the surface; ascospores 23–27×8–11 µm, with rather angular lumina. Pyrenula rhomboidea: corticolous; thallus olive-brown; ascomata single, immersed; ascospores irregularly uniseriate, clavate-rhomboidal, 11–13×3·5–4·0 µm.A key is provided to all species of pyrenocarpous lichens (except Trypetheliaceae) found in Rondônia. Nearly all species are new reports for Rondônia. Aspidothelium glabrum, Pyrenula leucotrypa and P. micheneri are newly reported for South America. The usually foliicolous Strigula nitidula is reported for the first time from bark.The high lichen diversity is explained by the poor soils, supporting an only moderately dense forest where enough light can reach the tree trunks at ground level to support a rich flora of crustose lichens usually confined to the upper trunks.


2014 ◽  
Vol 46 (6) ◽  
pp. 783-799 ◽  
Author(s):  
André APTROOT ◽  
Marcela Eugenia da Silva CÁCERES

AbstractA key is given to the foliose and squamulose lichens known so far from Rondônia, including also corticolous crustose lichens with a chlorococcoid alga. The foliicolous Lecanorales found are also listed. The following four new corticolous Lecanorales are described from Rondônia: Calopadia granulosa with a granular, corticate thallus and ascospores 1 per ascus, 33–38×10·5–13·0 µm; Crustospathula amazonica with irregularly capitate to nearly globose, c. 0·2–0·4 mm diam. soralia on cartilaginous stalks; Flavoparmelia plicata with a thallus containing usnic and protocetraric acids, with laminal, irregular, globose to cylindrical isidia which are often easily abraded and showing the whitish medulla, but not sorediate or postulate; Physcidia striata with ascending squamules, without hypothallus, often with laminal isidia in defined areas towards lobe tips of some, usually sterile lobes, and often with biatorine apothecia with ascospores simple to 1-septate, (6·2–)7·5–10·0×(2·5–)3·0–3·5 µm. In the whole lichen flora of the lowland rainforest region of Rondônia, the following traits can be discerned: foliose lichens amount to only 17 species (2·7% of nearly 600), 33 (5·5%) are squamulose, while the vast majority (91·8%) are crustose. Cyanobacteria are present in only 6 (1%) species. A chlorococcoid alga present in c. 100 (16%), 12 of which (2%) have a myrmecioid alga. The remainder of the species, a staggering 83%, have trentepohlioid alga, including 6 (1%) with Phycopeltis. In neotropical lowland rainforest, the vast majority of the lichens are crustose and contain a trentepohlioid alga, and the Arthoniales, Graphidaceae and pyrenocarpous lichens are the main groups, each accounting for roughly a quarter of the lichen biodiversity.


Phytotaxa ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 458 (2) ◽  
pp. 167-172
Author(s):  
CHAO ZHANG ◽  
ANDRÉ APTROOT ◽  
HUA-JIE LIU ◽  
SHU-HUA JIANG

The humid tropical and subtropical forests in South China harbour a rich diversity of crustose lichens. As a result of taxonomic studies of Anisomeridium, two species new to science are described. Comparisons and discussions with similar species are given. In addition, a key to the species of Anisomeridium in China is also provided.


1996 ◽  
Vol 28 (5) ◽  
pp. 401-414 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. M. McCarthy ◽  
J. A. Elix

AbstractMyeloconis P. M. McCarthy & Elix gen. nov. is described from the Neotropics and the eastern Paleotropics. Four new species, M. erumpens, M. fecunda, M. guyanenis and M. parva, are recognized. The genus is characterized by a medulla containing previously unknown yellow or orange pigments and perithecioid ascomata with a dark, dense, almost pseudostromatal wall, a basally anastomosing, but otherwise free, hamathecium, uniformly thin-walled asci and elongate, muriform ascospores. While its affinities are uncertain, the ascomata and their contents suggest a rather close relationship with Porina Müll. Arg. and ClathroporinaMüll. Arg. (Trichotheliaceae).


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