flavopunctelia lichen

Flavopunctelia flaventior

Description 6

 Thallus: foliose, weakly appressed to tightly adnate, 4-10(-13) cm in diam., lobate; lobes: sublinear to sub-irregular, 2-6 (-9) mm wide, plane, contiguous; upper surface: greenish yellow to yellow-green, turning a dark buff with age in the herbarium, smooth to weakly wrinkled and rugose, rarely weakly ridged-reticulate, sometimes with white maculae; rare specimens with a few marginal laciniae; pseudocyphellae: white, large (up to 1 mm), round to elongated and branched, generally common and abundant; soredia: white, farinose to granular, in round, laminal soralia arising from pseudocyphellae and sometimes coalescing; lobe margins may also support soralia, only occasionally forming reflexed, "crescent-shaped" soralia; medulla: white with a continuous algal layer; lower surface: black to dark chestnut brown, sometimes paler toward the margin, smooth to finely wrinkled; rhizines: simple, rarely branching, short, concolorous with the lower surface, usually absent in a zone along the margins; Apothecia: rare, laminal, sessile to substipitate, 2-6 mm in diam., pseudocyphellate and becoming sorediate; disc: deeply concave, dark rusty-brown; margin: concolorous with the thallus; asci: Lecanora-type, 8-spored; ascospores: hyaline, simple, ovoid to ellipsoid, 8-13 x 5-7 µm; Pycnidia: black, rare or absent; conidia: bifusiform or appearing filiform, 6-10 µm long; Spot tests: upper cortex K+ yellowish, KC-, C-, P-; medulla C+ red, KC+ red, K-, P-; Secondary metabolites: upper cortex with usnic acid (minor) and rarely atranorin (trace); medulla with lecanoric acid (major), + 5-chlorolecanoric acid (minor or trace).; Substrate and ecology: on rocks (basalt, gneiss, granite, rhyolite, sandstone and rarely limestone), bark of hardwoods (Fouquieria, Prunus, Quercus, Robinia), bark and wood of conifers (Juniperus, Picea, Pinus, Pseudotsuga) from 120-850 m in southern California or 1250-3140 m in other Sonoran areas; World distribution: widespread in temperate and boreal areas as well as higher elevations in the tropics in North and South America, Africa, Europe and India; Sonoran distribution: mountains of Arizona, southern California, including the Channel Islands, Baja California and Baja California Sur, Chihuahua, Sinaloa and Sonora.; Notes: As pointed out by Hale (1980), some specimens of F. flaventior intergrade with F. soredica. However, the combination of abundant large pseudocyphellae, laminal soralia, and the infrequent formation of marginal "crescent-shaped" soralia is usually diagnostic. Specimens collected from bark are more likely to appear "intermediate" than those occurring on rocks. 

Fuentes y créditos

  1. (c) Jason Hollinger, algunos derechos reservados (CC BY), http://www.flickr.com/photos/7147684@N03/982854348/
  2. František Bouda, sin restricciones conocidas de derechos (dominio publico), https://www.biolib.cz/IMG/GAL/16120.jpg
  3. (c) André Aptroot, algunos derechos reservados (CC BY-NC-SA), http://www.tropicallichens.net/photopath/flavoparmelia-flaventior-yunnan.jpg
  4. (c) National Museum of Natural History Collections, algunos derechos reservados (CC BY-NC-SA), https://collections.nmnh.si.edu/services/media.php?env=botany&irn=10267258
  5. (c) Wenting Shi, algunos derechos reservados (CC BY-NC-SA), https://collections.nmnh.si.edu/services/media.php?env=botany&irn=10267261
  6. (c) Lichen Unlimited: Arizona State University, Tempe., algunos derechos reservados (CC BY-NC-SA), http://eol.org/data_objects/10548498

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