Catinaria brodoana

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Catinaria brodoana
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Lecanoromycetes
Order: Lecanorales
Family: Ramalinaceae
Genus: Catinaria
Species:
C. brodoana
Binomial name
Catinaria brodoana

Catinaria brodoana is a species of lichen-forming fungus in the family Ramalinaceae.[1] It is a tiny, liverwort-dwelling species that grows on Cheilolejeunea liverworts in humid forests of the southeastern United States. The lichen has small black fruiting bodies and a thallus reduced to pale green granules that are largely hidden among the host's leaves.

Catinaria brodoana was described in 2016 by Richard C. Harris and William R. Buck as a hepaticolous (liverwort-dwelling) member of the lichen-forming fungus genus Catinaria. It was characterized and delimited through comparison with the genus type, C. atropurpurea, but differs in being host-specific on species of Cheilolejeunea sect. Leucolejeunea and in having a thallus made up of goniocysts, a distinctly cellular exciple, and ascospores with a weakly warted perispore. The species epithet honors the lichenologist Irwin M. Brodo.[2]

Description

Habitat and distribution

References

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