Dictyonema giganteum

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Dictyonema giganteum
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Agaricales
Family: Hygrophoraceae
Genus: Dictyonema
Species:
D. giganteum
Binomial name
Dictyonema giganteum
L.Y.Vargas, Moncada & Lücking (2014)
Holotype: Finca El Triunfo, Colombia[1]

Dictyonema giganteum is a species of lichen-forming fungus in the family Hygrophoraceae.[2] It is a basidiolichen—its fungal partner belongs to the Basidiomycota rather than the more typical Ascomycota. The species was discovered and described in 2014 from specimens collected in the cloud forests of Colombia's eastern Andes. As its name suggests, it forms unusually large, shelf-like lobes that can reach up to 12 cm (4.7 in) across. The lichen is covered with dense white hairs that give it a frosted appearance and is known only from a small area of sub-montane cloud forest in Casanare Department, Colombia.

Dictyonema giganteum was described in 2014 by Lina Vargas, Bibiana Moncada and Robert Lücking from material collected in the eastern Andean foothills of Colombia. Molecular work places it in the D. sericeum (sensu stricto, in the strict sense) clade, a group of filamentous taxa that form semicircular lobes on bark. Within that lineage it is closest to D. discocarpum and two still-unnamed Colombian and Ecuadorian species, but differs from all of them in its sheer size and the abundance of white, hair-like setae. The epithet giganteum refers to the unusually large lobes that characterise the lichen.[1]

Description

Habitat and distribution

References

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