Endocarpon unifoliatum
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| Endocarpon unifoliatum | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Fungi |
| Division: | Ascomycota |
| Class: | Eurotiomycetes |
| Order: | Verrucariales |
| Family: | Verrucariaceae |
| Genus: | Endocarpon |
| Species: | E. unifoliatum |
| Binomial name | |
| Endocarpon unifoliatum T.Zhang, X.L.Wei & J.C.Wei (2017) | |
Endocarpon unifoliatum is a species of squamulose lichen in the family Verrucariaceae.[1] It was described in 2017 from sandy soil crusts on the south-eastern edge of China's Tengger Desert. The species has a single, concave, lobed scale with slightly upturned margins, and relatively few fruiting bodies. Its branched, root-like rhizines wrap sand grains, helping to stabilise loose desert substrates.
Endocarpon unifoliatum was described in 2017 by Tao Zhang, Xin-Li Wei and Jiang-Chun Wei based on collections from the Shapotou experimental area in Ningxia, China. The species epithet means 'with one thallus' (Latin unifoliatus). The holotype (collector T. Zhang, Z10020) came from soil crust in the Shapotou north experimental zone and is housed in the lichen collection of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (HMAS-L). In a three-gene molecular analysis (nrITS plus two newly developed protein-coding markers, ADK and UCEH), the species formed a distinct, well-supported lineage within Endocarpon. It resembles Endocarpon pusillum, but that species has a plane, fully adherent thallus with tightly aggregated, nearly inseparable squamules.[2]