Enterographa perez-higaredae
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| Enterographa perez-higaredae | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Fungi |
| Division: | Ascomycota |
| Class: | Arthoniomycetes |
| Order: | Arthoniales |
| Family: | Roccellaceae |
| Genus: | Enterographa |
| Species: | E. perez-higaredae |
| Binomial name | |
| Enterographa perez-higaredae Herrera-Camp. & Lücking (2002) | |
Enterographa perez-higaredae is a species of lichen-forming fungus in the family Roccellaceae.[1] It is a leaf-dwelling lichen known from Mexico and has also been reported from Thailand and Sint Eustatius (Caribbean Netherlands). It forms pale grayish to whitish-green patches on the upper surfaces of living leaves. The species is distinguished by its rounded, wart-like fruiting bodies (rather than the narrow elongate structures typical of most Enterographa species) with brown discs and pale margins, and by the presence of conspicuous gray crystals in the internal tissues.
Enterographa perez-higaredae was described as new in 2002 by María de los Ángeles Herrera-Campos and Robert Lücking from foliicolous (leaf-dwelling) material collected at Los Tuxtlas Tropical Biology Station (Veracruz, Mexico), and placed in the lichen-forming fungal family Roccellaceae. Within Enterographa, it belongs to the small set of leaf-dwelling species that form rounded, wart-like ascomata rather than the more typical narrow, lirellate ones; in the original treatment it is compared most closely with E. batistae from Bahia (Brazil). The two are similar overall, but E. perez-higaredae was distinguished by its leaf-dwelling habit, a thicker thallus, and ascomata (fruiting bodies) with a well-developed sterile basal tissue filled with greyish crystals, together with differences in the hymenial pigmentation and spore dimensions reported in the protologue.[2] The specific epithet honours Gonzalo Perez-Higareda, recognizing his work at Los Tuxtlas and contributions to understanding the station's biota.[2][3]