Fellhanera silhouettae
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| Fellhanera silhouettae | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Fungi |
| Division: | Ascomycota |
| Class: | Lecanoromycetes |
| Order: | Lecanorales |
| Family: | Ectolechiaceae |
| Genus: | Fellhanera |
| Species: | F. silhouettae |
| Binomial name | |
| Fellhanera silhouettae | |
Fellhanera silhouettae is a species of crustose lichen in the family Ectolechiaceae. It was described in 2004 from the granitic island of Silhouette in the Seychelles. It forms a thin, granular green thallus on tree bark and occasionally over mosses and is recognised by its minute urn-shaped, orange-brown fruit-bodies, a hypothecium that flashes deep crimson when a drop of potassium hydroxide solution is applied, and elongate, five- to six-septate spores. The species appears to be confined to the mid-elevation evergreen forests of Silhouette Island, and may well be endemic there.
Fellhanera silhouettae was formally described in 2004 by André Aptroot and Mark Seaward in their paper describing four lichens new to science from the Seychelles. The holotype was collected at 220 m elevation along the trail to Jardin Marron on Silhouette Island, where it grew at the base of a living Tabebuia tree. The epithet silhouettae refers to the type locality. Although pycnidia have not been observed, the combination of a Byssoloma-type ascus structure and a non-aeruginous apothecial base places the species unambiguously in Fellhanera, separating it from superficially similar members of Byssoloma and Fellhaneropsis. Among other in the genus, it most closely resembles the foliicolous F. subfuscatula but differs in its deeper orange apothecia, red-reacting hypothecium and slightly larger, often clavate (club-shaped) ascospores.[1]