Fuscopannaria convexa
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| Fuscopannaria convexa | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Fungi |
| Division: | Ascomycota |
| Class: | Lecanoromycetes |
| Order: | Peltigerales |
| Family: | Pannariaceae |
| Genus: | Fuscopannaria |
| Species: | F. convexa |
| Binomial name | |
| Fuscopannaria convexa P.M.Jørg. (2005) | |
Fuscopannaria convexa is a species of lichen-forming fungus in the family Pannariaceae.[2] It is a small, olive-brown, crust-forming lichen with distinctive strongly convex, blackish fruiting bodies, found growing on tree bark and occasionally rock in humid coastal habitats of southern Alaska. The species was described in 2005 and appears to be restricted to ocean-influenced sites along the south-coastal Alaska region.
Fuscopannaria convexa was described as a new species in 2005 by Per Magnus Jørgensen, based on material collected in hypermaritime (an extremely wet, mild coastal climate with strong maritime influence) southern Alaska. The type specimen was collected by Tor Tønsberg in 2001 near Cordova (Copper River Delta, Long Island, along the Copper River Highway), and is housed in the herbarium of the University of Bergen (BG), with an isotype (duplicate) in the University of Washington herbarium (WTU).[3]
Jørgensen compared the species with the European Fuscopannaria ignobilis, which can look similar in having strongly convex apothecia, but F. convexa tends to be darker and contains atranorin. He also considered it closer to F. leucostictoides, from which it differs in its more crustose thallus, the absence of terpenoids, and its smaller, more strongly convex apothecia.[3]