Gyalolechia paradoxa
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| Gyalolechia paradoxa | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Fungi |
| Division: | Ascomycota |
| Class: | Lecanoromycetes |
| Order: | Teloschistales |
| Family: | Teloschistaceae |
| Genus: | Gyalolechia |
| Species: | G. paradoxa |
| Binomial name | |
| Gyalolechia paradoxa Himelbr., Stepanch. & I.V.Frolov (2025) | |
![]() Type locality: Medny Island, Russian Far East | |
Gyalolechia paradoxa is a species of lichen in the family Teloschistaceae.[1] It was described as new to science in 2025 from collections made on Medny Island in the Commander Islands of the Russian Far East, where it grows on mosses and sometimes as a parasite on other lichens in mountain tundra. The species has an orange to orange-red body with dark rust-coloured fruiting structures, and is named for its unusual combination of traits that the authors of the species considered atypical for the genus.
Gyalolechia paradoxa was described as a new species in 2025 by Dmitry Himelbrant, Irina Stepanchikova and Ivan Frolov from Medny Island in the Commander Islands (Kamchatka Territory, Russian Far East). The type collection came from a mountain slope west of Lake Gladkovskoe at 146 m altitude. The species was characterised as muscicolous or lichenicolous (on Psora rubiformis), and was separated from the similar Blastenia ammiospila by its thin orange to orange-red thallus (with 7-chloroemodin and no atranorin) and by its broadly ellipsoid to roughly spherical ascospores, measuring 12–19 × 8–13 μm.[2]
The epithet paradoxa refers to the combination of traits that the authors considered atypical for Gyalolechia, including chemistry more reminiscent of Blastenia and an occasionally parasitic way of life. In molecular phylogenetics analyses (nrITS, and a combined nrITS+nrLSU+mtSSU dataset), the species is placed within Gyalolechia in the loose sense (sensu lato). The nrITS sequences from both free-living, moss-growing material and lichenicolous thalli formed a strongly supported clade that was recovered as sister to Mikhtomia gordejevii. Although the lineage could be treated under Mikhtomia, the authors followed a broader genus concept for Gyalolechia in this study.[2]
