Lendemeriella

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Lendemeriella
Lendemeriella nivalis on siliceous rock near Snoqualmie Pass, Washington, USA
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Lecanoromycetes
Order: Teloschistales
Family: Teloschistaceae
Genus: Lendemeriella
S.Y.Kondr. (2020)
Type species
Lendemeriella reptans
(Lendemer & B.P.Hodk.) S.Y.Kondr. (2020)

Lendemeriella is a genus of crustose lichens in the subfamily Caloplacoideae of the family Teloschistaceae.[1] It has ten species. The genus was circumscribed in 2020 by Sergey Kondratyuk, with Lendemeriella reptans assigned as the type species. The genus name honours the American lichenologist James Lendemer,[2] who co-authored the type species in 2012 (as Caloplaca reptans).[3]

Lendemeriella species have an arctic-alpine, boreal-montane, and Mediterranean distribution in the Northern Hemisphere. They grow on twigs, wood, bryophytes, the bark of deciduous trees as well as Siberian fir. They also grow on siliceous and calcareous rock in certain habitats.[2]

Lendemeriella was circumscribed in 2020 by Sergey Kondratyuk and co-workers during a three-gene phylogenetic survey of the Teloschistaceae. Their analyses showed that material long treated as part of the heterogeneous Caloplaca reptans complex forms a distinct, strongly supported lineage, prompting recognition of a new genus. In the resulting tree Lendemeriella occupies its own branch within the subfamily Caloplacoideae, immediately sister to Olegblumia, Rufoplaca and Usnochroma in the broader Pyrenodesmia sensu lato clade. Lendemeriella reptans was designated as the type species. Its name commemorates the North-American lichenologist James C. Lendemer, whose early molecular work helped to unravel relationships in this group.[2]

Morphologically and chemically Lendemeriella resembles several crustose Teloschistaceae genera but can be separated by its inconspicuous to somewhat squamulose (scaly) thallus, frequent occurrence of apothecia (fruiting bodies), and the presence of a parietin-based pigment suite sometimes accompanied by sedifolia grey or, in L. exsecuta, the violet Lecidea green. Unlike Olegblumia, which lacks apothecia and contains vicanicin-type compounds, Lendemeriella is usually fertile and shows a different secondary metabolite profile; it also differs from Bryoplaca by thallus structure and chemistry, and from Blastenia by its broader ascospore dimensions and poorly developed thallus. These distinctions, together with its unique phylogenetic position, underpin the genus status. Seven species were accepted in the initial circumscription of the genus.[2]

Description

Species

References

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