Micarea isidiosa

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Micarea isidiosa
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Lecanoromycetes
Order: Lecanorales
Family: Ectolechiaceae
Genus: Micarea
Species:
M. isidiosa
Binomial name
Micarea isidiosa
M.Brand, van den Boom & Sérus. (2014)
Type locality: Forêt de Bébour, Réunion

Micarea isidiosa is a species of lichen-forming fungus in the family Ectolechiaceae.[1] It was described as new to science in 2014 from the tropical island of Réunion (Mascarene archipelago) in the Indian Ocean. The type collection was made in the Forêt de Bébour [fr], on the path from Bélouve to Cabane Dufour, where it grew on stems of Erica in wet montane ericoid (heather-family) thickets at about 1,890 m elevation. On Réunion it has been recorded from the same high-elevation thickets (about 1,900–2,000 m), where it occurs on Erica stems.[2]

The lichen forms a discontinuous greenish to brownish thallus up to about 3 cm across, made of small, globose, isidia-like areoles that can become elongated and forked. These structures arise directly from a partly dark border zone (prothallus) rather than as true isidia growing from the surface. Its black apothecia (fruiting bodies) are small (to about 0.4 mm wide) and contain narrow, rod-shaped spores that are typically 3–7-septate (about 22.5–29.8 × 2.8–2.9 μm). Chemically, it produces gyrophoric acid (C+ red) and has distinctive pigments in the apothecia, including a blue-green pigment that reacts K+ (intense green) and a red hymenial pigment that gives a characteristic dark-blue granular precipitate in N. These characters were used to separate it from similar Réunion species such as Micarea tenuispora.[2]

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