Parmelia hygrophila

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Parmelia hygrophila
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Secure (NatureServe)[1]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Lecanoromycetes
Order: Lecanorales
Family: Parmeliaceae
Genus: Parmelia
Species:
P. hygrophila
Binomial name
Parmelia hygrophila
Goward & Ahti (1983)

Parmelia hygrophila is a corticolous (bark-dwelling) foliose lichen in the Parmelia saxatilis group, described in 1983 from the Pacific Northwest of North America. It was segregated from material that had often been folded into a broad concept of P. saxatilis. The species is characterised by its greyish-green, leafy thallus that produces abundant tiny outgrowths called isidia along the lobe margins and upper surface for reproduction. It grows in the humid forests of the Pacific Northwest, growing on the bark of both coniferous and deciduous trees from coastal regions to mid-elevation mountain forests. The species was named from collections made in interior British Columbia and is now recorded from Alaska, British Columbia, Washington, and Idaho.

Parmelia hygrophila was described as new to science by Trevor Goward and Teuvo Ahti in 1983, based on a type collected at Kokanee Creek Provincial Park, British Columbia (holotype UBC). In proposing the species, the authors placed it within the P. saxatilis group and explained that western North American material with abundant isidia had frequently been treated under a broad P. saxatilis concept or linked to infraspecific names later shown to refer to different taxa. Their account provided a diagnostic key separating P. hygrophila from look-alikes in the complex.[2]

Molecular phylogenies place Parmelia hygrophila within the P. saxatilis group, where it forms a clade with P. submontana. In the dated evolutionary tree, P. submontana appears to have evolved from within P. hygrophila (making P. hygrophila paraphyletic, meaning it does not include all its evolutionary descendants), and their split is estimated to have occurred in the mid-Pleistocene, about 1.3 million years ago (with a confidence range of 380,000 to 2.91 million years ago).[3]

Description

The thallus forms rosettes about 4–10 cm across, attached moderately to rather loosely to the substrate. Lobes are 1–5 mm wide, usually somewhat elongate and branching, with a pale to dark greenish-grey upper surface that can appear bluish grey in some specimens. The surface shows scattered, often fissure-like pseudocyphellae (tiny, pale breaks in the cortex that aid gas exchange). Isidia (minute outgrowths used for vegetative reproduction) are abundant on the lobe margins and upper surface; they are initially cylindrical but frequently become powdery (soredioid), a feature illustrated in the original figures. Apothecia are uncommon, small (to about 2 mm), with simple, colourless ascospores about 14–16 × 9–12 μm; pycnidia were not observed. The lower surface is dark with non-squarrose rhizines (root-like attachments). In standard spot tests the cortex is K+ (yellow); the medulla is K+ (yellow turning red), C−, KC−, PD+ (orange); thin-layer chromatography shows atranorin and salazinic acid. These characters, together with its bark-dwelling habit, distinguish P. hygrophila from the typically rock-dwelling P. saxatilis and related species.[2]

Similar species

Parmelia hygrophila can be confused with the recently described P. sulymae, which also bears compact, isidia-like soredia ("sorsidia"); however, in P. sulymae these propagules arise chiefly along lobe margins, the lobes are generally narrower (often 1–2 mm), and rhizines more frequently bifurcate.[3]

Asian material described as P. hygrophiloides is very similar in appearance and chemistry (atranorin with salazinic-series compounds; abundant isidia that can become granular/soredioid). It differs mainly in having squarrose (branched like a bottlebrush) rhizines, whereas P. hygrophila has non-squarrose rhizines; the Indian species also tends to show dense, short-cylindrical to coralloid isidia and a shiny, finely wrinkled black lower surface. It may also be confused with P. squarrosa (which has brown-tipped, syncorticate isidial apices that do not become sorediate).[4]

Habitat and distribution

Ecology

References

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