Phyllopsora borbonica

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Phyllopsora borbonica
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Lecanoromycetes
Order: Lecanorales
Family: Ramalinaceae
Genus: Phyllopsora
Species:
P. borbonica
Binomial name
Phyllopsora borbonica
Timdal & Krog (2001)
Holotype: towards Plaine d'Affouches, Réunion

Phyllopsora borbonica is a species of crustose lichen in the family Ramalinaceae.[1] It grows in humid woodland environments across several Indian Ocean islands including Mauritius and Réunion, as well as in Sri Lanka, typically found at elevations between 540 and 1255 metres. The species forms colonies with a distinctive brownish-black base layer that develops into a continuous pale green crust. It produces abundant reddish-brown reproductive structures up to 2 mm in diameter, and is characterized by its unusually long, needle-shaped spores that help distinguish it from related species.

Phyllopsora borbonica was formally described as a new species in 2001 by the lichenologists Einar Timdal and Hildur Krog. The species is classified within the genus Phyllopsora primarily based on several distinctive features: a brownish black prothallus (the initial fungal growth stage) that forms colonies of pale green, scattered areas (areolae) that eventually merge; reproductive structures (apothecia) with slightly pubescent margins; upper cortex of type 2 (lacking an epinecral layer); strongly gelatinised lower tissue (hypothecium) that merges into the surrounding tissue (excipulum); and simple, needle-like reproductive spores.[2]

The species shares similarities with P. mauritiana but differs in having a more extensive growth pattern and thinner prothallus. P. borbonica also has darker reproductive structures (apothecia) that often turn black on the underside, and longer, needle-like spores. Acicular (needle-shaped) spores are unusual in the genus Phyllopsora, being known in Africa only in the squamiform (scale-like), radiate species P. longispora.[2]

Description

Habitat and distribution

References

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