Pseudopeltula myriocarpa

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Pseudopeltula myriocarpa
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Lichinomycetes
Order: Lichinales
Family: Lichinaceae
Genus: Pseudopeltula
Species:
P. myriocarpa
Binomial name
Pseudopeltula myriocarpa
Henssen (1995)

Pseudopeltula myriocarpa is a species of rock-dwelling squamulose lichen in the family Lichinaceae. It forms small, olive-colored, shield-shaped scales on limestone and dolomite. The species is the type of its genus and is distinguished by its fruiting bodies, which become aggregated into dark, spot-like stromatic patches up to about 2 mm across. It occurs in Mexico and the Caribbean.

Pseudopeltula myriocarpa was described as a new species in 1995 by the lichenologist Aino Henssen. In that paper, Henssen designated P. myriocarpa as the type species of Pseudopeltula, a genus of small, olive cyanolichens with an ecorticate thallus (lacking a true cortex) and unusually complex, mature apothecia.[1]

The species epithet myriocarpa refers to the many small apothecia that ultimately become packed together in a partly stromatic tissue. In Henssen's key to Gloeoheppiaceae, P. myriocarpa is identified by its fruiting bodies being aggregated into stromata that appear as circular to rosette-shaped spots up to about 2 mm across. Henssen also emphasized that, unlike Pseudopeltula heppioides (where the hymenium subdivides into small excipulate units), P. myriocarpa develops true stromatic fruiting bodies.[1]

A 2024 phylogenetic reclassification of the Lichinomycetes did not support recognizing a separate family for Gloeoheppia (Gloeoheppiaceae), and instead treated the genus within Lichinaceae.[2]

Description

Habitat and distribution

References

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