Pyrenula xanthoglobulifera

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Pyrenula xanthoglobulifera
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Eurotiomycetes
Order: Pyrenulales
Family: Pyrenulaceae
Genus: Pyrenula
Species:
P. xanthoglobulifera
Binomial name
Pyrenula xanthoglobulifera
Aptroot, Lücking & M.Cáceres (2013)

Pyrenula xanthoglobulifera is a species of corticolous (bark-dwelling) crustose lichen in the family Pyrenulaceae.[1] First described in 2013 from specimens collected in Chapada do Araripe, Brazil, it is characterized by its pale yellowish-brown thallus with white pseudocyphellae, spherical fruiting bodies immersed in thalline warts, and large brown muriform ascospores visible even under a stereo microscope. The species is distinguished by the presence of lichexanthone, which causes the thallus to fluoresce yellow under ultraviolet light. It primarily grows on smooth tree bark in Caatinga forest environments in northeastern Brazil, and has also been recorded in Guadeloupe and the Pantanal wetland region of west-central Brazil.

The species was first described by the lichenologists André Aptroot, Robert Lücking, and Marcela Cáceres in 2013 from specimens collected in Chapada do Araripe, Ceará State, Brazil. The species epithet xanthoglobulifera refers to two of its distinguishing characteristics: xantho (from Greek, meaning yellow) refers to the presence of the chemical compound lichexanthone, while globulifera indicates its spherical or globose fruiting bodies.[2]

Pyrenula xanthoglobulifera is closely related to Pyrenula globifera, but differs in several important characteristics, most notably the presence of lichexanthone (which gives parts of the thallus a yellow fluorescence under ultraviolet light) and its fruiting bodies being fully covered by thalline warts.[2]

Description

Pyrenula xanthoglobulifera is a crustose lichen, meaning it grows closely attached to its substrate, forming a crust-like thallus. Its thallus is dull, pale yellowish-brown in colour, and features distinctive white pseudocyphellae (small pores in the upper surface). The thallus lacks a prothallus line (a dark boundary around the edge). The lichen contains trentepohlioid algae as its photobiont (the photosynthetic partner in the symbiotic relationship). Its reproductive structures (ascomata) are globose, single, and relatively evenly dispersed, measuring 0.6–0.9 mm in diameter. These are immersed in undifferentiated superficial corticated warts of 1.0–1.4 mm in diameter and are only visible from above by their black ostioles (openings) which are positioned at the apex.[2]

The hamathecium (sterile tissue between asci) consists of unbranched paraphyses containing hyaline oil droplets. Each ascus contains two large brown spores that are densely muriform (divided into many compartments by both longitudinal and transverse walls). These spores are long-ellipsoid in shape, measuring 125–178 by 25–38 μm, and are surrounded by a 5–10 μm thick gelatinous sheath. The spores contain 7–11 primary cross-walls (eusepta) as well as numerous additional internal walls (distosepta).[2] The spores are large enough to be seen with a stereo microscope.[3]

When tested with chemical reagents used in lichen spot tests, the thallus and pseudostromata test negative with C, P, and K, but fluoresce yellow under ultraviolet light due to the presence of lichexanthone.[2]

Habitat and distribution

See also

References

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