Santessoniella pulchella
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| Santessoniella pulchella | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Fungi |
| Division: | Ascomycota |
| Class: | Lecanoromycetes |
| Order: | Peltigerales |
| Family: | Pannariaceae |
| Genus: | Santessoniella |
| Species: | S. pulchella |
| Binomial name | |
| Santessoniella pulchella P.M.Jørg. (1998) | |
Santessoniella pulchella is a species of lichen in the family Pannariaceae.[1] It is a bright bluish, gelatinous, crust-forming lichen with distinctive pinkish fruiting bodies, found on bark and moss in moist, warm-temperate rainforest. The species was described in 1998 and is known from eastern New South Wales in Australia and from the northern North Island of New Zealand.
Santessoniella pulchella was described as a new species by Per Magnus Jørgensen in 1998 from material collected on Clyde Mountain in New South Wales by J. A. Elix in 1976. Jørgensen placed the species in Santessoniella because it has an almost uniform, gelatinous thallus with only a thin outer cortex, together with a hymenial iodine reaction that turns reddish-brown, characters that distinguish the genus from Parmeliella in the strict sense. He also noted that it differs from the type species, S. polychidiodes, in having a nearly crustose rather than somewhat fruticose thallus and flattened, immersed apothecia that may develop a secondary thalline margin. The specific epithet refers to the attractive colour contrast between the bluish thallus and the pinkish apothecia.[2]
A later study by Aino Henssen emended the description of Santessoniella pulchella on the basis of the isotype and additional Australian material. Henssen wrote that Jørgensen had failed to recognize a lower cortex in the species, and accepted S. pulchella in Santessoniella because its thallus anatomy agrees with other members of the genus that have warty ascospores. She regarded thallus structure as more important for generic delimitation than variation in the iodine reaction of the hymenium.[3]