Schaereria brunnea

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Kingdom:Fungi
Division:Ascomycota
Schaereria brunnea
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Lecanoromycetes
Order: Schaereriales
Family: Schaereriaceae
Genus: Schaereria
Species:
S. brunnea
Binomial name
Schaereria brunnea
Björk, T.Sprib. & T.B.Wheeler (2009)

Schaereria brunnea is a species of lichen in the family Schaereriaceae,[1] first found in inland rainforests of British Columbia.[2] This rare lichen forms very thin crusts made up of small pale brown patches, each topped with distinctive chocolate-brown barrel-shaped fruiting bodies that distinguish it from other tree-dwelling species in its genus. It was originally known from only three collections made between 1992 and 2007, all found growing on branches of western hemlock trees in ancient, misty forests over five centuries old. It has since been documented in Alaska.

Schaereria brunnea was described in 2009 by Curtis Björk, Toby Spribille and Tim Wheeler; the holotype was collected near the mouth of the Roaring River on the north arm of Quesnel Lake, British Columbia. The specific epithet (brunnea = brown) refers to the conspicuous chocolate-coloured apothecia (fruiting bodies), a feature that immediately separates the species from the blue-green-tinted apothecia typical of other epiphytic members of the genus. Before the formal publication the lichen had been illustrated informally in the Vancouver Sun.[2]

Within the genus Schaereria the taxon is readily distinguished by its combination of brown pigments, large spores and unique suite of fatty acid metabolites. None of the three previously known tree-dwelling species (S. corticola, S. dolodes, S. parasemella) produces fatty acids, and all possess markedly smaller spores. Southern-Hemisphere rock dwellers such as S. bullata and S. porpidioides share the brown pigmentation but differ in their consistently spherical spores and different chemistries. As a result, S. brunnea represents a chemically and morphologically isolated lineage that is presently placed in Schaereria but, like the genus itself, remains unassigned to a definite family within the Ostropomycetidae.[2]

Description

Habitat and distribution

References

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