Sclerophyton perithecioideum

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Sclerophyton perithecioideum
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Arthoniomycetes
Order: Arthoniales
Family: Opegraphaceae
Genus: Sclerophyton
Species:
S. perithecioideum
Binomial name
Sclerophyton perithecioideum
Aptroot (2022)

Sclerophyton perithecioideum is a corticolous (bark-dwelling) lichen in the family Opegraphaceae.[1] It is a small crustose lichen that forms pale grayish-white crusts on tree bark in lowland primary (old-growth) rainforest in the Brazilian Amazon. The species is distinguished by clusters of small, dark fruiting structures set within raised, pale, pustule-like mounds on the thallus, and by the presence of psoromic acid (a lichen substance). It was formally described in 2022 from material collected near Manaus in Amazonas State, and it remains known only from two low-elevation localities in northern Brazil.

Sclerophyton perithecioideum was described in 2022 by André Aptroot from material collected on tree bark in primary rain forest in the Adolfo Ducke Forest Reserve near Manaus, Amazonas, Brazil, at about 50 m (160 ft) elevation. The holotype (M.E.S. Cáceres 50801 & A. Aptroot) is deposited in the herbarium of the National Institute of Amazonian Research (INPA 284722), with isotypes (duplicate specimens) in the herbaria ABL and the Instituto de Botânica [pt] (ISE). The species is a bark-dwelling Sclerophyton with a thallus containing psoromic acid. It has pinpoint-like, perithecioid ascomata in groups of 15–35 within pseudostromata (raised tissue mounds), and ascospores that are typically 3-septate (with three cross-walls), club-shaped, and enlarged at the tip (macrocephalic), 28–31 μm long. In a global identification key to Sclerophyton (Sparrius, 2004), it runs to the couplet defined by a dull thallus, somewhat glossy pseudostromata, and ascospores about 28–31 μm long. This combination distinguishes S. perithecioideum from other species in the genus.[2]

Description

Habitat and distribution

References

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