Streimanniella

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Streimanniella
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Lecanoromycetes
Order: Teloschistales
Family: Teloschistaceae
Genus: Streimanniella
S.Y.Kondr., Kärnefelt, A.Thell, Elix & Hur (2015)
Type species
Streimanniella michelagoensis
(Elix, S.Y.Kondr. & Kärnefelt) S.Y.Kondr., Kärnefelt, A.Thell, Elix, J.Kim, A.S.Kondr. & Hur (2015)
Species

S. asserigena
S. burneyensis
S. kalbiorum
S. michelagoensis
S. seppeltii
S. tomnashii

Streimanniella is a genus of lichen-forming fungi in the family Teloschistaceae.[1] It includes six species of crustose lichens, recorded mainly from Australia, with S. asserigena also known from Europe. Species in this genus form a crust-like thallus ranging from white to dark brownish-grey, with blackish to orange-brown fruiting bodies. Its taxonomic placement has been debated, but molecular studies recover it as a distinct genus within the subfamily Caloplacoideae.

The genus was circumscribed in 2015 by lichenologists Sergey Kondratyuk, Ingvar Kärnefelt, Arne Thell, John Elix, and Jae-Seoun Hur. It was introduced for species that had been treated as part of the Caloplaca michelagoensis species complex. The genus name honours Heinar Streimann (1938–2001), an Australian bryologist and lichen collector.[2]

Some later sources treated Streimanniella as a synonym of Marchantiana, and Wilk and colleagues (2021) questioned whether the original sequence data reflected Teloschistaceae.[3][4] Kondratyuk and co-authors (2025) reported new sequence data for the type species, S. michelagoensis, and recovered it in the subfamily Caloplacoideae as a well-supported lineage sister to the Marchantiana branch, supporting continued recognition of Streimanniella as a separate genus. In the same study, two additional species were transferred to Streimanniella: S. asserigena (previously treated as Marchantiana asserigena) and S. tomnashii (based on Caloplaca tomnashii).[5]

Kondratyuk and colleagues suggested that Streimanniella was part of a subfamily Brownlielloideae,[2] but subsequent molecular research has disputed the validity of this subfamily.[6][4]

Description

Species

References

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