Xylographa soralifera

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Xylographa soralifera
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Lecanoromycetes
Order: Baeomycetales
Family: Xylographaceae
Genus: Xylographa
Species:
X. soralifera
Binomial name
Xylographa soralifera
Holien & Tønsberg (2008)

Xylographa soralifera is a species of bark-dwelling, crustose lichen in the family Xylographaceae.[1] It was described in 2008 and belongs to the X. vitiligo complex, but differs from that species in both morphology and chemistry, including its production of fumarprotocetraric acid.

Xylographa soralifera was described as new to science by Håkon Holien and Tor Tønsberg in 2008. The holotype is from Kittitas County, Washington, near Cle Elum; roughly 1,000 m (3,300 ft) elevation, where it was growing on conifer wood. In the same paper the authors clarified long-standing confusion within the X. vitiligo species complex by typifying several historical names (X. vitiligo, X. corrugans, and X. spilomatica).[2]

The new species was set apart from X. vitiligo on the basis of its typically areolate thallus with convex, mostly pale (non-darkened) soralia and by its fumarprotocetraric acid chemistry; X. vitiligo instead has a poorly delimited thallus with excavate soralia and contains stictic acid (with satellite compounds).[2]

Description

Habitat and distribution

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI