Palicella lueckingii (Lecanorales, Ascomycota), a new lichen species inhabiting Araucaria from the extratropical South America
Author
Rodriguez-Flakus, Pamela
Senckenberg Forschungsinstitut und Naturmuseum, Frankfurt, Germany.
text
Phytotaxa
2018
2018-03-13
344
1
24
30
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.344.1.3
journal article
302502
10.11646/phytotaxa.344.1.3
dd031733-f1b8-47f2-a770-6bde4a305294
1179-3163
13720766
Palicella lueckingii
Rodr. Flakus
,
sp. nov.
(
Fig. 2
)
MycoBank no. 824257
Diagnosis
:—Differs from its relative
P. glaucopa
(Hook. f. & Taylor) Rodriguez Flakus & Printzen
in having smaller ascospores, comparatively thicker thallus, epruinose apothecia, the inner part of exciple not inspersed by oil droplets, and presence of thiophanic acid as a major metabolite.
Type
:—
CHILE
. IX Región, de la
Araucanía
, Malleco, Reserva Nacional Malalcahuelo, very close to Lonquimay Vulcan,
38°25′14.5′′S
,
71°32′38.9′′W
,
1431 m
, Valdivian temperate forest, on bark of
Araucaria araucana
,
22 November 2011
,
P
. Rodriguez Flakus 2124 &
R
. Vargas
(
CONC
—
holotype
,
FR
—
isotype
).
FIGURE 2.
Palicella lueckingii
(
Rodriguez Flakus 2124
)
. A habit: A, thick thallus with black marginate apothecia, B, section through apothecium showing hyaline exciple; C, asci showing amyloid
Lecanora
/Lecidella-
like ascus apex (mounted in K/I); D, ascospores. Scales: A = 1000 μm, B = 50 μm, C–D = 10 μm.
Etymology
:—The epithet is named in honor of Dr. Robert Lücking, prominent German lichenologist, who has made an outstanding contribution to the knowledge of Neotropical lichens.
Description
:—
Thallus
greyish to pale yellow, crustose, very thick, (0.3–)
0.6–1.3 mm
high, cracked-areolate, split into elevated areoles of different size, 0.4–1.5(–3.0) mm in diam., surface smooth to rough, isidia and soredia absent.
Photobiont
chlorococcoid, cells 8–11 μm diam.
Apothecia
usually numerous, rounded to irregular in shape, sessile with constricted base, 0.2–0.6(–0.8) mm in diam., when well-developed sometimes growing in groups.
Disc
black, matte or shiny, epruinose, flat to moderately convex (in old apothecia), usually P+ orange.
Margin
concolorous with disc, persistent, shiny.
Exciple
laterally 15–20 μm, basally 50–60 μm wide, colourless inside, not inspersed by crystals or oil droplets, I–, outer layer dark pigmented by
Cinereorufa
-green (
Meyer & Printzen 2000
), and additional undetermined brown pigment, K+ green, N+ purple-red, composed of highly conglutinate radiate hyphae,1–2 μm wide, in which apically widened to 5 μm.
Hypothecium
colourless, 45–50 μm high.
Subhymenium
colourless, ca. 15 μm high.
Hymenium
colourless, inspersed by oil droplets, 45–55 μm high, strongly agglutinated.
Epihymenium
greenish black, mainly because of
Cinereorufa
-green pigment (the same as in the exciple), 8–10 μm thick.
Paraphyses
colourless, branched and anastomosed, 1–2 μm wide, strongly apically thickened, pigmented caps not evident, apical cells 3–6 μm wide.
Asci
8-spored, clavate, with K/I+ blue tholus resembling a transitional
form between
Lecanora
- and
Lecidella
-
type
, usually with a small region at the top with non-amyloid reaction, 35–45 × 10–15 μm.
Ascospores
colourless, simple to 1-septate, broadly ellipsoid, without epispore, (8–)10.4–
12.9
–15.6(–17) × (4–)4.7–
5.3
–5.9(–6.5) μm, length-width ratio (1.8–)2.0–
2.4
–2.8(–3.0) μm (n=26).
Pycnidia
not seen.
Chemistry
:—Atranorin (minor to trace), pannarin (minor; on disc), thiophanic acid (major). Thallus K–, P–, C+ orange, KC+ orange, UV+ pale yellowish; apothecial disc K–, P+ rust orange to yellowish, C–, KC–.
Ecology and distribution
:—So far,
Palicella lueckingii
is known only from the
type
locality in
Chile
, where it grows exclusively on the bark of
Araucaria araucana
in the Malalcahuelo National Reserve in humid Valdivian temperate forest.
Remarks
:—The new species is characterized by small ascospores, thick thallus, epruinose apothecia, not inspersed inner part of exciple, and production of atranorin, pannarin and thiophanic acid as secondary metabolites.
Palicella lueckingii
is rather similar to the epruinose forms of
P. glaucopa
, a common species growing on
Nothofagus
spp.
bark in the southern part of
Argentina
and
Chile
. Both species have similar black and marginate lecideoid apothecia reacting P+ rust-orange.
Palicella glaucopa
, however, can be easily distinguished by its larger ascospores, (9.0–)15.9–19.5– 23.0(–32.0) × (4.8–)5.5–6.5–7.4(–9.5) μm, inner part of exciple composed of loosely arranged narrow hyphae and strongly inspersed by oil droplets, much thinner thallus (
0.04–0.15 mm
), larger apothecia, (0.3–)0.5–0.7–1.0(–1.4) mm, and different chemistry (
Rodriguez Flakus & Printzen 2014a
). The key characters to separate
Palicella lueckingii
from other known species of
Palicella
are presented in
Table 1
.