New or otherwise interesting Lichens. VI, including a lichenicolous fungus
Author
Kalb, Klaus
Lichenologisches Institut Neumarkt, Im Tal 12, D- 92318 Neumarkt, Germany. E-mail: klaus. kalb @ arcor. de & University of Regensburg, Institute for Botany, Universitätsstrasse 31, D- 93040 Regensburg, Germany.
Author
Buaruang, Kawinnat
Lichen Research Unit, Biology Department, Faculty of Science, Ramkhamhaeng University, Ramkhamhaeng 24 road, Bangkok, 10240 Thailand.
Author
Mongkolsuk, Pachara
Lichen Research Unit, Biology Department, Faculty of Science, Ramkhamhaeng University, Ramkhamhaeng 24 road, Bangkok, 10240 Thailand.
Author
Boonpragob, Kansri
Lichen Research Unit, Biology Department, Faculty of Science, Ramkhamhaeng University, Ramkhamhaeng 24 road, Bangkok, 10240 Thailand.
text
Phytotaxa
2012
2012-01-25
42
35
47
http://biotaxa.org/Phytotaxa/article/view/phytotaxa.42.1.5
journal article
6120
10.11646/phytotaxa.42.1.5
4531ad17-7666-4546-9b8d-665e0fd00226
1179-3163
4894823
Crustospathula khaoyaiana
Kalb & Mongkolsuk
sp. nov.
(
Fig. 1D
) Mycobank MB 564177
Sicut
Crustospathula macrocarpa Aptroot & Schumm
, sed ascosporis minoribus, stipitibus sorediigeris brevioribus et materia chemica differt.
Type
:—
THAILAND
.
Nakhon Ratchasima Province
:
Pak Chong District
;
Khao Yai National Park
, at km 33, in a pristine ‘
Dry Evergreen Forest’
, ±
810 m
,
14°27’48’’ N
,
101°22’14’’ E
,
12 March 2011
,
K. Kalb
&
K. Buaruang
(
holotype
RAMK
, isotype hb. Kalb 38798)
.
Etymology
:—The new lichen is named after the National Park where the
type
was collected.
Thallus scurfy, green, grey-green to grey, consisting of agglutinating globular to flattened patches
25–50 µm
wide, growing on a webby, white hypothallus, very similar to those present in many species of
Malmidea
. Soralia numerous, whitish, with a greenish tinge in part, with many tiny crystals, globose,
15–25 µm
wide, originating from the tips of stalks. Stalks cartilaginous, beige to off-white, unbranched, cup-shaped,
80–110 µ
m high and
200–300 µ
m wide. Apothecia numerous, ± round,
0.6–1.2 mm
diam., solitary, sessile to appressed, medium brown to dark brown, margin paler, dull, not raised above the disc,
0.1 mm
wide; disc flat to strongly convex with age, not pruinose. Excipulum hyaline, without algae, with many tiny crystals that are also present under most of the apothecium. Hymenium clear,
50–75 µm
high, yellow but tinted orange in lower part. Hypothecium orange brown,
20–30 µm
high. Asci 8-spored,
Bacidia
-
type
. Ascospores hyaline, rod-shaped to small-ellipsoid, straight, distinctly 1-septate, 11–16 ×
2–3 µm
. Pycnidia not seen. Chemistry: an unknown substance with ± the same R
f
-values in solvents A, B’ and C (Elix & Ernst-Russell 1993) as atranorin, but showing an ice-blue fluorescens in UV before and after charring. Atranorin, lobaric acid and 2’-
O
-methylperlatolic acid could not be detected by means of TLC.
Notes
:—
Crustospathula
was initially described as a monotypic genus (
type
species:
C. cartilaginea
Aptroot
) to accomodate an enigmatic lichen from
Papua New Guinea
(
Aptroot 1998
) with peculiar stalked, cartilaginous soralia.
Aptroot & Schumm (2009)
subsequently described two further species, namely
C. macrocarpa
Aptroot & Schumm
from the
Philippines
and
Crustospathula
sp.
from
French Guiana
. Kalb (2011) described an additional species,
C. humboldtii
Kalb
from
Venezuela
, which differed from the closely related
C. macrocarpa
by the presence of atranorin and from
C. cartilaginea
by the absence of 2’-
O
- methylperlatolic acid.
Crustospathula khaoyaiana
is closely related to
C. macrocarpa
, but differs in having shorter stalked soralia (
80–110 µm
versus
0.7 mm
high), shorter ascospores (
11–16 µm
versus 17–22(–25) µm long) and alternative chemistry. Lobaric acid is present in
C. macrocarpa
, but is absent in
C. khaoyaiana
which contains an unknown substance.