Phylogeny of the genus Loxospora s. l. (Sarrameanales, Lecanoromycetes, Ascomycota), with Chicitaea gen. nov. and five new combinations in Chicitaea and Loxospora
Author
Ptach-Styn, Lucja
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2027-1636
Department of Plant Taxonomy and Nature Conservation, Faculty of Biology, University of Gdansk, Wita Stwosza 59, PL- 80 - 308 Gdansk, Poland
Author
Guzow-Krzeminska, Beata
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0805-7987
Department of Plant Taxonomy and Nature Conservation, Faculty of Biology, University of Gdansk, Wita Stwosza 59, PL- 80 - 308 Gdansk, Poland
Author
Lendemer, James C.
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1186-0711
Department of Botany, Research and Collections, CEC 3140, The New York State Museum, 222 Madison Ave., Albany NY 12230, USA
Author
Tonsberg, Tor
Department of Natural History, University Museum, University of Bergen, Allegt. 41, 7800, 5020 Bergen, Norway
Author
Kukwa, Martin
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1560-909X
Department of Plant Taxonomy and Nature Conservation, Faculty of Biology, University of Gdansk, Wita Stwosza 59, PL- 80 - 308 Gdansk, Poland
martin.kukwa@ug.edu.pl
text
MycoKeys
2024
2024-02-19
102
155
181
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.102.116196
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.102.116196
1314-4049-102-155
BE07EE2B3F8F57C8B5D74BA2D345EE33
Loxospora elatina (Ach.) A. Massal.
Fig. 8
Lecanora elatina
Ric. Auton. Lich. Crost.: 138 (1852). -
Lecanora elatina
Ach., Lich. Univ.: 387 (1810).
Type
.
Lusatia, [corticolous], Mosig? (
lectotype
: H-ACH 1199A!, selected here; MycoBank No: MBT 10017693).
Typification.
In the protologue of
Lecanora elatina
,
Acharius (1810)
cited the locality as "Habitat in cortice
Pini Abietis
Silesiae. Mosig". The type collection in H-ACH consists of four pieces of bark covered with thalli of
Loxospora elatina
. Three (H-ACH 1199A, 1199B and 1199C) are annotated
"Lusatia"
with a very faint pencil note next to H-ACH 1199A deciphered as possibly
"Mosig"
(this note probably not added by Acharius himself as the handwriting in pencil differs from all notes made in ink). The fourth specimen, H-ACH 1199D is annotated "Germania. Schrader". According to the label added in modern times and attached to the type collection, Lusatia was part of Silesia, therefore, the three specimens annotated
"Lusatia"
can be considered original material; however, it is impossible to verify whether all three were collected by Mosig. Nevertheless, the largest sample (H-ACH 1199A) is fertile and apothecia were mentioned in the diagnosis, therefore it is selected as lectotype. The Acharius collection in BM also contains a specimen of
Lecanora elatina
, however without any locality details; therefore, it cannot be considered as an isolectotype.
Description.
Thallus crustose, grey, matt, thin (at the margin) or more usually thick, continuous or cracked, slightly folded at least the margins, later areolate-verrucose to tuberculate (sometimes only part of the thallus tuberculate). Areoles usually strongly convex, tuberculate and constricted at the base or resembling coarse isidia, sometimes pustulate, dispersed or aggregated. Soralia whitish to greenish-grey, flat or more often convex, rounded or more often irregular, bursting from the top of areoles, often fused and tending to coalesce locally on the thallus or covering most parts of the thallus, sometimes developing from irregular cracks of the thallus. Soredia up to 60
µm
in diam., often in consoredia up to 120
µm
wide. Apothecia rare, up to 1.2 mm in diam., single or grouped up to five apothecia. Thalline margin present in young apothecia, smooth to flexuose, verrucose or dentate, sometimes with small soralia, later excluded. Excipulum proprium thin, flesh-coloured to white grey in surface view, orange-brown in section, smooth or more often flexuous, up to 100
µm
wide in section. Disc reddish-brown, thinly white pruinose. Hymenium up to 125
µm
high. Epihymenium straw-brown (K+ pale reddish-brown), with dense granules dissolving in K. Paraphyses not capitate, sometimes anastomosing. Asci 8-spored, with uniformly KI+ blue apical dome. Ascospores 0-5-septate, spiralled in asci, hyaline, fusiform, curved, 35-53(-64)
x
4.5-6.5(-7)
µm
. Pycnidia not known. Photobiont chlorococcoid, cells up to 12
µm
in diam.
Chemistry.
Thamnolic acid (major), elatinic acid (minor, trace or absent) and squamatic acid (trace or absent). Spot tests: cortex, apothecial section, soralia and medulla K+ lemon-yellow, Pd+ yellow to orange, UV-.
Notes.
Loxospora elatina
is similar to
L. chloropolia
; for differences, see under that species. The name (often as
Haematomma elatinum
(Ach.) A. Massal.) was often used in the past for the non-sorediate specimens currently referred to as
L. ochrophaea
. Both species, as mentioned above, are indeed morphologically (except for the production of soralia) and chemically almost identical and may represent the same species.
Loxospora ochrophaeoides
, when described, was compared with
L. ochrophaea
and characterised as differing only in the presence of semi-globose soralia (
Kalb and Hafellner 1992
). Whether this taxon is distinct or synonymous with
L. elatina
or
L. chloropolia
, needs further studies using molecular techniques.
Some specimens of
L. elatina
were found to be determined as
Ochrolechia androgyna
(Hoffm.) Arnold, but that species and the recently segregated
O. bahusiensis
H. Magn. and
O. mahluensis
Raesaenen
differ in the production of gyrophoric acid and simple, larger ascospores (
Tonsberg
1992
;
Kukwa 2011
).
Habitat and distribution.
The species is corticolous or lignicolous and grows on bark of various coniferous and deciduous tree in forests. The species was reported from many countries in the Northern Hemisphere; however, as some records may belong to
L. chloropolia
, its distribution needs revision. In the course of this study, we examined specimens from Austria, Czechia, Estonia, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia, United Kingdom, Ukraine and USA.
Specimens of
Loxospora elatina
and
L. ochrophaea
examined.
See Suppl. material 3.