On the identity of some taxa of Pertusaria (lichens) described by C. F. E. Erichsen
Author
Oset, Magdalena
text
Phytotaxa
2021
2021-04-20
497
2
165
171
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.497.2.9
journal article
4450
10.11646/phytotaxa.497.2.9
833b0f76-aa56-46c0-a9ba-3652e981cb68
1179-3163
5423923
Pertusaria jurana
var.
confluens
Erichsen (1935
[
1936
]: 678)
Type
:—[Switzerland]
SCHWEIZ
,
Jura
,
Neuenburg
, an
Wegulmen
bei
Buttes
,
800 m
.
,
03.10.1928
,
leg.
E. Frey
(367) (
holotype
HBG
!).
Figure 3
.
The thallus of the
type
specimen of
Pertusaria jurana
var.
confluens
in
HBG
is quite thick, whitish-grey and sorediate, with a whitish to brownish prothallus. Soralia are grey-whitish, abundant, orbicular to irregular, discrete, and separated from each other (see
Sipman 2006
) (
Figure 3
). The presence of variolaric acid has been detected by
TLC
.
The
type
specimen
Pertusaria jurana
var.
confluens
is morphologically and chemically concordant with
Ochrolechia turneri
(
Smith 1801: 857
)
Hasselrot (1945: 130)
(
Kukwa 2011
)
. Therefore it should be treated as a synonym of the latter name (
Turland
et al.
2018
).
According to
Kukwa (2011)
there are two other corticolous and sorediate
Ochrolechia
species
with variolaric acid,
O. alboflavescens
(Wulfen, in
Jacquin 1791
[1789]: 111)
Zahlbruckner (1927
[1926]: 94) and
O. microstictoides
Räsänen (1936: 226)
, which resemble
O. turneri
.
Ochrolechia albofavescens
has often well-separated soralia, like
O
.
turneri
, but it contains in addition to variolaric acid also fatty acids, lichesterinic and protolichesterinic acids.
Ochrolechia microstictoides
is very variable in thallus morphology, but in general its soralia are irregular and often confluent, but can be distinguished by the presence of lichesterinic acid, which is produced in addition to variolaric acid (
Kukwa 2011
). Another species which may produce variolaric acid is
Varicellaria hemisphaerica
(
Flörke 1815: 6
) I. Schmitt & Lumbsch
in
Schmitt
et al.
(2012: 29)
. The species is characterized by the pale bluish-grey tinged thallus with an often broad white margin and conspicuous, paler or concolorous, convex soralia. It can be, however, easily differentiated by the presence of lecanoric acid giving C+ carmine red reaction of soralia (
Tønsberg 1992
;
Chambers
et al.
2009
;
Schmitt
et al.
2012
).