Taxonomy of Verrucaria species characterised by large spores, perithecia leaving pits in the rock and a pale thin thallus in Finland
Author
Pykaelae, Juha
Biodiversity Centre, Finnish Environment Institute, Latokartanonkaari 11, 00790 Helsinki, Finland
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7566-9310
juha.pykala@ymparisto.fi
Author
Kantelinen, Annina
Botanical Museum, Finnish Museum of Natural History, P. O. Box 7, FI- 00014 University of Helsinki, Finland
Author
Myllys, Leena
Botanical Museum, Finnish Museum of Natural History, P. O. Box 7, FI- 00014 University of Helsinki, Finland
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9566-9473
text
MycoKeys
2020
72
43
92
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.72.56223
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.72.56223
1314-4049-72-43
5243D130A7EF55F3856E1E3722F204D5
Verrucaria alpigena Breuss, nom. nov., Sauteria 15: 122, 2008
Type.
Austria,
Niederoesterreich
, Voralpen, Bez. Lilienfeld, Gem. Kleinzell, SE von Salzerbad, Weg von Reintal zum Kruckensattel, 550-650 m alt., 29.3.2002, O. Breuss (8060) 19.990 (LI-01763881!, holotype).
Description.
Prothallus rather weakly developed, medium brown, weakly fimbriate. Thallus pale greyish-brown with frequent medium brown flecks, rimose, ca. 0.05-0.15 mm thick. Perithecia 0.22-0.38 mm, 1/2-3/4-immersed, not leaving pits to leaving shallow pits in the rock, thinly thalline covered except apex; ca. 80-100 perithecia cm2. Ostiole pale brown, plane, ca. 20-60 mm wide. Involucrellum to the exciple base level, occasionally enveloping the exciple, ca. 40-60 mm thick, appressed to the exciple. Exciple 0.21-0.24 mm in diam., wall pale to dark brown. Ascospores 0-septate, (22.7-)26.1-28.1- 30.9(-33.6)
x
(12.1-)12.4-13.5-14.5(-15.8) mm (n = 20).
Notes.
This species was erroneously reported from Finland by
Pykaelae
(2011)
, but based on the ITS phylogeny, the specimen belongs to
V. subjunctiva
. It differs from the other Finnish specimens of
V. subjunctiva
by the pale exciple wall. Originally,
V. alpigena
was described as a species related to
V. muralis
, but differing by larger spores (Breuss 2008). Studying the type specimen of
V. alpigena
revealed that the species may not be related to
V. muralis
nor to the
Thelidium
group. It has a superficial morphological similarity to
Verrucaria ahtii
Pykaelae
, Launis & Myllys (
Pykaelae
et al. 2017), but the spores are larger.
Verrucaria alpigena
may belong to the so-called Endocarpon group such as
V. ahtii
.