building a Global Consortium of Bryophytes and Lichens as keystones of cryptobiotic communities
Melanelixia subaurifera
Melanelixia subaurifera(Nyl.) O. Blanco, A. Crespo, Divakar, Essl., D. Hawksw. & Lumbsch
Family: Parmeliaceae
[Imbricaria subaurifera (Nyl.) Arnold, moreMelanelia subaurifera (Nyl.) Essl., Parmelia subaurifera Nyl., Parmelia subaurifera f. fuliginoides B. de Lesd., Parmelia subaurifera f. isidioidea H. Olivier, Parmelia subaurifera f. laciniata Maas Geest., Parmelia subaurifera f. minuta (Erichsen) Rass., Parmelia subaurifera f. subaurifera Nyl., Parmelia subaurifera var. fuliginoides (B. de Lesd.) Frey, Parmelia subaurifera var. minuta Erichsen, Parmelia subaurifera var. subaurifera Nyl.]
Nash, T.H., Ryan, B.D., Gries, C., Bungartz, F., (eds.) 2002. Lichen Flora of the Greater Sonoran Desert Region. Vol 1.
Thallus: adnate to loosely adnate appressed throughout or occasionally slightly reflexed at the periphery, foliose, up to 8 (-10) cm diam., lobate lobes: short and rounded to somewhat elongate, discrete to more often contiguous or subimbricate, 1-4 (-6) mm broad, ± flat upper surface: olive-green or olive-brown to rather dark reddish brown, smooth to weakly pitted or rugulose near the periphery, inward usually somewhat more strongly rugose; dull throughout or occasionally shiny, especially near the periphery; sometimes with small and very obscure, concolorous pseudocyphellae on the lobes; sorediate or isidiate or (usually) both isidia: arising within but also between the soralia, cylindrical, not or infrequently branched, to 0.2 (-0.4) mm long and 0.02-0.06 mm diam. soredia: granular, frequently becoming brownish and isidioid or isidiate; in laminal soralia that often arise from the obscure pseudocyphellae and are punctiform and discrete, or become ± confluent in central parts lower surface: pale brown to dark brown or black, often paler at the periphery; ± smooth to rugose, dull to rather shiny; moderately rhizinate, the rhizines concolorous with the lower surface Apothecia: rare, up to 2.5 mm diam., sessile, ± flat, the margin entire when young, soon sorediate and isidiate asci: clavate, 8-spored ascospores: ellipsoid, 10-13 x 5.5-7 µm Pycnidia: rare, immersed conidia: weakly fusiform to weakly bifusiform, 5.5-7 x 1µm Spot tests: cortex K-, C-, KC-, P-, HNO3-; medulla K-, C+ rose-red or red, KC+ red, P- Secondary metabolite: lecanoric acid. Substrate: bark or wood, rarer on rocks World distribution: much of temperate and boreal North America and Europe, North and Central Africa, Asia Sonoran distribution: infrequent, only in the California part of the Sonoran region. Notes: The presence of both soredia and true, very slender isidia on the lamina, a C+ medulla, and a mostly appressed thallus will distinguish this species from most others in the genus. Melanelia subargentifera has soredia which sometimes become isidioid, but they are much coarser than the isidia of M. subaurifera, which also lacks the hyaline cortical hairs characteristic of that species. Melanelia fuliginosa sometimes has the thallus surface eroded around its isidia, and this situation has been mistaken for the presence of soredia.
Thompson, J., 1984. American Arctic Lichens: The Macrolichens.
Thallus granulose, the granules 0.12-0.3 mm thick, spherical, not branched but coalescing to form a continuous crust, swelling when wet and drying into wrinkled clumps, gray with brown suffusion; upper cortex 8-12 μ, para-plectenchymatous; algae glomerulate in a dense medulla; underside attached by hyphae; although resembling the thallus of Pannaria pezizoides in structure, this lacks the bordering squamules of that species. Apothecia adnate, to 0.7 mm broad; margin lecideine, narrow, entire, paler than the disk, not gelatinous; disk flesh-colored, flat to convex, smooth, epruinose; epithecium brown, not inspersed; hymenium hyaline, 75-95 μ; with compact plug-like apical apparatus; paraphyses 1.5μ thick, unbranched; spores ellipsoid, the outer wall smooth both ends round, 15-50 x 7-12 μ.
Reactions: hymenium 1+ blue, turning wine-red.
Contents: unknown.
This species grows over mosses on soil. It is arctic and alpine, probably circumpolar. In North America it is exceedingly rare. It was first reported from the Mt. McKinley area in Alaska by W. A. Weber (1965). Jorgensen (1978:111) expressed doubt that this species is in the Pannariaceae, suggesting it may be possibly referred to the Collemataceae or Placynthiaceae on account of the thallus texture.