Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-g8jcs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-23T22:38:37.579Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The genus Xenolecia (Lecideaceae s. lat., Lecanoromycetidae inc. sed.), including a second species in the genus from Campbell Island, New Zealand

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 July 2017

Alan M. FRYDAY
Affiliation:
Herbarium, Department of Plant Biology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824-1312, USA. Email: [email protected]
Holger THÜS
Affiliation:
Life Sciences Department, The Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD, UK.

Abstract

The new species Xenolecia cataractarum Fryday is described from Campbell Island. It differs from X. spadicomma, the only other species of the genus, in having much smaller apothecia and ascospores, an olivaceously pigmented epihymenium (brown in X. spadicomma), and a thallus with a non-amyloid medulla and norstictic acid (amyloid medulla and confluentic acid in X. spadicomma). Xenolecia spadicomma is reported here from several localities on the Falkland Islands and three from the Región de Los Lagos, Chile, which are the first reports of this species since its description from Isla Wellington in the south-west of Patagonia in 1868. A full description of X. spadicomma is also provided.

Type
Articles
Copyright
© British Lichen Society, 2017 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Crombie, J. M. (1876) On the lichens collected by Prof. R.O. Cunningham in the Falkland Islands, Fuegia, Patagonia and the Island of Chiloe during the voyage of H.M.S. Nassau 1867–1869. Journal of the Linnean Society 15: 222235.Google Scholar
Fryday, A. M. (2002) A revision of the species of the Rhizocarpon hochstetteri group occurring in the British Isles. Lichenologist 34: 451477.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fryday, A. M. (2005) The genus Porpidia in northern and western Europe, with special emphasis on collections from the British Isles. Lichenologist 37: 135.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fryday, A. M. & Hertel, H. (2014) A contribution to the family Lecideaceae s. lat. (Lecanoromycetidae inc. sed., lichenized Ascomycota) in the southern subpolar region; including eight new species and some revised generic circumscriptions. Lichenologist 46: 389412.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fryday, A. M. & Prather, L. A. (2001) The lichen collection of Henry Imshaug at the Michigan State University Herbarium (MSC). Bryologist 104: 464467.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hafellner, J. (1984) Studien in Richtung einer natürlicheren Gliederung der Sammelfamilien Lecanoraceae und Lecideaceae . Beiheft zur Nova Hedwigia 79: 241371.Google Scholar
Hertel, H. (1984) Über saxicole, lecideoide Flechten der Subantarktis. Beiheft zur Nova Hedwigia 79: 399499.Google Scholar
Meyer, B. & Printzen, C. (2000) Proposal for a standardized nomenclature and characterization of insoluble lichen pigments. Lichenologist 32: 571583.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Orange, A., James, P. W. & White, F. J. (2001) Microchemical Methods for the Identification of Lichens. London: British Lichen Society.Google Scholar