Lobariella flavomedullosa | |
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Scientific classification ![]() | |
Kingdom: | Fungi |
Division: | Ascomycota |
Class: | Lecanoromycetes |
Order: | Peltigerales |
Family: | Peltigeraceae |
Genus: | Lobariella |
Species: | L. flavomedullosa |
Binomial name | |
Lobariella flavomedullosa B.Moncada, Betanc. & Lücking (2013) |
Lobariella flavomedullosa is a species of foliose lichen in the family Peltigeraceae. [1] The species was first scientifically described in 2013 by researchers working in Colombia, where it grows on tree branches in high-elevation cloud forests. It is characterized by its small size, narrow ribbon-like lobes , and distinctive pale yellow inner layer that gives the species its name. Genetic studies show it is closely related to other South American and Hawaiian species, being closely related to a Hawaiian endemic clade; molecular work places Hawaiian colonisation about 1–8 millions of years ago.
Lobariella flavomedullosa was described in 2013 by Bibiana Moncada, Luisa Betancourt-Macuase, and Robert Lücking. The epithet highlights the lichen's pale-yellow medulla. Although superficially similar to L. angustata , it differs in having a yellow rather than white medulla and much narrower ribbon-like lobes (1.5–3 mm versus 3–5 mm wide). [2]
A maximum-likelihood tree based on three genetic markers shows that L. flavomedullosa is sister to L. subcrenulata ; together they are sister to a Hawaiian endemic clade (including L. flynniana , L. robusta , and L. sandwicensis ). A molecular clock analysis places the colonisation of Hawaii at roughly 1–8 Ma, with within-Hawaii divergences around 0–2 Ma. [3]
This is a small species whose tightly adherent thallus rarely exceeds 6 cm (2.4 in) across. Lobes are 1.5–3 mm (0.06–0.12 in) wide and up to 2.5 cm (1.0 in) long, branching irregularly into flat ribbons that give the thallus a delicate aspect. When dry the upper surface appears gray; when moistened it shifts to a pale yellow-brown. Small white macula e are present but seldom open into distinct pseudocyphella e. The medulla—a soft inner layer exposed in section—is pale yellow, matching the species name. [2]
The lower surface is cream to pale yellow-brown with scant tomentum and dirty yellow-brown rhizine s that anchor the lichen. Fruiting bodies (apothecia), when produced, are tiny cups up to 2 mm in diameter with gray to cream lobulate margins; they generate long, narrow ascospores. [2]
Lobariella flavomedullosa has so far been recorded only from Colombia, where it grows on branches and twigs in upper-montane and sub-Andean cloud forests. It favors semi-shaded to semi-exposed microhabitats. [2] Lobariella is a fairly species-rich genus in Colombia, with at least 20 species from the genus reported from there. [4] L. flavomedullosa is one of three Lobariella species reported from the Cerro Machín volcano cloud forest in Tolima. [5]