| Pyrenula flavida | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Fungi |
| Division: | Ascomycota |
| Class: | Eurotiomycetes |
| Order: | Pyrenulales |
| Family: | Pyrenulaceae |
| Genus: | Pyrenula |
| Species: | P. flavida |
| Binomial name | |
| Pyrenula flavida Sipman (2023) | |
Holotype: Kuyuwini Landing, Upper Takutu-Upper Essequibo Region, Guyana | |
Pyrenula flavida is a species of corticolous (bark-dwelling) crustose lichen in the family Pyrenulaceae. [1] It is the only species in its genus with a greenish-yellow coloration, making it readily recognizable among related bark-dwelling lichens. The species is known only from a single tree in a small savanna area of southern Guyana.
Pyrenula flavida was described as new by Harrie Sipman in 2023. The holotype was collected in southern Guyana near Kuyuwini Landing, Upper Takutu-Upper Essequibo Region (Region 9), at about 230 m elevation, on canopy branches of a solitary Agonandra brasiliensis tree. The species epithet refers to its yellow thallus. [2]
Within Pyrenula , it is set apart by a greenish-yellow thallus (unique in the genus) and small brown, 3-septate spores; Sipman compared it directly with P. cerina , which has an orange thallus, much larger spores (26–42 × 12–15 μm), and occurs in mangroves rather than inland forests. [2]
This is a bark-dwelling lichen with a thin, pale greenish-yellow body (thallus) embedded in the outer bark ( endoperidermal ). Under ultraviolet light the thallus fluoresces reddish (UV+). Chemical spot tests indicate an unidentified yellow pigment: the thallus is K+ (dark red) and, in section, K+ (orange and dissolving). Thin-layer chromatography shows a single spot that may correspond to 4-chloroemodin. [2]
The fruiting bodies are black, flask-like structures (perithecia) that release spores through a small top pore (an ostiole). They are initially immersed in the bark, soon become emergent, and can appear almost stalked; each is about 0.6–0.8 mm wide with a hard, carbonized wall ( exciple ) and an apical black ostiole. The internal tissue between the spore sacs ( hamathecium ) is clear. The spore sacs (asci) are cylindrical, about 80 × 10 μm, sometimes with a tiny ocular chamber . The spores are produced eight to an ascus, arranged in a single row, and mature from pale gray to brown; they are broadly spindle-shaped, three-septate, and around 11 × 6–7 μm in size, with rounded to lens-shaped internal cavities ( lumina ) and thick lateral walls. Unlike some relatives, the spores do not shrivel with age. [2]
The only known specimen was taken from the canopy of an isolated tree in a small lowland savanna near Kuyuwini Landing, Guyana; the site is an inland setting and the savanna has been expanded by bushfires. At the time of its original description the species was known only from this locality. [2]