Pyrenula flavida

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Pyrenula flavida
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Eurotiomycetes
Order: Pyrenulales
Family: Pyrenulaceae
Genus: Pyrenula
Species:
P. flavida
Binomial name
Pyrenula flavida
Sipman (2023)
Pyrenula flavida
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.

Contents

Taxonomy

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]

Description

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]

Habitat and distribution

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]

See also

References

  1. "Pyrenula flavida". MycoBank . Retrieved November 18, 2025.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Sipman, Harrie J.M. (2023). "Four new Pyrenula species from primary forests in the Guianas, South America, and their ascospore development". Folia Cryptogamica Estonica. 60: 65–74. doi: 10.12697/fce.2023.60.09 .