Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Acarospora socialis

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Kingdom
  
Fungi

Family
  
Rank
  
Species

Division
  
Order
  
Genus
  
Acarospora

Acarospora socialis Acarospora socialis

Similar
  
Acarospora schleicheri, Acarospora thamnina, Acarospora, Acarospora fuscata, Pleopsidium

Acarospora socialis top 10 facts


Acarospora socialis (bright cobblestone lichen) is a usually bright yellow aereolate to squamulose crustose lichen in the Acarosporaceae family that grows up to 10 cm wide, mostly on rock in western North America. It is among the most common lichens in the deserts of Arizona and southern California. It grows on sandstone, intrusive and extrusive igneous rock such as granitics, in all kinds of exposures to sunlight, including vertical rock walls. It is found in North America and Mexico, including areas of the Mojave Desert and Sonoran Desert region, to Baja California Sur. It is the most common yellow member of its genus in southwestern North America. It sometimes, but rarely, grows on other soil crusts. It is a pioneer species.

Contents

Acarospora socialis Ways of Enlichenment Lichens of North America

It is variable in its growth pattern. Areoles can be angular to round, sometimes forming lobes. They can be contiguous or scattered. Color is variable - bleached white, green-yellow, and other hades of yellow. It has a lower surface when squamulose, but without a lower cortex. With age, it forms stipes. Each squamule has 0 or one 1 mm round to angular apothecia immersed in it, outside desert habitats, but may have 2 to 10 per in deserts. Two apothecia may merged leaving a peninsula (umbo) of thalline tissue through the disc. Apothecia may have lecanorine margins. Apothecia have a flat to concave mostly brown or reddish brown, concave disc.

Acarospora socialis Ways of Enlichenment Lichens of North America

Lichen spot tests are all negative. It is UV+ orange. Secondary metabolites include rhizocarpic acid, and sometimes trace amounts of epanorin.

Acarospora socialis CNALH Flash Cards

When young, it is very similar to Accarospora contigua. But A. socialis has areolas that become lobed and squamulose. When appearing on soil, it may be mistaken for Acarospora schleicheri. But A. socialis has contiguous areoles while those of A. schlecheri can be imbricate. It is also similar to Acarospora chrysops, which grows from South America to central Mexico, through Texas and into the Rocky Mountains. It is very similar to Pleopsidium flavum at mid-level mountains, with the latter favoring higher elevations, above 900 metres (3,000 ft), and being somewhat effigurate with smaller (less than 1 mm) yellow apothecia.

Acarospora socialis httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Acarospora socialis fungi kingdom


Acarospora socialis Tim Wheeler Photography Acarosporasocialis

References

Acarospora socialis Wikipedia