Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Aspicilia phaea

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Kingdom
  
Fungi

Class
  
Ascomycetes

Family
  
Megasporaceae

Rank
  
Species

Division
  
Ascomycota

Order
  
Pertusariales

Genus
  
Aspicilia

Aspicilia phaea

Similar
  
Aspicilia cuprea, Aspicilia cinerea, Lobothallia, Aspicilia, Acarospora

Aspicilia phaea fungi kingdom


Aspicilia phaea (dusky sunken disk lichen) is a grayish brown to tan areolate crustose lichen commonly found on rock in coastal to inland parts of central and southern California. Described as new to science in 2007, it is endemic to (only found in) California. It grows on exposed or partially shaded siliceous rock, with a few known occurrences on serpentine rock.

In rare cases full areolas do not form, and it appears as being cracked (rimose). There are often grayish or whitish spots on the areolas. The thallus is 2–8 cm in diameter, and 0.1– 1.2 mm thick. The areolas are irregularly sized and angular, giving the lichen body (thallus) the appearance of a mosaic of small polygons. A rim of dark tissue (prothallus) may surround the edges of the lichen. The fruiting body parts (apothecia) are flat to concave (especially in the thallus center), and slightly immersed in the thallus, appearing as sunken round to polygonal discs, often with a grey or white rim of thalline tissue. Lichen spot tests are all negative (K-, C-, KC-, P-).

The photobiont is a chlorococcoid. In Joshua Tree National Park, it is commonly found to be infected with Lichenostigma, a genus or lichenicolous fungi (fungi that are parasitic on lichens).

References

Aspicilia phaea Wikipedia