Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Buellia spuria

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Kingdom
  
Fungi

Class
  
Lecanoromycetes

Family
  
Caliciaceae

Rank
  
Species

Division
  
Ascomycota

Order
  
Teloschistales

Genus
  
Buellia

Buellia spuria

Similar
  
Buellia badia, Buellia disciformis, Amandinea, Amandinea punctata, Buellia

Buellia spuria (disc lichen) is a white to light ashy gray crustose areolate lichen that grows on rocks (epilithic) in montane habitats. It has a black edge from the conspicuous, more or less continuous prothallus, which can also be seen in the cracks between the areolas forming a hypothallus, and in sharp contrast with the whitish or ashy colored areolas. It prefers mafic (siliceous) rock substrates. In Joshua Tree National Park is can be seen on vertical granite and gneiss faces in washes. It is common worldwide in the Northern Hemisphere. It is very common in the Sonoran Desert from southern California to Arizona, Baja California, and Sonora, Chihuahua, and Sinaloa, Mexico.

It is similar in appearance to Buellia stellulata, but has a different secondary chemistry, and B. spuria is common throughout the Sonoran Desert region, while B. stellulata is restricted to coastal regions.

References

Buellia spuria Wikipedia