Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Umbilicaria phaea

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Kingdom
  
Fungi

Class
  
Lecanoromycetes

Family
  
Umbilicariaceae

Rank
  
Species

Division
  
Ascomycota

Order
  
Lecanorales

Genus
  
Umbilicaria

Similar
  
Umbilicaria americana, Umbilicaria vellea, Umbilicaria polyphylla, Umbilicaria crustulosa, Umbilicaria mammulata

Umbilicaria phaea top 5 facts


Umbilicaria phaea is a brown, umblicate foliose lichen that grows up to 6 cm in diameter, sometimes in colonies covering large patches of desert rocks. One variety that grows in northern California is brilliant red. It is (monophyllous) with a single 1 - 5 cm flattish leaf-like cap on top of an anchoring stem(umblicate). The leaflike top is smooth with some lobes, roughly circular, thin, and brittle. The lower surface is light gray to light brown. It has up to 2.5 mm black circular to slightly polygonal spots that are the fruiting bodies (apothecia), slightly sunken into the main nonfruiting body part (thallus). It grows on siliceous boulders in very dry climates of western North and South America, where it is usually the most common member of its genus.

References

Umbilicaria phaea Wikipedia