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General: Common Name: The Brownette Lichens. Stresses the miniature size and superficial resemblance to certain species of “brown” lichens (e.g., Melanelia and Neofuscelia). Minute to small stratified to nonstratified foliose or occasionally squamulose lichens, corticate above and below, isidiate or not, lobes closely appressed or partly semi-erect, elongate-linear, linear or occasionally short, averaging to (0.1–) 0.2–0.8 (–l.5) mm wide, thin. Upper surface dark olive-brown or blackish, smooth or longitudinally striate. Lower surface dark or occasionally pale, bearing blue-green or occasionally pale rhizines, these often extending outward from thallus as prothallus. Medulla white. Photobiont blue-green. Apothecia located over upper surface, disc dark brown to black; spores 2- to 4-celled, ellipsoid to somewhat spindle-shaped/fusiform, colourless, (4-) 8 per ascus. Over rock, rarely over bark. Notes: Placynthium is primarily a temperate genus, consisting of approximately 25 species worldwide. Of the six species occurring in North America, five are reported from B.C. In this taxonomically rather difficult genus, conclusive identification of some species requires detailed anatomical studies (see Henssen 1963d). No lichen substances have been reported.
Species description: Thallus broadly or narrowly attached to substrate, but not umbilicateAND Thallus brownish; lobes not at all swollen; substrate variousAND Lobes either mostly appressed to substate or, if erect, then over rock AND Lower surface and rhizines blue-green or blackish AND Peripheral lobes essentially continuous with thallus, elongate or short, but never scalelike; hypothallus inconspicuous or absent AND Over acid rock; lobes occasionally averaging to more than 0.2 mm wide; thallus never forming concentric rings AND Peripheral lobes averaging to more than 0.2 mm broad, usually dull and either plane or weakly grooved; “isidia,” if present, more or less appressed, usually granular or flattened (rarely cylindrical)
Comments: The anatomy of this species is unique among North American Placynthium species, the thallus being comprised of close-fitted, angular cells. In all other species, the cells are rounded when viewed in longitudinal section (see Henssen 1963d).
Source: Lichens of British Columbia |