Dermatocarpon moulinsii (Mont.) Zahlbr.
Shag-belly stippleback
Verrucariaceae

Introduction to the Lichens

Photograph

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Map

E-Flora BC Static Map

Distribution of Dermatocarpon moulinsii unavailable

Species Information

General:
Common Name: The Stippleback Lichens. Emphasizes the presence of numerous dot-like perithecia over the upper surface.
Small to medium stratified foliose lichens, corticate above and below, lacking isidia and soredia, lobes attached to substrate by more or less central holdfast (except occasionally unattached in some species), loosely attached, subrotund to rotund, entire thallus averaging to 1–3 (–6) cm across, usually somewhat thick. Upper surface greyish to dark olive brownish. Lower surface pale brown or blackening, rhizinate or more often lacking rhizines. Medulla white. Photobiont green.
Ascocarp a perithecium immersed in upper surface, appearing as blackish dot from above; spores simple, ellipsoid, colourless, 8 per ascus.
Over rock, rarely over exposed soil.
As adopted here, Dermatocarpon includes all foliose or squamulose peritheciate lichens having simple spores and attached to substrate by one or more thickened holdfasts, whether central or marginal. Squamulose specimens attached by rhizoidal threads are treated under Catapyrenium.
Notes: Dermatocarpon is a cosmopolitan genus of approximately 60 species. Only seven species are reported for North America and five occur in B.C. This is a taxonomically difficult group in which many species appear to intergrade. The keys should be considered preliminary, pending a thorough taxonomic revision of the genus. Chemistry is of no diagnostic value in Dermatocarpon and has therefore been omitted in the following species accounts.
Comments:
Dermatocarpon moulinsii may be mistaken for Umbilicaria vellea which, however, has a black lower surface and ball-tipped rhizines.

SourceLichens of British Columbia

Habitat and Range

Habitat: Not yet confirmed for B.C., but expected to occur in southern inland regions, especially over dry, base-rich rock

World Distribution: incompletely circumpolar

SourceLichens of British Columbia