Hypocenomyce castaneocinerea (Räsänen)Timdal
Grey-brown turtleback


Introduction to the Lichens

Photograph

© Jim Riley     (Photo ID #12399)


Map

E-Flora BC Static Map

Distribution of Hypocenomyce castaneocinerea unavailable

Species Information

General:
Common Name: The Turtle Lichens. Describes the shell-like habit of the species. Minute stratified squamulose lichens, corticate above, corticate or not below, sorediate or not, squamules closely appressed or more often attached to substrate at one margin, the opposite margin weakly raised, short to subrotund, averaging to 0.8–1.5 (–2) mm wide, thin. Upper surface pale greyish, greenish or dark brown, shiny or not. Lower surface pale or darkening, lacking rhizines. Medulla white. Photobiont green.
Apothecia usually located along lobe margins, disc plane or occasionally convex, brown orblack; spores simple, ellipsoid to spindle-shaped, colourless, 8 per ascus.
Over (fire-blackened) trees.
Notes: Hypocenomyce is primarily a temperate and boreal genus consisting of ten species worldwide. Of the eight species reported for North America, four are known to occur in B.C. Hypocenomyce was formerly treated within Psora. The taxonomy of the western North American species has not been entirely elucidated; this treatment is preliminary, pending further study.
Species description:
Soredia absent AND
Lobes weakly lobulate, lobules never distinctly longer than broad; upper surface sometimes strong brown; apothecia rare, disc brownish
Comments:
The local material was previously assigned to H. anthracophila, though that species should have a PD+ red medulla. Much of the B.C. material lacks soredia.
Reactions:
All spot tests negative, but medulla UV+ white.
Contents:
Various unknown lichen substances.

SourceLichens of British Columbia

Illustration

If more than one illustration is available for a species (e.g., separate illustrations were provided for two subspecies) then links to the separate images will be provided below. Note that individual subspecies or varietal illustrations are not always available.

Illustration ByTrevor Goward

Habitat and Range

Habitat: Common over fire-blackened conifer bark and wood in coastal and intermontane (ICH zone) forests

World Distribution: tentatively western N Am – western Eurasia, S to AZ.

SourceLichens of British Columbia