Solorina octospora (Arnold) Arnold
Greater tundra owl
Peltigeraceae

Introduction to the Lichens

Photograph

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Map

E-Flora BC Static Map

Distribution of Solorina octospora unavailable

Species Information

General:
Common Name: The Owl Lichens. Alludes to the typically round, large apothecia, which are usually somewhat sunken below the average level of the upper surface.
Small to medium (rarely minute) stratified foliose lichens, corticate above and below, nonsorediate, nonisidiate, bearing cephalodia, lobes closely appressed to more often loosely appressed, short to subrotund, averaging to 0.5–3 (–10) mm wide, thin. Upper surface pale greenish or occasionally orangish brown, shiny or dull. Lower surface white or, in one species, orange, dull, usually weakly veined, often bearing scattered rhizines. Medulla white (orange in one species). Photobiont green and blue-green.
Apothecia immersed in upper surface, disc reddish brown; spores 2-celled, ellipsoid, brown, 2–8 per ascus.
Over soil and mosses over soil, usually base-rich sites.
Notes: Solorina is a boreal–arctic genus consisting of about ten species worldwide. Five species are reported for North America and all occur in B.C. Spot tests are of little taxonomic value in this genus and have therefore been omitted in the species accounts. For points of distinction with similar lichens, see the descriptions under Peltigera .
Species description:
Medulla white; over base-rich soil; distribution various AND
Thallus more or less well developed, at maturity generally more than 1.0 cm wide; upper surface never pruinose, usually continuous; apothecia weakly to sometimes deeply sunken AND
Upper surface predominantly brownish; thallus lobate, lobes short or elongate (i.e., thallus not rounded in outline); spores 8 per ascus; alpine

SourceLichens of British Columbia

Illustration

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Illustration ByTrevor Goward

Habitat and Range

Habitat: Infrequent over base-rich soil and rock in exposed inland alpine localities

World Distribution: probably circumpolar, S to NM.

SourceLichens of British Columbia