Glaucomaria carpinea explained

Glaucomaria carpinea is a species of corticolous (bark-dwelling), crustose lichen in the family Lecanoraceae. It is a widely distributed species.

Taxonomy

The lichen was first scientifically described by Carl Linnaeus in 1753. It has had a complex taxonomic history, and has been transferred to several genera, including Lecanora, Scutellaria, and Variolaria. It is synonymous with Lichen angulosus, as defined by Johann Christian Daniel von Schreber in 1771, and all of the names resulting from generic transfers of that taxon. Sergey Kondratyuk, László Sándor Lőkös, and Edit Farkas transferred it to the genus Glaucomaria in 2019.

Description

Glaucomaria carpinea has a crust-like (crustose) thallus that is either continuous or cracked. It has a whitish to grey colour, with a smooth texture and is not covered with a powdery substance . This lichen is sometimes bordered by a white growth (prothallus) at its edges. Its apothecia (fruiting bodies) are typically crowded together and can be round or angular due to mutual compression. These apothecia are flat or slightly convex, measuring 0.5–1.5 mm across, and have an orange-brown to flesh-coloured heavily covered in white . The margin of the apothecia is thin, slightly prominent, and typically not wavy.

The outer ring of the apothecia (the) features a well-developed composed of vertically aligned hyphae (an arrangement), with a medulla containing crystals that dissolve in a solution of potassium hydroxide (K). The inner ring is thin and colourless, also filled with K-soluble crystals. The (topmost layer of the apothecia) is pale brown with a layer of fine crystals, with both the pigment and crystals dissolving in K to produce a bright yellow colour change (C+ bright yellow). The hymenium, the spore-producing layer, is colourless and 50–70 μm high. The paraphyses (sterile filaments in the hymenium) are slightly thickened at the top. The layer below the hymenium is colourless.

The asci (spore-bearing cells) of Glaucomaria carpinea are elongated-club shaped (elongate-) and very thin-walled, containing eight spores each. These asci have a tall structure in the middle that reacts to iodine and potassium hydroxide by turning blue (K/I+ blue), surrounded by a blue outer layer. The are single-celled, hyaline (translucent), simple, broadly ellipsoid, and measure 9–14.5 by 5–8.5 μm with a thin wall. The, the photosynthetic partner of the lichen, is –a spherical green alga.

Chemical tests on the thallus reveal a yellow reaction to the K spot test (K+ yellow) and contain atranorin as the major compound, with minor amounts of chloroatranorin and eugenitol. The pruina on the apothecial disc contains a major metabolite called sordidone. Glaucomaria carpinea has been noted to be a morphologically variable species, particularly in the deposition of pruina on various surfaces and the thickness of the margins. However, the lichen tends to be anatomically and chemically uniform.

Habitat and distribution

Glaucomaria carpinea has a nearly cosmopolitan distribution. It has been recorded from Africa, Asia, Europe, Macaronesia, New Zealand, and North America. Its usual is the smooth bark of deciduous trees, especially on twigs, branches, and young trunks.

Species interactions

Lichenicolous (lichen-dwelling) fungi that have been recorded parasitising Glaucomaria carpinea include Arthonia subfuscicola, Sphaerellothecium propinquellum, Tremella endosporogena, and Heteroacanthella ellipsospora.