Pallidogramme is a genus of lichen-forming fungi in the family Graphidaceae. It has 8 species of corticolous (bark-dwelling), crustose lichens.
Pallidogramme was proposed in 2008 by lichenologists Betsy Staiger, Klaus Kalb, and Robert Lücking, as a replacement name for Leucogramma . The justification for this change originated from the previously established Hemithecium subgen. Leucogramma by Staiger in 2002. There was, however, a pre-existing generic name, Leucogramma, which was based on the same species as Staiger's subgenus, Hemithecium chrysenteron. Both of these names were unusable at the genus level due to their homonymy with Leucogramma a name with unknown taxonomic affinity. As a result, a new name was deemed necessary to avoid confusion and maintain nomenclatural clarity.
The defining features of genus Pallidogramme include a crust-like, bark-dwelling thallus, fully formed labia, a predominantly hymenium, and an which is non-, displaying a spectrum of colours from pale yellowish-brown to reddish-brown, accompanied by internal striations. Moreover, it possesses that range in colour from pale brown to brown, and that turn reddish-brown when stained with iodine (I+).
Pallidogramme indica was proposed as a new species from India in 2009, but it was not published validly; a similar situation occurs with the proposed Pallidogramme undulatolirellata .
Former Pallidogramme species: