Results 51 to 60 of about 115 (81)
New records of Arthoniaceae from Vietnam
(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
Santosh Joshi +2 more
exaly +2 more sources
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Related searches:
Related searches:
The Arthonialean challenge: Restructuring Arthoniaceae
Taxon, 2014AbstractThe Arthoniales is the second–largest group of lichen–forming fungi. A new phylogeny of Arthoniales based on mtSSU, nLSU andRPB2sequence data is presented, with a focus on crustose representatives. A total of 145 taxa are analyzed including 64 species of Arthoniaceae.
Andreas Frisch +2 more
exaly +3 more sources
Herpothallon rubroechinatum (Arthoniaceae), a new species from tropical and subtropical America
Herpothallon rubroechinatum is described from the U.S.A. (Florida), Costa Rica and Peru. The new species is characterised by scattered red anthraquinone crystals being attached to hyphae projecting from the thallus, the globose to cylindrical pseudoisidia, a closely adnate thallus, and psoromic acid as the main lichen compound; pycnidia are common at ...
Andreas Frisch, Göran Thor
exaly +3 more sources
Staurospora, a New Genus for a Unique Species with Spherical Ascospores in Arthoniaceae
Herzogia, 2018Grube M. 2018: Staurospora, a new genus for a unique species with spherical ascospores in Arthoniaceae. – Herzogia 31: 695–699.Staurospora, with S. purpurissata as the single species, is described as a new genus in the Arthoniaceae. The genus is distinct from all other members of the family by its peculiar ascospores.
Martin Grube
exaly +2 more sources
A new species of Reichlingia (Arthoniaceae) from the grasslands of central North America
The Bryologist, 2021Reichlingia americana, a new saxicolous species, is described from Oklahoma, U.S.A., representing the first records of the genus in North America. The species is distinguished from other members of the genus by a combination of its epilithic, rimose thallus; submuriform ascospores; presence of 2′-O-methylperlatolic acid; and unique habitat on sheltered
Caleb A. Morse, Douglas Ladd
openaire +1 more source
Crypthonia, a new genus of byssoid Arthoniaceae (lichenised Ascomycota)
Mycological Progress, 2009Crypthonia with 11 species is described as belonging to the Arthoniaceae. The new genus is characterised by (1) white to pale carneous, maculiform ascomata lacking a distinct exciple, (2) a weakly gelatinised, hydrophobic hymenium of paraphysoids, (3) a discontinuous layer of branched ascogenous hyphae in the hypothecium, (4) small, clavate to broadly ...
Andreas Frisch +2 more
exaly +2 more sources
Arthoniaceae with reddish, K+ purple ascomata in Japan
Phytotaxa, 2018Arthonia sanguinaria is described as new to science. The East Asian Arthonia lopingensis and the widely distributed Arthonia picea are reported as new to Japan from Honshu and the Ogasawara Islands, respectively. The phylogenetic position of A. picea, A.
Frisch, Andreas +3 more
openaire +2 more sources
Four new species of Herpothallon (Arthoniaceae, Arthoniales, Arthoniomycetes, Ascomycota) from China
Phytotaxa, 2022Four new species of Herpothallon: H. capilliferum, H. polyisidiatum, H. subglobosum and H. viridi-isidiatum are described from southern China. Detailed taxonomic descriptions, ecological and chemical characters, and illustrations are provided for the new species. A key to all known Chinese Herpothallon species is also provided.
PENGFEI CHEN +3 more
openaire +2 more sources
Two species of Arthothelium (Arthoniaceae, Arthoniales) new to Scandinavia
Nova Hedwigia, 1999Per Gerhard Ihlen, Brian J. Coppins
exaly +2 more sources
Fungal Diversity, 2011
Morphological, anatomical, chemical and molecular data suggest that a relatively common lichenicolous coelomycete on Lecanora conizaeoides is conspecific with Phoma cytospora, previously known only from parmelioid lichens, and that further populations on Cladonia and Pertusaria belong to the same species.
Paul Diederich +2 more
exaly +2 more sources
Morphological, anatomical, chemical and molecular data suggest that a relatively common lichenicolous coelomycete on Lecanora conizaeoides is conspecific with Phoma cytospora, previously known only from parmelioid lichens, and that further populations on Cladonia and Pertusaria belong to the same species.
Paul Diederich +2 more
exaly +2 more sources

