Lichinaceae

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Lichinaceae
Lichinella cribellifera
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Lichinomycetes
Order: Lichinales
Family: Lichinaceae
Nyl. (1854)
Type genus
Lichina
C.Agardh (1817)
Genera

See text

Synonyms[1]

The Lichinaceae are a family of ascomycete fungi. Most species are lichenized with cyanobacteria, and have a distribution largely in temperate regions.[2]

Taxonomy[edit]

The family was circumscribed in 1854 by Finnish lichenologist William Nylander. His description of the family mentioned the obscure brown thallus resembling algae, with an overall morphology described as either filamentous or tufted (fruticose). The fruiting structures, the apothecia, are described as either endocarpous or biatorine. He included two tribes in the Lichinaceae: Ephebeae, which contained the genera Ephebe and Gonionema, and Lichineae, which contained Lichina, the type genus.[3]

In 1986, Aino Henssen and Burkhard Büdel proposed the order Lichinales to contain the Lichinaceae.[4] In the 1980s and 1990s, several taxonomic and nomenclatural studies were the basis for the revision of many of the species in the family.[5][6]

Heppiaceae was a family proposed by Alexander Zahlbruckner in 1906 to contain the genus Heppia. It was considered to differ from the Peltulaceae in the polysporous asci, the rostrate type of ascus (i.e., having a beaklike process), the type of photobiont, and the thallus anatomy. Heppiaceae was typically included in the order Lecanorales, while the Peltulaceae was included in the Lichinales.[7] Molecular phylogenetic methods showed that the genus Heppia forms a clade nested within the Lichinaceae, and so Heppiaceae was synonymized with Lichinaceae in 2003.[1]

First informally proposed by Antonín Vězda in 1974, then formally published in 1984 by Josef Hafellner,[8] the family Harpidiaceae contains the genera Harpidium and Euopsis. Although some authoritative sources have folded the Harpidiaceae into the Lichinaceae, some other authorities have preferred to treat the Harpidiaceae as a distinct, independent family. For example, in the Outline of the Ascomycota, the genera were included in the Lichinaceae.[7][9] In a corrected and amended version of the "2016 classification of lichenized fungi in the Ascomycota and Basidiomycota", the Harpidiaceae was added as Pezizomycotina incertae sedis,[10] a placement followed by recent (2022) review of fungal classification.[11]

Description[edit]

The thalli of Lichinaceae species are known to occur in a variety of forms, including gelatinous, crustose, peltate, filamentous to microfoliose or microfruticose, ecorticate (lacking a cortex) and homoiomerous or stratified and very rarely eucorticate (i.e., comprising well-differentiated hyphae). The photobiont partner for the majority of species is cyanobacterial. The form of the ascomata is apotheciate, usually zeorine, immersed or adnate, often pycnoascocarps, rarely thallinocarps. The hamathecium (the hyphae or other tissues between the asci) consist of unbranched to branched paraphyses, amyloid or non-amyloid. Asci are either prototunicate or unitunicate, and either amyloid or non-amyloid. Ascospores are simple, spherical to ellipsoid in shape, hyaline, and non-amyloid. The conidiomata are in the form of pycnidia. The conidia are non-septate, ellipsoid or bacilliform, rarely globose or filiform to sigmoid, and hyaline. No lichen products are made. Most species in the family are saxicolous (rock-dwelling) or terrestrial, while some species are corticolous (bark-dwelling).[12]

Genera[edit]

Peccania tiruncula
Synalissa ramulosa
Thyrea confusa

As of December 2023, Species Fungorum (in the Catalogue of Life) accepts 47 genera and 156 species in the family Lichinaceae.[13]

The genus Lichinodium, formerly placed in Lichinaceae, was placed in its own family (Lichinodiaceae) and order (Lichinodiales) in the class Leotiomycetes.[42]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Schultz, Matthias; Büdel, Burkhard (2003). "On the systematic position of the lichen genus Heppia". The Lichenologist. 35 (2): 151–156. doi:10.1016/s0024-2829(03)00019-7.
  2. ^ Cannon, Paul F.; Kirk, Paul M. (2007). Fungal Families of the World. Wallingford, UK: CAB International. p. 17. ISBN 978-0-85199-827-5.
  3. ^ Nylander, W. (1854). "Essai d'une nouvelle classification des Lichens". Mémoires de la Société Impériale des Sciences Naturelles de Cherbourg (in French). 2: 5–16 [8].
  4. ^ Henssen, A.; Büdel, B. (1986). "Lichinales Henssen and Biidel ordo nov". Systema Ascomycetum. 5 (115): 138.
  5. ^ Henssen, Aino (1986). "The genus Paulia (Lichinaceae)". The Lichenologist. 18 (3): 201–229. doi:10.1017/s0024282986000282.
  6. ^ Henssen, Aino; Jørgensen, Per Magnus (1990). "New combinations and synonyms in the Lichinaceae". The Lichenologist. 22 (2): 137–147. doi:10.1017/s0024282990000093.
  7. ^ a b Eriksson, O.E.; Hawksworth, D.L. (1998). "Outline of the ascomycetes—1998". Systema Ascomycetum. 16 (1–2): 83–296.
  8. ^ Hafellner, J. (1984). "Studien in Richtung einer natürlichen Gliederung der Sammelfamilien Lecanoracae und Lecideaceae". Beihefte zur Nova Hedwigia (in German). 79: 283.
  9. ^ Lumbsch, H. Thorsten; Huhndorf, Sabine M. (2010). "Myconet Volume 14. Part One. Outline of Ascomycota—2009. Part Two. Notes on Ascomycete Systematics. Nos. 4751–5113". Fieldiana Life and Earth Sciences. 1: 1–64. doi:10.3158/1557.1.
  10. ^ Lücking, Robert; Hodkinson, Brendan P.; Leavitt, Steven D. (2017). "Corrections and amendments to the 2016 classification of lichenized fungi in the Ascomycota and Basidiomycota". The Bryologist. 120 (1): 58–69. doi:10.1639/0007-2745-120.1.058.
  11. ^ Wijayawardene, N.N.; Hyde, K.D.; Dai, D.Q.; Sánchez-García, M.; Goto, B.T.; Saxena, R.K.; et al. (2022). "Outline of Fungi and fungus-like taxa – 2021". Mycosphere. 13 (1): 53–453. doi:10.5943/mycosphere/13/1/2. hdl:10481/76378.
  12. ^ Jaklitsch, Walter; Baral, Hans-Otto; Lücking, Robert; Lumbsch, H. Thorsten (2016). Frey, Wolfgang (ed.). Syllabus of Plant Families: Adolf Engler's Syllabus der Pflanzenfamilien. Vol. 1/2 (13 ed.). Berlin Stuttgart: Gebr. Borntraeger Verlagsbuchhandlung, Borntraeger Science Publishers. pp. 205–206. ISBN 978-3-443-01089-8. OCLC 429208213.
  13. ^ Source dataset. Species Fungorum Plus: Species Fungorum for CoL+. "Lichinaceae". Catalog of Life Version 2023-12-15. Retrieved 27 December 2022.
  14. ^ a b c Wainio, Edvard August (1890). Étude sur la classification naturelle et la morphologie des Lichens du Brésil, I–II. Acta Societatis pro Fauna et Flora Fennica (in French and Latin). Vol. 7. Helsinki: J. Simelius. p. 232.
  15. ^ Brusse, F.A. (1985). "Heppiaceae (Lichenes). Corynecystis, a new lichen genus from the Karoo, South Africa". Bothalia. 15: 552–553. doi:10.4102/abc.v15i3/4.1844.
  16. ^ Fries, T.M. (1866). "Nya Skandinaviska Lafarter". Botaniska Notiser. 1866: 56–60.
  17. ^ Moreno, P.P.; Egea, J.M. (1992). "Digitothyrea, a new genus in the family Lichinaceae". The Lichenologist. 24 (3): 215–228. doi:10.1017/s0024282992000331.
  18. ^ Henssen, Aino (1986). "Edwardiella mirabilis, a holocarpous lichen from Marion Island". The Lichenologist. 18 (1): 51–56. doi:10.1017/S0024282986000063.
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  20. ^ Wächter, W. (1897). "Jenmania goebelii, eine neue Flechtengattung". Flora (Regensburg) (in German). 84: 349–351.
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  26. ^ Fée, A.L.A. (1836). "Monographie du genre Paulia". Linnaea (in French). 10: 466–472.
  27. ^ Arnold, F. (1858). "Die Lichenen des fränkischen Jura" [The lichens of the Franconian Jura]. Flora (Regensburg) (in German). 41 (6): 81–110.
  28. ^ Steiner, J. (1903). "Bearbeitung der von O. Simony 1898 und 1899 in Südarabien, auf Sokotra undden benachbarten Inseln gesammelten Flechten". Denkschriften der Akademie der Wissenschaften (Wien) Mathematisch-naturwissenschaftliche Klasse (in German). 71: 93–102.
  29. ^ Cengia Sambo, M. (1937). "Lichenes Africae orientalis italicae. I. I. I licheni dell'Abissinia meridionale e della Somalia". Nuovo Giornale Botanico Italiano (in Italian). 44: 456–470.
  30. ^ Henssen, A.; Büdel, B. (1984). "Phyllisciella, a new genus of the Lichinaceae". In Hertel, H.; Oberwinkler, F. (eds.). Beitrage zur Lichenologie. Festscrift J. Poelt. Beihefte zur Nova Hedwigia. Vol. 79. Vaduz: J. Cramer. pp. 381–398.
  31. ^ Nylander, W. (1855). "Essai d'une nouvelle classification des lichens (second mémoire)". Mémoires de la Société Impériale des Sciences Naturelles de Cherbourg (in French). 3: 161–202 [166].
  32. ^ Körber, Gustav Wilhelm (1855). Systema lichenum Germaniae (in German). Breslau: Trewendt & Granier. pp. 157, 425.
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  34. ^ Schultz, Matthias (2002). "Pseudopaulia tesselata, a new genus and species in the Lichinaceae (lichenized Ascomycotina) from Socotra, Yemen". Mycotaxon. 82: 443–449.
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  39. ^ Massalongo, A.B. (1856). Schedulae criticae in lichenes exsiccatos Italiae. p. 75.
  40. ^ Díaz-Escandón, David; Hawksworth, David L.; Powell, Mark; Resl, Philipp; Spribille, Toby (2021). "The British chalk specialist Lecidea lichenicola auct. revealed as a new genus of Lichinomycetes". Fungal Biology. 125 (7): 495–504. doi:10.1016/j.funbio.2021.01.007. PMID 34140146.
  41. ^ Herre, Albert W.C.T. (1912). "Supplement to the lichen flora of the Santa Cruz peninsula, California". Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences. 2 (15): 380–386. JSTOR 24520690.
  42. ^ Prieto, Maria; Schultz, Matthias; Olariaga, Ibai; Wedin, Mats (2018). "Lichinodium is a new lichenized lineage in the Leotiomycetes". Fungal Diversity. 94 (1): 23–39. doi:10.1007/s13225-018-0417-5. hdl:10115/29252.