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Type: Article
Published: 2014-12-19
Page range: 204–231
Abstract views: 24
PDF downloaded: 1

Twenty-three new species in the lichen family Graphidaceae from New Caledonia (Ostropales, Ascomycota)

Department of Biology and Natural Medicinal Mushroom Museum, Faculty of Science, Mahasarakham University, Kantarawichai, Maha Sarakham Province, 44150 Thailand
Science & Education, The Field Museum, 1400 South Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, Illinois 60605-2496, U.S.A.
Science & Education, The Field Museum, 1400 South Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, Illinois 60605-2496, U.S.A.
Division of Toxicology, Department of Medical Sciences, Ministry of Public Health, Tivanon Rd., Nonthaburi 11000, Thailand
Science & Education, The Field Museum, 1400 South Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, Illinois 60605-2496, U.S.A.
Science & Education, The Field Museum, 1400 South Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, Illinois 60605-2496, U.S.A.
Diversity lichens Oceania South Pacific taxonomy tropical lichens

Abstract

During a field trip to Grande Terre in New Caledonia in 2012, a number of Graphidaceae were collected, among which 23 species that turned out to represent previously undescribed species: Astrochapsa verruculosa Papong, Lücking & Parnmen, differing from A. megaphlyctidioides in the thinner, verrucose thallus and smaller, distinctly chroodiscoid ascomata; Diorygma roseopruinatum Papong, Lücking & Parnmen, similar to D. junghuhnii but with pink-red pruina covering the ascomata along the slit; Fissurina aurantiacolirellata Papong, Lücking & Kraichak, differing from other species of Fissurina in the prominent to sessile ascomata with bright orange pigment; F. fuscoalba Papong, Lücking & Kraichak, superficially resembling F. pseudostromatica but distinguished by the brown, endoperidermal thallus and the distoseptate ascospores; F. stegoboloides Papong, Lücking & Kraichak, with large ascomata with exposed disc resembling a species of Stegobolus; Graphis leptotremoides Papong, Lücking & Kraichak, differing from other species of Graphis in the gall-forming thallus, in combination with immersed, uncarbonized ascomata; G. subelongata Papong, Lücking & Kraichak, related to G. neoelongata but with less branched lirellae with lateral thalline margin and with narrower, submuriform ascospores; Leucodecton pseudostromaticum Papong, Lücking & Lumbsch, differing from L. expallescens in the pseudostromatic ascomata and larger ascospores becoming brown; Ocellularia albocolumellata Lücking, Lumbsch & Parnmen, similar to O. ripleyi but with uncarbonized excipulum and columella and broader pore of the ascomata; O. albothallina Lücking, Lumbsch & Parnmen, differing from O. pluripora in the loosely corticate, whitish thallus and ascomata with broader pore and broad columella; O. austropacifica Lücking, Lumbsch & Parnmen, resembling O. dolichotata but with green, densely corticate thallus and smaller ascospores; O. fuscosporella Lücking, Lumbsch & Parnmen; differing from O. vizcayensis in the brown ascospores; O. inconspicua Lücking, Lumbsch & Parnmen, akin towards O. pseudopyrenuloides but with ascomata with narrower pore and uncarbonized columella and with broader ascospores; O. neocaledonica Lücking, Lumbsch & Parnmen, differing from O. pluripora in the ligher thallus and lack of secondary substances; O. pulchella Lücking, Lumbsch & Parnmen, resembling Ocellularia mammicula but with green, minutely grainy thallus with columnar clusters of calcium oxalate crystals and with ascomata with narrower, non-annulate pore; O. rugosothallina Lücking, Lumbsch & Parnmen, differing from O. perforata in the carbonized excipulum and columella; O. salmonea Lücking, Lumbsch & Parnmen, similar to O. baileyi in the salmon-pink medulla but with larger ascomata with only partially carbonized excipulum and with larger ascospores; Pseudotopeliopsis longispora Papong, Lücking & Parnmen, differing from other species of Pseudotopeliopsis in the long, transversely septate ascospores; Rhabdodiscus farinosus Papong, Lücking & Parnmen, differing from other species of Rhabdodiscus in the ecorticate, finely farinose and sorediate thallus; R. neocaledonicus Lücking, Lumbsch & Parnmen, similar to R. lankaensis in the salmon-pink ascoma pigment but with submuriform, brown ascospores; R. saxicola Lücking, Lumbsch & Parnmen, growing saxicolous and with pseudostromatic ascomata with broad brown rim and columella contrasting with the light yellowish brown thallus; R. thouvenotii Lücking, Lumbsch & Parnmen, similar to R. saxicola but with larger, more or less solitary ascomata with narrower pore and finger-like columella; and Thelotrema perriei Papong, Lücking & Lumbsch, differing from T. diplotrema in the densely corticate, verrucose thallus and smaller ascospores. The number of new discoveries demonstrates that the South Pacific is a center of diversity of Graphidaceae. We also propose the new combinations Ocellularia mammicula (Hale) Lücking, O. permaculata (Nagarkar & Hale) Lücking and Rhabdodiscus lankaensis (Hale) Lücking.