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Type: Article
Published: 2014-12-19
Page range: 312–324
Abstract views: 14
PDF downloaded: 1

New species of Graphidaceae (Ostropales, Lecanoromycetes) from southern Thailand

Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Chiang Mai University, 239 Huay Kaew Rd., Suthep, Mueang, Chiang Mai, 50200 Thailand.
Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Chiang Mai University, 239 Huay Kaew Rd., Suthep, Mueang, Chiang Mai, 50200 Thailand.
Lichen Research Unit, Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Ramkhamhaeng University, Ramkhamhaeng road 24, Bangkok, 10240 Thailand.
Lichenologisches Institut Neumarkt, Im Tal 12, D-92318 Neumarkt, Germany. University of Regensburg, Institute of Botany, Universitätsstraβe 31, D-93040 Regensburg, Germany
Asia lichenized Ascomycota

Abstract

Fourteen species of the lichen family Graphidaceae from southern Thailand are described as new, namely Creographa subbrasiliensis, which is similar to C. brasiliensis but without chemistry; Diorygma angusticarpum, which differs from D. hieroglyphicum by a I+ blue hymenium and lirellae with a slit-like disc; D. chumphonense, distinguished by its small, densely muriform ascospores and production of salazinic and norstictic acids; D. citri, distinguished by a I- hymenium and a complex chemistry including salazinic and hypostictic acids as major metabolites; D. conprotocetraricum, which is unique by its chemistry, i.e. conprotocetraric acid as a major substance; D. fuscopruinosum with a brown pruina on the disc of the apothecium and comparatively small ascospores; D. hieroglyphicellum, which is similar to D. hieroglyphicum but differs by much smaller ascospores; D. inexpectatum, which is distinguished by its chemistry (salazinic and hypostictic acids) and a I+ blue hymenium; D. salazinicum, separated from D. pruinosum by its rare chemistry (stictic and salazinic acids as ± major metabolites); D. subpruinosum, distinguished by often 2-spored asci and protocetraric and hypostictic acids as major constituents; D. thailandicum, which is similar to D. pruinosum, but differs by protocetraric and stictic acid as major metabolites; Graphis australosiamensis, distinguished by one muriform ascospore per ascus, a laterally carbonized exciple and norstictic acid in the thallus; Ocellularia palianensis, distinguished by small, transversely septate ascospores and by producing two unknown substances; and Platygramme microspora, which is distinguished by very small transseptate ascospores and producing stictic acid and its satellites.