Astrothelium lineatum


Astrothelium lineatum is a species of corticolous crustose lichen in the family Trypetheliaceae. This lichen was discovered in the Brazilian Amazon, where it grows on tree bark in savanna areas. It is distinguished by its bright orange coloring and the linear patterns formed by its ascospore-producing structures.

Taxonomy

Astrothelium lineatum was described as new to science in 2016 by André Aptroot and Marcela da Silva Cáceres from material collected in Amapá, northern Brazil. The holotype was gathered on tree bark in savanna vegetation near the Maracá Extractive Reserve. The specific epithet refers to the species' often linear.
In their notes, the authors indicated that it keys near Astrothelium condoricum, but that species lacks the red pigmentation in the and has shorter, wider spores without a gelatinous sheath.

Description

The thallus of A. lineatum is dull ochraceous and entirely suffused with bright orange pigment. It lacks a distinct and appears to induce gall-like swelling of the host bark. Ascomata are roughly spherical to pear-shaped, 0.5–0.8 mm in diameter, and occur deeply in and beneath the pseudostromata in groups of 3–15. Pseudostromata are only weakly differentiated from the thallus, ellipsoid to elongated or branched, and orange on the surface but unpigmented internally. The ostioles are apical, pale brown, and encircled by a roughly 0.1 mm whitish ring. The is not. Asci contain eight ascospores; the spores are hyaline, regularly, long-ellipsoid, 45–55 × 11–13 μm, without a distinctly thickened median septum, and are surrounded by a 10–13 μm-wide gelatinous sheath. Pycnidia were not observed to occur in this species.
In terms of spot test reactions, the thallus and pseudostroma are UV+ and K+ ; thin-layer chromatography detected an anthraquinone, probably parietin.

Habitat and distribution

The species grows on tree bark in savanna vegetation and is known to occur only in Amapá, Brazil.