Austroroccella
Austroroccella is a single-species fungal genus in the family Roccellaceae. It contains Austroroccella gayana, a saxicolous, fruticose lichen found only in Chile. This lichen produces dark to black s lacking pruina, and it contains roccellic acid as its only lichen product.
Taxonomy
The genus was circumscribed in 2013 by Anders Tehler and Damien Ertz based on molecular phylogenetic analysis that showed that the species belongs in an isolated clade in the Roccellaceae along with Dendrographa, Syncesia, and Roccellina.Description
Austroroccella gayana presents as a, bush-like lichen whose cords drape 5–40 cm down seaside rocks. Most branches are cylindrical, but many widen into thin, shovel-shaped blades that give the thallus a pliable, waxy feel. The surface is smooth and never wears the talc-like frost that coats related genera; instead it shows sober grey-brown tones that darken toward the branch tips. Chemically the lichen is equally restrained: routine spot tests with potassium hydroxide, bleach or para-phenylenediamine yield no colour change, and thin-layer chromatography detects only roccellic acid, whereas the erythrin and lecanoric acids that are found in many Roccella relatives are entirely absent.A thin of vertically oriented, brown-tipped hyphae encloses a loose white medulla, while the basal holdfast turns coal-black as the hyphae compact against the rock. The internal partner is the green alga Trentepohlia, whose orange cells form a continuous layer just beneath the cortex. Reproduction is profuse: minute, disc-shaped apothecia stud the older branches in rows, their epruinose black bordered by a low collar of the thallus. Each fruit body shelters a 100 μm-thick hymenium threaded with delicate ; the asci discharge eight colourless ascospores that are spindle-shaped, divided by three cross-walls, and measure about 28 × 3 μm. Tiny pycnidia, seen as darker pin-pricks in the cortex, release thread-like conidia that provide an auxiliary means of dispersal.