Bactrospora flavopruinosa
Bactrospora flavopruinosa, the dead cedar lichen, is a species of lignicolous lichen of uncertain familial placement in the Arthoniales. Found in Bermuda, it was described as a new species in 2008. It forms thin, mostly hidden crusts on barkless Bermuda cedar wood, showing only as whitish patches with scattered yellow dots from its algal cells. The species is distinctive for its bright lemon-yellow, powdery fruiting bodies that contrast sharply with the black margins typical of related species, combined with exceptionally narrow, thread-like ascospores that do not fragment. It is known only from the Walsingham Nature Reserve in Bermuda, where it grows on the persistent dead trunks of Bermuda cedar trees killed by a twentieth-century scale insect outbreak, and forms part of a specialised community of wood- and bark-inhabiting lichens restricted to this habitat.
Taxonomy
Bactrospora flavopruinosa was described as a new species in 2008 by Franz Berger and André Aptroot, based on material collected in 2007 from the Walsingham Nature Reserve on Bermuda. The type specimen was found on a decorticated trunk of the endemic Bermuda cedar. The holotype is kept in the Natural History Museum in London, and isotypes are in several European herbaria.Bactrospora is a widespread but seldom abundant genus, usually corticolous and often overlooked because the thallus is weakly developed and specimens can be mistaken for non-lichenised fungi. The authors placed the species in Bactrospora ) based on a combination of features. It has a crustose thallus that lacks a and contains a Trentepohlia . Its apothecia are black with a that extends below the spore-bearing layer. Microscopically, the asci are cylindrical, each with eight spores, and have the characteristic "Bactrospora type" tip, including an iodine-positive apical ring. The ascospores are long, colourless, and divided by many septa, matching the patellarioides spore type used within the genus. Within Bactrospora, B. flavopruinosa is set apart by its consistently yellow, apothecial and its especially narrow, thread-like spores that do not break into fragments.
Description
The thallus of Bactrospora flavopruinosa is mostly immersed in the outer surface of the wood, and shows up only as a thin whitish patch with scattered yellow dots from its algal partner. In cross-section the thallus is very thin and, with only a few short, colourless fungal hyphae reaching the surface. Some areas are exposed while others are still covered by a thin film of the wood, giving a mottled look under magnification. The is Trentepohlia-like, forming branched filaments of broadly spindle-shaped, rough-walled cells about 11–18 × 7–9 μm.The apothecia are sessile, round to slightly top-shaped, 0.3–0.8 mm across and about 0.2 mm tall. Their discs are flat and coated in a bright lemon-yellow, powdery pruina; the margin is also pruinose, but looks glossy black where the coating has rubbed off, and is often toothed. Microscopically, the hymenium is clear and colourless, 100–150 μm tall, and iodine-positive; above it, the epihymenium contains bright yellow crystals that turn ochraceous in section after treatment with potassium hydroxide solution. The asci are cylindrical and each contains eight long, colourless ascospores with 9–15 septa; the spores are 45–55 × 1.5–2.5 μm, straight to slightly curved, and do not break apart. Pycnidia have not been observed. In K, the yellow pruina releases a yellow solution and briefly forms sulphur-yellow, needle-like crystals before dissolving again. Based on this reaction, the authors suggested the pruina may contain naphthopyran compounds such as simonyellin or protosimonyellin.