Biatora


Biatora is a genus of lichens in the family Ramalinaceae. Originally circumscribed in 1817, the genus consists of crustose and squamulose lichens with green algal photobionts, biatorine apothecia, colorless, simple to 3-septate ascospores, and bacilliform pycnospores.

Description

Biatora species are crustose lichens with a spreading thallus that may appear thin and somewhat membranous in places. The surface is often cracked and, in species that grow in association with mosses, may be or warted. The thallus is typically creamy white, dull green, glaucous green, or green-grey and lacks a distinct outer protective layer. Some species produce soredia, small reproductive that facilitate dispersal. A, the initial fungal layer that some lichens form before developing a full thallus, is absent. The photosynthetic partner is a alga, a group characterized by spherical to broadly ellipsoidal cells.
The reproductive structures are, meaning they lack a derived from the lichen thallus itself. They are or closely to the surface and range from weakly to strongly convex. In some species, the apothecia are initially flat with a shallow margin but later become . Their colour varies widely, including light beige, dark reddish brown, green-grey, bluish green, or khaki. Black apothecia are rare but, when present, have a green or blue tint when wet. Most species lack, the powdery surface coating found on some lichens.
A well-developed is present but becomes reflexed over time. It consists of tightly packed, radiating hyphae embedded in a gel matrix that remains stable in potassium hydroxide solution and does not swell. The outer edge may be coated with a thin gel layer. The hymenium, where spores develop, is 30–100 μm tall and typically lacks a distinct , though some species show pale pigmentation at the top. It does not contain granules or oil droplets and reacts with iodine, staining red-brown when young and blue in older herbarium specimens. Below the hymenium, the is distinct and slightly opaque due to the presence of ascogenous hyphae. The, a supporting tissue beneath the hymenium, consists of interwoven hyphae embedded in a dense gel matrix.
The paraphyses, sterile filamentous structures within the hymenium, are coherent in KOH, have narrow , and are mostly unbranched, though occasional branching or connections occur. The tips of the paraphyses are slightly swollen, sometimes reaching up to 5 μm in diameter, and rarely bear a distinct cap or hood. The asci, where spores develop, contain eight spores and have a Biatora-type structure. They feature a blue-staining apical dome penetrated from below by a non-staining apical cushion, which is surrounded by a deeply blue-staining zone. The ascus walls themselves do not stain in K/I but are surrounded by an outer layer that reacts red-brown in iodine and blue in K/I. The ocular chamber, an internal structure within the ascus, is relatively small.
The are colourless, with a shape ranging from ellipsoidal to or . They may be aseptate or have between one and seven septa. The spores are smooth and do not possess a distinct outer coating. Asexual reproduction occurs via conidia, which are produced in small, flask-shaped reproductive structures called pycnidia. These structures are within the thallus and have an unpigmented or weakly pigmented wall, similar in colour to the hymenium. The conidia themselves are colourless, aseptate, and .
Chemically, Biatora lichens can contain a variety of secondary metabolites, including gyrophoric acid and argopsin, and less commonly, other depsides, depsidones, xanthones, or usnic acid. Some species, however, lack detectable secondary metabolites when analysed using thin-layer chromatography.

Species

The taxon Biatora marmorea, found in Alaska, was proposed as a new species in 2020; however, it is an illegitimate name as it had already been used for a species that is now known as Bagliettoa marmorea.