Carbacanthographis indica
Carbacanthographis indica is a species of bark-dwelling crustose lichen in the family Graphidaceae. It occurs in Meghalaya, India.
Taxonomy
The species was described as new to science in 2011 by Bharati Sharma and Pradnya Khadilkar, based on material housed in the Ajrekar Mycological Herbarium. Their Latin states that it resembles C. marcescens but differs in having spores with transversely arranged septa. The holotype was collected in the Garo Hills of Meghalaya, from a Lagerstroemia forest on 5 November 1977. In the original account, C. indica is defined by a laterally, trans-septate ascospores, and the presence of salazinic acid. In their comparisons, the authors note that C. marcescens differs in having smaller, spores. They also distinguish C. indica from morphologically similar species such as C. induta and C. iriomotensis by chemistry, and discuss Graphis garoana as a related Indian species that fits Carbacanthographis but has much longer lirellae and contains norstictic acid in addition to salazinic acid.Description
The thallus of Carbacanthographis indica is a crust tightly attached to bark that is greyish white, flat, and variably smooth to rough, with cracking. The thallus margin is defined by a black. The fruiting bodies are, which are conspicuous and often the same colour as the thallus, with a clearly raised. They are usually irregularly branched and partly break through the thallus surface, measuring about 1–5 mm long, with pointed ends. The exposed is slit-like and lacks. The wall around the slit-like fruiting body narrows towards the opening, is blackened and hardened along the sides, and has a distinctly orange-brown base.Microscopically, the hymenium is clear, lacks granular inclusions, shows no iodine staining reaction, and is 87–137 μm high. The paraphyses are, and the are short and only faintly warty. Each ascus contains eight spores. The ascospores are hyaline and trans-septate, with 10–15 transverse septa, measuring 25–70 × 7.5–10 μm; in iodine they show only a weak positive colour change. Chemical tests detected salazinic acid as the sole lichen product.