Cladonia albonigra
Cladonia albonigra is a species of fruticose lichen in the family Cladoniaceae. Found from Alaska to California, this lichen grows in both wet bogs and dry forest floors as long as there is abundant sunlight. The species develops characteristic tiered cup structures that start light-coloured but gradually blacken from the bottom up as the outer layer flakes away. It was first scientifically described in 1996 and has since been found in limited locations in Europe and Russia as well.
Taxonomy
The species was formally described by the lichenologists Irwin M. Brodo and Teuvo Ahti as part of their 1996 revision of the Cladonia chlorophaea species complex. The holotype, collected by Brodo in 1971 from an open lodgepole-pine bog on Graham Island in Haida Gwaii, anchored the name. Morphologically, C. albonigra is grouped with members of the C. chlorophaea aggregate but is set apart by two consistent traits: a conspicuously blackened medulla that advances from the base upward, and the frequent production of central proliferations in the scyphi. These characters are absent from other, otherwise similar species such as C. merochlorophaea. Despite sharing grayanic acid with the eastern North American C. grayi, the latter seldom melanises and rarely proliferates centrally, so confusion is unlikely. Chemotype variation within C. albonigra appears to correlate only loosely with subtle differences in stature, amount of squamulation and degree of melanisation, and all three chemotypes are currently treated as a single species.In a molecular phylogenetics analysis published in 2024, Cladonia albonigra was phylogenetically positioned within a clade that includes several closely related Cladonia species such as C. graeca, C. krempelhuberi, and members of the C. rappii complex, forming part of a larger grouping that is sister to the C. pulvinata clade.
Description
Cladonia albonigra begins as a —small, scale-like that lie close to or rise slightly from the substrate. These, 0.5–2 mm long, are grey-green to pale yellow-green above and white beneath, and they lack the powdery reproductive granules often seen in other lichens. From this crust grow slender, upright podetia, 1–4 cm tall and 1–2.5 mm wide. Each podetium terminates in a broad, cup-shaped ; the rim of the cup may be smooth or toothed, and the cups commonly "bud" new tiers either from the centre or the margin, sometimes forming four or five storeys. A striking feature is the podetium's strongly melanotic base: as the flakes away, the underlying tissue gradually turns black, so older parts look dark while the newest proliferations remain pale. The exposed surface is patchily covered with thick, convex and occasional tiny, round squamules that lie flat or curve outward like minute shields.The podetia often acquire a coarse granular or sorediate coating, especially on their upper half and within the cups, giving a dusty look. Brown, hemispherical apothecia appear only sparingly on the cup rims, and small reddish-brown pycnidia—flask-shaped bodies that release asexual spores—may also develop there. Chemical spot tests are distinctive: the thallus turns red with para-phenylenediamine, remains unchanged with potassium hydroxide, and fluoresces bright blue-white or not at all under ultraviolet light. Three chemotypes occur. The commonest, widespread from Haida Gwaii north to Alaska, contains grayanic acid together with fumarprotocetraric acid. A southern chemotype, frequent in coastal Washington, Oregon and California, replaces grayanic acid with 4-O-methylcryptochlorophaeic acid and shows heavier squamule development. A third, largely Alaskan strain lacks orcinol meta-depsides other than fumarprotocetraric acid and tends to be less intensely blackened and of medium height.