Corticorygma
Corticorygma is a monotypic fungal genus in the subfamily Graphidoideae of the family Graphidaceae. It contains a single species, the corticolous crustose lichen Corticorygma stellatum. This script lichen is found in the shaded understory of rainforests in the Brazilian states of Rondônia and Paraná.
Taxonomy
Both the genus and the species were described as new to science in 2014 by the lichenologists Marcela Cáceres, Shirley Cunha Feuerstein, André Aptroot, and Robert Lücking. The type specimen of Corticorygma stellatum was collected from Fazenda São Francisco, located off the BR-319 highway, north of Porto Velho, at an elevation of. Cáceres and Aptroot found the lichen growing on tree bark in a primary rainforest on 15 March 2012.Molecular phylogenetics analysis shows that Corticorygma forms part of the Acanthothecis clade, which also includes Acanthothecis, Gintarasia, and Topeliopsis darlingtonii. This group of taxa was formally described as tribe Acanthothecieae, member of the Graphidaceae subfamily Graphidoideae.
Description
The thallus of Corticorygma stellatum is corticolous, meaning it grows on tree bark. It can reach up to in diameter and has a continuous, smooth, light grey surface without a visible . In cross-section, the thallus is 30–50 μm thick and comprises a cortex, a, and a medulla encrusted with numerous small, grey crystals that are insoluble in potassium hydroxide solution. The photobiont partner is Trentepohlia, a type of green algae with cells that are rounded to irregular, arranged in groups, and measuring 6–11 by 5–8 μm.The ascomata are, forming distinct, well-defined clusters that are . These clusters are 1–3 mm in diameter, with individual lirellae measuring 1–3 mm long, 0.2–0.3 mm wide, and 0.12–0.15 mm high. The of the ascomata is narrow and light brown, covered with a thick white . The is thin, dark brown, and also pruinose, while the is thick and pruinose.
The is dark brown, 15–20 μm wide, and prosoplectenchymatous. The thalline margin is 30–50 μm thick and similar in structure to the thallus. The is hyaline and prosoplectenchymatous, measuring 5–10 μm high. The hymenium is 100–120 μm high, hyaline, and clear, topped by a granular that is 15–20 μm high and dark grey-brown. The paraphyses are unbranched and smooth. No are observed. The asci are cylindrical to narrowly, measuring 100–120 by 25–30 μm. Each ascus contains a single ascospore, which is ellipsoid to oblong, richly, measuring 60–110 by 20–30 μm, and is 3–4 times as long as wide. The ascospores are hyaline,, and have angular. They do not react to staining with iodine.
The secondary chemistry of Corticorygma stellatum includes a complex of stictic acids, specifically stictic and hypostictic acids, along with two unknown compounds related to norstictic and connorstictic acids. The medulla reacts to chemical spot tests with a P+ reaction, and microscopic sections show a K+ efflux.