Cryptothecia demethylconfluentica


Cryptothecia demethylconfluentica is a corticolous lichen in the family Arthoniaceae. It is a small crustose lichen that forms pale ochre-coloured crusts on tree bark in primary rainforest in northeastern Brazil. The species is distinguished by its powdery reproductive granules scattered across the thallus surface and by the presence of two specific chemical compounds in its tissues that are used to identify it. It was formally described in 2022 from material collected in in Sergipe State and remains known only from this locality.

Taxonomy

Cryptothecia demethylconfluentica was described in 2022 by André Aptroot from material collected on tree bark in at about elevation. The holotype is deposited in the herbarium of the . The species is a bark-dwelling Cryptothecia with colorless, ascospores measuring 50–56 × 20–22.5 μm, and a thallus containing demethylconfluentic and confluentic acid. In a global key to Cryptothecia, it keys out using this combination of spore size and chemistry.

Description

The thallus of Cryptothecia demethylconfluentica is crustose and continuous, forming a dull, pale ochraceous patch up to about across while remaining under 0.1 mm thick. It lacks a and is not bordered by a distinct. It bears granular that lie on the thallus rather than being grouped into soralia. The is. The spore-producing areas are not visibly distinct from the surrounding thallus. The asci are not visible to the naked eye. They occur singly, are immersed in the thallus, and are roughly spherical, about 100–125 μm in diameter. Ascospores are produced eight per ascus. They are hyaline, muriform, ellipsoid, and measure 50–56 × 20–22.5 μm, without a gelatinous sheath. Pycnidia have not been observed. In standard spot tests the thallus is UV–, C–, K–, KC– and P–. Thin-layer chromatography detects demethylconfluentic and confluentic acid as the main lichen substances.

Habitat and distribution

Cryptothecia demethylconfluentica grows on tree bark in primary rainforest in Parque Nacional Serra de Itabaiana, at around elevation. As of the original publication, it had not been reported from outside Brazil. No additional occurrences were reported up to 2025.