Eremothecella nicobarica
Eremothecella nicobarica is a leaf-dwelling lichen in the family Arthoniaceae, described from Great Nicobar Island, India. It forms thin, pale greenish-grey patches on living leaves in shaded evergreen forests and is distinguished from related species by its highly septate ascospores, which have 15–17 cross-walls. Currently known only from its type locality, the species was discovered in 2015 and formally described in 2019.
Taxonomy
The species was described in 2019 by T.A.M. Jagadeesh Ram and G.P. Sinha as Eremothecella nicobarica. The holotype was collected on 30 May 2015 in the Shompen Hut forest along the East–West Road on Great Nicobar Island and deposited in the Central National Herbarium, Howrah, with an isotype in the Regional Herbarium, Botanical Survey of India, Port Blair. The specific epithet refers to its discovery in the Nicobar Islands.In the authors distinguished E. nicobarica from similar members of the genus by its higher ascospore septation: it resembles E. macrosperma in having non- fruiting bodies, but that species has only 7–12 septa; E. calamicola likewise lacks pruina yet has smaller, 5–7-septate spores.
Description
The thallus forms thin, matt, pale greenish-grey patches on living leaves, typically 15–50 mm across and about 10–20 micrometres thick; it lacks a and a distinct. The algal partner occurs in irregular to radiating plates of angular to rectangular cells.Ascomata are sharply delimited, scarcely raised, rounded to irregular 0.5–1.3 mm in diameter and 70–120 μm thick, dark brown to blackish-brown, and non-pruinose. The is a dense, layer that reacts K+, I+ and KI+. The hymenium is 70–110 μm high and stains I+, turning KI+ then quickly yellow. are branched and anastomosing, about 1.0–1.5 μm wide.
Asci are to more or less spherical, 65–100 × 52–70 μm, I−, with the ascus KI+ internally. Ascospores are initially colourless, later pale brownish, and gently curved, with the terminal cell enlarged and only slight constrictions at the septa; they are 15–17-septate, measuring 60–72 × 10–13 μm.
Asexual structures are present: pycnidia are flattened, black, oval to drop-shaped, producing very long, thread-like, multiseptate conidia 60–120 × 1.5–2.0 μm, often slightly wider at one end. Standard spot tests on the thallus are negative and thin-layer chromatography did not detect lichen substances.