Fuscopannaria leucosticta


Fuscopannaria leucosticta, commonly known as the rimmed shingle lichen, is a species of lichen in the family Pannariaceae. It has a thallus that lacks soredia and isidia, but has abundant apothecia with distinct white rims. Although its main centres of distribution are eastern North America and southeast Asia, where it grows in damp forests, it has been reported from various other high-altitude, humid locations.

Taxonomy

The lichen was first formally described by Edward Tuckerman in 1853 from specimens collected in the eastern United States. He placed it in the genus Parmelia, the customary generic placement for most foliose species at the time. By 1859 he described it as a member of Pannaria.
In more modern times, Per Magnus Jørgensen transferred it to the newly circumscribed genus Fuscopannaria, in which it is the type species. This genus contains largely temperate to arctic–alpine lichens, mostly small- species with amyloid apical structures in the asci that contain fatty acids and terpenoids. Fuscopannaria is species rich in the East Asian flora, particularly the F. leucosticta group. This includes the following species and their distributional centres: F. dispersa, F. dissecta, F. poeltii, F. leucosticta, F. protensa and F. siamensis.
In North America, Fuscopannaria leucosticta is commonly known as the "rimmed shingle lichen".

Description

The lichen has plentiful that are round or have a scalloped edge, measuring 2–3 mm in diameter and displaying chestnut-brown coloration. These squamules have white felty margins and are frequently found on a black. The lichen does not have any soredia or isidia. Additionally, apothecia with notable white rims are typically visible. The ascospores of this lichen are 23–27 by 9–11 μm and have a relatively thick, transparent outer wall that often narrows to a fine point at one or both ends.
All of the standard chemical spot tests are negative in Fuscopannaria leucosticta.

Similar species

Two sorediate counterparts Fuscopannaria leucosticta are F. coerulescens from Nepal and New Guinea and F. sorediata from eastern North America and Japan. Fuscopannaria rugosa, described from China in 2016, differs from F. leucosticta in its foliose-squamulose thallus, longitudinally wrinkled upper surface, and highly convex discs. The similarly named Fuscopannaria leucostictoides, found on the west coast of northern North America, is grayer in colour, does not have pointed spores, and contains atranorin.

Habitat, distribution, and conservation

Fuscopannaria leucosticta used to be widely distributed in temperate eastern North America, but its range has declined due to habitat destruction and reduction. In eastern Canada, it prefers old, wet forests. Its distribution includes Central America and the Caribbean, extending as far south as Cuba. In Mexico, it is found at a high-elevation location distribution model incorporating various environmental variables, including cedar presence and lack of human-induced disturbance, predicted high probability areas, and subsequent field verifications revealed 13 previously unsurveyed locations with high probability of occurrence, which can help guide future conservation efforts for the management of rare and at-risk species.
In 2007, Fuscopannaria leucosticta was reported from Ecuador, which the authors noted as "remarkable" due to the lack of any known collections in intermediate areas; they suggested it may be an example of a long-distance dispersal, or a relict species. Another surprising record was that from Tanzania the year prior. According to Jørgensen and Sipman, this record from the Uluguru forest region indicates the ancient history of the species and its existence around the Tertiary Madro-Tethyan sea. It seems to have expanded southward through the familiar pathway established by the Tertiary forests of Egypt and the Sudan into East Africa. In these tropical and subtropical locations, the lichen was found high-elevation, mountainous "mist zones", emphasizing their requirement for humid environments. Although very rare in Europe, F. leucosticta was rediscovered there in 2006 when a specimen was found in Greece–the first collection of the species in over a century.