Heterodermia rubrotricha
Heterodermia rubrotricha is a foliose lichen species in the family Physciaceae. It is found in Sri Lanka.
Taxonomy
Heterodermia rubrotricha was formally described by Gothamie Weerakoon and André Aptroot in their 2013 study of lichen biodiversity in Sri Lanka. The species is closely related to Heterodermia boryi, sharing a similar configuration, but differs distinctly by having red pigmentation on its marginal. Another related species, Heterodermia vulgaris, also exhibits red pigmentation, but in that species, the pigment occurs over the entire lower surface rather than just the cilia.The species epithet rubrotricha is derived from Latin, referring to the red coloration of its cilia.
Description
The thallus of Heterodermia rubrotricha is foliose and can form tufts up to 10 cm in diameter. It features whitish lobes that grow linearly, ascending or becoming, reaching lengths up to 4 cm and widths of 0.9–1.6 mm. The lobes taper at the tips, where they are narrower and recurved. Branching is, occurring every 0.5–2.0 cm. The upper surface of the lobes is smooth, shiny, and ranges from flat to convex, while the lower surface lacks both a and rhizines, being instead and whitish with corticate margins.A distinguishing characteristic of this species is the presence of prominent, black marginal, which are or branched, dull, 0.1–0.2 mm thick, and can grow up to 8 mm long. These cilia are mostly covered with a containing dark red pigment, excluding the very tips and bases. The species does not produce rhizines, soredia, isidia, or pseudocyphellae.
Apothecia are common, measuring 4–7 mm in diameter and occurring . Their margins feature 6–15 tapering lobes similar in form to the primary lobes. The apothecial are brownish-grey, typically heavily covered with white pruina. The hymenium is 100–180 μm tall, while the is pale brown and about 30 μm thick. are brown, contain one septum, have few, and measure 35–43 by 19–22 μm.
Chemically, the cortex of H. rubrotricha reacts yellow with potassium hydroxide, the medulla faintly yellow, and the red pigment on the cilia produces a purple reaction. Thin-layer chromatography has identified atranorin, zeorin, and a red anthraquinone pigment on the cilia.