Lecidea coriacea


Lecidea coriacea is a species leprose lichen in the family Lecideaceae. Found in Europe and North America, where it grows on the bark and wood of various trees in old-growth and montane forests, it was scientifically described in 2016.

Taxonomy

Lecidea coriacea was described as a new species in 2016 by Håkon Holien and Zdeněk Palice. The type specimen was collected by Holien on 13 June 2002, from an old-growth Picea abies forest in Holmvassdalen, Nordland, Norway on the trunk of Salix caprea. The species epithet coriacea derives from the Latin word for leather, reflecting the characteristic brownish, leather-like colour of the apothecia. While it is likely related to some species currently assigned to the genus Puttea, it is provisionally placed in the genus Lecidea pending further taxonomic revision. In a later publication about the DNA barcoding of European lichens, L. coriacea was considered to be an apothecial morphotype of the genus Cheiromycina, although no formal taxonomic transfer was made.

Description

The thallus of Lecidea coriacea is thin and mostly endosubstratal, appearing whitish grey or pale greenish grey in fresh samples. Occasionally, it can be episubstratal in part, with a continuous or fragmented surface that sometimes has soredioid granules and yellowish pigmentation. The is. The ascomata are numerous, rounded to irregular, and often tuberculate. They measure 0.2–0.6 mm in diameter, with some reaching up to 0.8 mm. The is pale yellowish brown to dark brown, flat to strongly convex, and lacks. The margin is distinct, thin, and slightly darker than the disc. The is about 170–190 μm high, pale yellow, and reacts with potassium hydroxide solution to produce a golden yellow colour. The hymenium is colourless and measures approximately 110–140 μm in height. Asci contain 12–16 colourless, simple s, which measure 3.9–4.6 by 7.3–9.1 μm. Pycnidia are rare and roughly spherical, with conidia that are threadlike.
The thallus of the lichen does not react with any standard chemical spot test reagents, indicating the lack of secondary metabolites. The golden yellow colour resulting from the reaction of K with the hypothecium is due to the compound secalonic acid A.

Habitat and distribution

Lecidea coriacea is known from old-growth boreal and montane forests in Europe and North America. In Scandinavia, it has been recorded at elevations ranging from, while in the Czech Republic it has been found at and in Russia at. In Canada, it occurs at altitudes from, in Washington State at, and in Alaska at. The species grows on both bark and wood, often on old trunks of Betula, Picea, and Salix, as well as on conifer snags and dead branches. Commonly associated lichen species include Biatora efflorescens, Cheiromycina petri, Cladonia spp., Micarea denigrata, M. globulosella, M. prasina, Ochrolechia mahluensis, Parmeliopsis ambigua, Ramboldia cinnabarina, and Xylographa species.