Lichenostigma cosmopolites
Lichenostigma cosmopolites is a species of lichenicolous fungus belonging to the family Phaeococcomycetaceae. It was first described in 1999 from Spain and has since been found on multiple continents wherever its Xanthoparmelia hosts occur. The fungus appears as dark, net-like patches on the surface of infected lichens but does not seem to seriously harm its hosts.
Taxonomy
The fungus was described as new to science in 1999 by the lichenologists Josef Hafellner and Vicent Calatayud. The type specimen was collected by Calatayud from Serra Calderona in Spain, at an elevation of 350 m, where it was found growing on Xanthoparmelia tinctina.Description
Lichenostigma cosmopolites is a lichen-dwelling fungus that parasitises members of the widespread foliose lichen genus Xanthoparmelia. On an infected thallus it appears as a dark, net-like film of single-stranded, septate hyphae that lie largely on the surface of the host rather than penetrating its tissues. These filaments are dark brown, sparsely branched and measure 6–10 μm long by 4–7 μm wide; occasional slight constrictions at the cross-walls give them a beaded look.Reproduction takes place in minute, almost spherical fruit-bodies scattered across the hyphal network. Each ascoma is 60–100 μm wide and 30–45 μm high, dark brown to black, and opens to the outside through a small, irregular pore. Inside, broadly club-shaped asci develop in a single layer; each ascus contains eight ascospores. The ascospores are initially oval but mature to become almost spherical, 8–11 μm long by 3–5 μm wide, and acquire a fine, sculptured outer wall as the originally conspicuous contracts. When treated with potassium hydroxide solution followed by iodine, the ascus apex turns blue and the gelatinous interior of the ascoma shows an orange-red reaction—tests that aid in distinguishing the species.