Malmidea rhodopisoides
Malmidea rhodopisoides is a species of corticolous, crustose lichen in the family Malmideaceae. It is found in Brazil.
Taxonomy
The lichen was formally described as a new species in 2021 by the German lichenologist Klaus Kalb. The type specimen was collected by the author from at an elevation of. The species epithet alludes to its resemblance to Malmidea rhodopis.Description
Malmidea rhodopisoides is a crustose lichen with a thallus thickness of 20–40 μm. It is composed of isidia-like forming clumps that densely cover an orange-red prothallus. The thallus surface is dull, showing shades of grey to greenish grey, which turns orange-red when the cortex is abraded. Its medulla is also orange-red and has a K+ chemical spot test reaction.The species' is, with cells measuring 6–8 μm in diameter. Apothecia are sessile and rounded, measuring 0.7–1.5 mm in diameter and 0.4–0.5 mm in height. The apothecial is initially flat but becomes slightly convex, ranging in colour from beige to dark brown. The margin around the disc is about 0.1 mm thick, bulging, and elevated above the disc, typically orange-red and occasionally partly blackish.
The of Malmidea rhodopisoides is of the piperis-type, hyaline at the periphery, with the inner part containing hydrophobic granules of norsolorinic acid. The is approximately 20 μm high and varies from hyaline to light brown. The is relatively tall, ranging from 200 to 400 μm, reddish to dark brown in colour, and does not react to potassium hydroxide. The of the species is either indistinct or slightly granular, while the hymenium is hyaline and stands 70–80 μm high.
Asci within this species measure 60–70 by 20–25 μm, each containing 6–8 ascospores. These spores are broadly ellipsoid to, lack septa, with a uniformly thickened wall and a approximately 1 μm thick. The size of the spores ranges between 15 and 20 by 9–12 μm.
Chemically, Malmidea rhodopisoides is characterized by a major presence of norsolorinic acid and a lack of atranorin.