Megalotremis cauliflora
Megalotremis cauliflora is a species of corticolous, crustose lichen in the family Monoblastiaceae. It was described as a new species in 2008 based on material collected in Guadeloupe, and has since been reported from Sri Lanka. The lichen forms glossy, pale gray patches on bark that can spread across several centimeters, with the perithecia mostly buried in the thallus and visible only as slight bumps. It is unusual for the genus in having tiny brown, flattened blobs made of stuck-together spores at the openings of its asexual structures.
Taxonomy
It was described as a new species in 2008 by the lichenologists André Aptroot, Emmanuël Sérusiaux and Robert Lücking, based on material collected in Guadeloupe.Description
The lichen forms a glossy, pale mineral-gray to almost glassy-looking thallus that can spread over bark or overgrow loose plant debris, sometimes covering an area up to about across. The colony margin is typically traced by a thin, black line of up to 0.2 mm wide. Its photobiont is a green alga, with cells up to about 12 × 6 μm.The perithecia are immersed in the thallus and may be invisible from above, or show only as a slight swelling, each with a tiny black ostiole. They are globose and about 0.2–0.4 mm in diameter, with a carbonized wall roughly 50–100 μm thick. Under the microscope, the is pale yellowish and clear rather than oil-speckled, and it does not change color in an iodine test ; the threadlike filaments form a tangled network, and the asci lack an ocular chamber. Each ascus contains from one to four ascospores that are colorless at maturity and divided by a single median septum, measuring about 110–130 × 25–45 μm. The spore wall is 2–3 μm thick, with rounded internal compartments and an outer surface bearing low, obliquely oriented warts about 1 × 2 μm. No lichen products were detected in the thallus. The species is mainly characterized by its laterally positioned ostioles. Similar immersed perithecia occur in Megalotremis biocellata and Megalotremis verrucosa, but those taxa have 2–4 spores per ascus with a symmetrical septum. In habitat terms, its occurrence on coastal palms was treated as unusual for the genus, which is otherwise generally associated with wet-forest settings.
The asexual structures are especially distinctive. The conidiomata are pycnidia immersed in the thallus, more or less spherical to somewhat pear-shaped, about 0.2–0.3 mm in diameter, with a wall around 25 μm thick. The brown ostiole forms a short, neck-like projection about 0.2 mm tall, and it is capped by 5–15 tightly packed, flattened brown globules made of extruded conidia that resemble blood cells in shape. These globules are about 100–150 μm across and consist of densely agglutinated conidia that have turned brown; the conidia are produced within the pycnidia on colorless conidiogenous cells and are rod-shaped, colorless, and roughly 6–9 × 2.5–3 μm, already sticking together before being extruded. The original description emphasized that this is the first known Megalotremis reported with conspicuous brown blobs of agglutinated conidia outside the pycnidia, and suggested that their erythrocyte-like form may result from collapsing after drying; strong conidial agglutination is known in related genera such as Anisomeridium and Caprettia, and in some Coenogonium species, but without the same shape reported here.