Monocalenia


Monocalenia is a fungal genus in the family Gomphillaceae. It comprises the single species Monocalenia monospora, a leaf-dwelling lichen that occurs in Guinea and the Galápagos Islands.

Taxonomy

Genus Monocalenia contains a single species, Monocalenia monospora, which was originally described as Calenia monospora by the Czech lichenologist Antonín Vězda in 1979. The species was later transferred to its own genus by Amanda Xavier-Leite, Marcela Cáceres, and Robert Lücking in 2023 based on molecular phylogenetics analysis that showed it was unrelated to Calenia in the strict sense and instead allied with Asterothyrium. The genus is of several segregates from the historically broad concept of Calenia that were recognised following modern molecular systematic studies of the Gomphillaceae.
The genus name combines "Calenia" with a reference to the distinctive single-spored asci that characterise the species. Monocalenia is distinguished by its smooth thallus lacking, and apothecia with discs containing epithecial algae, and unusual single ascospores. While some morphologically similar species exist, molecular evidence supports Monocalenias placement as a separate genus based on its unique combination of and phylogenetic position.

Description

Monocalenia monospora forms a continuous growth on living leaves as a foliicolous lichen. The thallus has a smooth surface and lacks hair-like projections that are common in related genera. Its most distinctive features are its reproductive structures, which emerge from beneath the thallus surface and have a powdery white coating on their spore-producing.
The apothecia have two distinct parts: an inner and an outer derived from the main body of the lichen. What makes these structures particularly unique is the presence of symbiotic algal cells embedded within the upper layer of the apothecia – a feature rare among related lichens. The fungal partner produces just a single large spore per reproductive sac, rather than the multiple spores typical in most lichens. These spores are divided into many compartments by both vertical and horizontal septa.
The species also produces specialized reproductive structures called, which are pale and bristle-like. These structures bear chains of fungal cells with distinctive spindle-shaped segments. While some other species in the family share individual features with Monocalenia, this particular combination of characteristics – especially the single-spored asci and presence of algal cells in the apothecia – sets it apart as a distinct genus.

Habitat and distribution

Monocalenia monospora is from the type locality in the Republic of Guinea at Macenta, Ziama Massif, Sérédou, at an elevation of above sea level. It has also been recorded from the Galápagos Islands on Isla Santa Cruz in the upper moist zone above Bella Vista at elevation, where it was found growing on Malcolmia leaves. This indicates the species can grow as an epiphyllous lichen in both African and South American tropical montane forests.