Mycobilimbia subbyssoidea
Mycobilimbia subbyssoidea is a species of crustose lichen in the family Ramalinaceae. This small lichen forms thin, greyish patches with tiny black fruiting bodies up to 1 mm across. It was found growing among dying moss on Heard Island, a remote and largely ice-covered island in the southern Indian Ocean, and remains known only from the original discovery site.
Taxonomy
Mycobilimbia subbyssoidea was described as new to science by Dag Øvstedal in a survey of the lichens of subAntarctic Heard Island. The holotype was collected on Corinth Head at 170 m elevation in 2001 by N.J.M. Gremmen. Earlier, the material had been listed only as Mycobilimbia sp.; subsequent review of the literature—including Southern Hemisphere species treatments—showed it lacked a valid name and warranted formal description.Description
The thallus is thin and indistinct, greyish, and lacks a protective outer skin. Its photosynthetic partner is a green alga of the Trebouxia type with cells 6–8 micrometres across. The fruiting bodies are black, up to about 1 mm in diameter, with a narrow but distinct rim and a flat ; the underside often shows patches of cottony white tissue.Internally, the spore-bearing layer is 100–110 μm tall and turns blue with iodine-based reagents. Beneath it lie a strongly red-brown layer and a blue-pigmented zone; the pigments intensify slightly in standard spot tests. The asci are of the Biatora-type and the paraphyses are very slender. Ascospores are colourless, with 1–3 cross-walls, typically 30–33 × 5–6 μm, and have pointed ends; no pycnidia were seen. No secondary metabolites were detected, as there was insufficient material for full chemical tests.