Niebla rugosa


Niebla rugosa is a fruticose lichen that grows on rocks along the foggy Pacific Coast of Baja California in the [Sebastián Sebastián Vizcaíno Bay|Vizcaíno Bay|Vizcaíno] Desert. The epithet, rugosa is in reference to the wrinkled reticulated surface of the thallus.

Distinguishing features

Niebla rugosa is distinguished by a thallus divided into relatively few—less than 20–branches from a yellow pigmented holdfast, the branches generally strap-shaped, oblong to linear in outline, to 4 cm long and 3–7 mm wide, mostly simple, wavy along acute margins and cortical ridges, occasionally with short rounded lobes, especially near apex, with longitudinal spiraling ridges that divide and unite generally at 45° to form angled margins and intermittent ridges, the longitudinal ridges connected by transverse ridges, similar to a spiraled ladder, and by containing divaricatic acid, with triterepenes. Similar species are Niebla siphonoloba, distinguished by the lichen substance sekikaic acid and by transverse ridges branching between margins, Niebla podetiaforma, distinguished by reticulated vein-like cortical ridges between margins, Niebla contorta distinguished by the obtuse branch margins, and Niebla undulata that differs by having a smooth recessed cortical surface between ridges.

Taxonomic history

Niebla rugosa was recognized as a result of undertaking a taxonomic revision of the genus in regard to developing a lichen flora of Baja California, which began in 1986. It was first collected northwest of Bahía Tortugas near Punta Eugenia on the Vizcaíno Peninsula of Baja California. 17 May 1986, the type, Spjut 9699, deposited in the United States National Herbarium, and at the Universidad Autónoma de Baja California, Ensenada, Mexico. The species was subsequently collected along the east coast of Cedros Island on mesas north of Punta Canoas, and on small rocks in a pebble Niebla community along the beach near the northern boundary of the Vizcaíno Desert, just south of Campo Nuevo.
Niebla rugosa is only known from collections made by Richard Spjut and Richard Marin, while their herbarium specimens have been interpreted to belong to a broad species concept of Niebla homalea, one that recognizes only three species in the genus, two by the medulla reaction to para-phenylenediamine, depsidones, depsides and one by isidia, based on the genus concept defined by Spjut; however, the broad taxonomic concept has many inconsistencies.