Phacopsis australis


Phacopsis australis is a species of lichenicolous fungus in the family Parmeliaceae. It is found in a few locations in South Africa, where it grows on the thalli of several species of the leafy lichen genus Xanthoparmelia. Unlike other members of genus Phacopsis, the fungus does not induce the formation of galls in its host.

Taxonomy

The fungus was formally described as a new species in 2002 by lichenologists André Aptroot and Dagmar Triebel. The type specimen was collected from a farm in the Droekloof Mountains at an altitude of. Here it was found growing on Paraparmelia molybdiza, a foliose and saxicolous lichen that is now known as Xanthoparmelia molybdiza.

Description

Phacopsis australis grows superficially on the thallus of its host. Unlike other members of the genus Phacopsis, it is cecidogenous, meaning it does not cause the formation of galls in the host. Its apothecia are dark brown to black, range from sessile to slightly immersed in the thallus, and measure 0.2–0.4 mm in diameter. The hypothecium is hyaline to pale brown, measuring about 20–60 μm thick. The ascospores are ellipsoid to fusiform and contain oil droplets; they typically measure 12–15 by 5.5–7 μm with a 0.5 μm-thick spore wall.
Known hosts for Phacopsis australis are all from the genus Xanthoparmelia: X. annexa, X. molybdiza, X. conspersa and X. incerta.
Lecanora lasalliae is quite similar in appearance to Phacopsis australis, but this lookalike lacks algae in its excipulum, and has larger ascospores.

Distribution

Phacopsis australis is only known from a few collections, in Cape Province and in the Drakensberg region of KwaZulu-Natal. Although one of its hosts, X. conspersa, has a cosmopolitan distribution with many specimens having been studied, the fungus has not been recorded occurring out of South Africa.