Polyblastidium hypoleucum
Polyblastidium hypoleucum, the cupped fringe lichen, is a widely distributed species of corticolous, foliose lichen in the family Physciaceae.
Taxonomy
The species was first formally described by the Swedish lichenologist Erik Acharius in 1814, who considered it a form of what was then known as Parmelia speciosa. Vittore Benedetto Antonio Trevisan de Saint-Léon reclassified it in genus Heterodermia in 1868. It was transferred to the newly circumscribed genus Polyblastidium in 2015 by Klaus Kalb.Description
Polyblastidium hypoleuca is a foliose lichen with a grey to blue-grey upper surface. The thallus lacks vegetative propagules such as soredia and isidia, and is instead composed of long, flat that spread outward and often develop short secondary lobes in the central parts of the thallus. The internal medulla is white. The underside is pale and lacks a distinct, while the rhizines are dark,, and concentrated along the lobe margins. Apothecia are common, borne on the upper surface, and frequently have margins that break up into small.Chemically, the species contains atranorin, zeorin, a terpenoid compound and probably leucotylin. In standard spot tests the cortex reacts K+ and P+, but is C–, KC– and UV–; the medulla is K–, C–, KC–, P– and UV–.
In North America, it is commonly known as the "cupped fringe lichen".