Pseudopeltula heppioides


Pseudopeltula heppioides is a species of lichen in the family Lichinaceae. It forms small, greenish-olive, shield-shaped scales on volcanic rock. The species is distinguished by its fruiting bodies, in which the spore-producing layer becomes divided into many small compartments as it matures. It is known only from Baja California Sur in northwestern Mexico.

Taxonomy

Pseudopeltula heppioides was described as a new species in 1995 by the lichenologist Aino Henssen, in her treatment of the family Gloeoheppiaceae. In that framework, Pseudopeltula is one of the New World genera, and P. heppioides is the species in the genus characterized by having a hymenium that becomes multiply divided and partitioned into small units, each enclosed by its own excipulum.
Henssen chose the epithet heppioides because the small, thallus resembles lichens in the genus Heppia. She noted that it can look like Heppia adglutinata and could be confused with it, but the internal structure of the thallus, the asci and ascospores, and the early development of the apothecia fit Gloeoheppiaceae. The mature apothecia differ from those of G. turgida in that sterile hyphal strands subdivide the hymenium, and the tissue ultimately becomes separated into many small compartments with darkened margins; the ridged surface reflects those protruding margins. A 2024 phylogenetic reclassification of the Lichinomycetes did not support recognising a separate family for Gloeoheppia, and instead treated the genus within Lichinaceae.

Description

The thallus is greenish olive and, forming small, rounded units up to about 3 mm across. It is attached to the substrate by rhizoidal strands, and the lower surface is described as smooth. The upper surface is smooth to cracked, and in section the thallus is about 95–210 μm thick. The fungal hyphae form a around the single-celled cyanobacterial.
The apothecia are immersed and urn-shaped, with brown up to about 0.4 mm wide that may appear faintly ridged. Internally, the hymenium and react I+, and the mature hymenium becomes partitioned into multiple small segments, each surrounded by an excipulum. The asci are 8-spored, and the ellipsoid ascospores were reported as not well developed in the studied material. Pycnidia were not observed.

Habitat and distribution

The type specimen was collected on volcanic rock in Mexico, Baja California Sur. In Henssen's account, the species was known only from that type locality.