Pulvinora
Pulvinora is a genus of saxicolous lichens in the family Lecanoraceae. The genus was established in 2021 when DNA studies showed that two species then placed in Lecanora formed a distinct evolutionary lineage. Later work broadened the genus to include three additional species formerly treated in Lecanora, bringing the total number of recognised species to five. Species of Pulvinora form small cushions or thick, warty crusts on rock, and they produce black apothecia that start with raised rims but become strongly domed as they mature.
Taxonomy
The genus Pulvinora was circumscribed in 2021 by Evgeny Davydov, Lidia Yakovchenko, and Christian Printzen after multilocus analyses showed that the North American Lecanora pringlei and a morphologically similar Altai Mountains taxon formed a well-supported lineage distinct from Lecanora in the broad sense. The authors erected the new genus Pulvinora within Lecanoraceae, designated P. stereothallina as the type species and transferred L. pringlei as P. pringlei. In that initial framework, Lecanora cavicola could not be tested with DNA sequence data, and some material identified as L. subcavicola was placed outside Pulvinora.In 2025, Edyta Mazur and Lucyna Śliwa re-evaluated the group using DNA sequences from three loci. They recovered Lecanora cavicola and L. subcavicola as a strongly supported clade sister to P. pringlei and P. stereothallina, making the expanded Pulvinora clade monophyletic. On that basis, they proposed a broader circumscription of Pulvinora and made the new combinations P. cavicola and P. subcavicola. They also transferred Lecanora brandegeei to Pulvinora on morphological and chemical grounds, while noting that specimens labelled Lecanora cf. subcavicola in earlier work appear to represent a different lineage and may belong with Glaucomaria rather than Pulvinora.
Description
Pulvinora species have asci similar to those found in genus Lecanora. Their apothecia are mycolecanorine, meaning they are lecanorine, but without photobiont cells in the. The apothecia eventually become strongly convex with an that is pushed below the.With the broader circumscription of the genus, thallus form ranges from distinctly cushion-like and stalked to a thick crust made of warty, to units that can still appear when the units become narrowed at the base or weakly stalked. Across the expanded genus, species share similar apothecial structure and a chemical profile in which atranorin and alectorialic acid are common major substances, with additional acids varying among species.