Relicina
Relicina is a genus of foliose lichens belonging to the large family Parmeliaceae. Established as a genus in 1974 after initially being treated as a series within Parmelia, Relicina now encompasses about 40 species worldwide. These lichens typically grow as yellow-green, leaf-like patches with flat fringed by short black hairs, attaching to their substrate by a swollen base. The genus is characterized chemically by the presence of usnic acid and various other lichen products, and is distinguished from related groups by details of ascospore structure and surface features.
Taxonomy
Relicina was originally conceived as a series of the large genus Parmelia by lichenologists Mason Hale and Syo Kurokawa in 1964. A decade later, they promoted it to the status of genus.The genus Relicinopsis, proposed by Australian lichenologists John Elix and Doug Verdon in 1986 as a segregate of Pseudoparmelia, was shown to be nested within Relicina in a 2017 molecular phylogenetics study.
Description
Relicina lichens have a leaf-like body with flat, two-sided that are typically attached by a somewhat swollen, bulbous base. The edge of each lobe is lined with short, black, hair-like structures called. The upper surface is generally yellow to yellow-green and may sometimes show small spots; it lacks the typical hairs and minute pores seen in some other lichens. Instead, the surface is covered by a continuous, pored layer. On the underside, the color ranges from pale brown to black, and it bears simple or branched, root-like structures that extend to the edges, helping secure the lichen to its substrate.The lichen's photosynthetic partner is a green alga similar to those in the genus Trebouxia. Reproduction occurs through apothecia, which are open, disc-like fruiting bodies located on the surface of the lobes. These apothecia have a margin that resembles the thallus and display a solid, uninterrupted that ranges in color from pale to dark red-brown. The disc lacks a powdery coating and is surrounded by a cup-shaped layer. The thallus-like margin is smooth or slightly scalloped and is often fringed with at its base; in some cases, this edge appears almost crown-like due to the influence of swollen and bulbous pycnidia.
Inside the apothecia, delicate filament-like cells called paraphyses are present; these are about 2–3 μm thick, mostly straight, and only lightly branched, with their tips being brown, rounded, and slightly expanded. The spore-bearing sacs, or asci, typically contain eight spores each. Each ascus features a well-developed, iodine-reactive zone known as the that is pierced by a narrow, non-reactive central strand with parallel sides; there is no distinct ocular chamber. The resulting sexual spores are in structure, translucent, ellipsoid in shape, and have walls about 0.5 μm thick.
In addition to these sexual structures, Relicina produces asexual fruiting bodies known as pycnidia. These are embedded in the lichen's surface and often appear somewhat swollen. They release conidia—small, asexual spores—that can be spindle-shaped or more uniformly cylindrical to.
Chemically, members of the genus Relicina contain usnic acid along with various other secondary metabolites such as depsidones, depsides, or fatty acids.