Roccella phycopsis
Roccella phycopsis is a species of fruticose lichen in the family Roccellaceae. A study of Roccella phycopsis in Tunisia revealed that it contains methyl orcellinate, a chemical compound of interest for its anti-inflammatory activity.
Description
Roccella phycopsis forms small, shrubby tufts up to about 5 cm tall. Each tuft is made of narrow that rise more or less vertically from the substrate. At first the branches are round in cross-section, though they can become slightly angular or flattened with age, and their uneven, irregular pattern of forking gives the lichen a rather untidy appearance. Fresh material is a pale blue-grey or buff, while the inner body shows a yellow tinge close to the base. Powdery reproductive patches called soralia are plentiful: they start as tiny warts on the branch surface, then expand into globular, flour-like masses that shed microscopic particles for asexual dispersal and give older thalli a frosted look.Sexual fruit bodies are infrequent. When present they project conspicuously from the branches as rounded to elongated lumps, often twisted or misshapen. Unlike in many related lichens, the apothecia lack a rim of thallus tissue, so the whole is exposed and appears jet-black. Inside, the spore-bearing layer is threaded by support filaments that remain unbranched at the base but divide near the tip. Each sac contains eight colourless ascospores that become faintly brown with age; the spores are three-celled, straight to gently curved, and measure roughly 18–21 × 4–6 μm. Tiny flask-shaped structures produce curved, rod-like conidia 12–17 × about 1 μm, providing an additional means of reproduction. Standard chemical spot tests reveal a C+ reaction in the outer cortex, no reaction in the soralia, and a blue-white fluorescence under long-wave ultraviolet light in the medulla, indicating erythrin, roccellic acid, and sometimes lecanoric acid.