Sagenidiopsis isidiata
Sagenidiopsis isidiata is a species of corticolous byssoid lichen in the family Roccellaceae. Found in tropical montane rainforests throughout Central America, South America, and the Antilles, it was described as new to science in 2011. The lichen is characterised by its cream-coloured to greyish thallus and numerous, which are small, cylindrical outgrowths on its surface.
Taxonomy
Sagenidiopsis isidiata was first scientifically described by lichenologists Göran Thor, John Elix, Robert Lücking, and Harrie Sipman. The type specimen was collected in the Biotopo del Quetzal in Baja Verapaz, Guatemala, from a montane rainforest habitat at an altitude of. The species name isidiata refers to the frequent presence of pseudoisidia on the thallus surface.The first author of this species had known about it for about 20 years, but it remained undescribed due to its unclear generic position. It is superficially similar to byssoid genera in the order Arthoniales, such as Crypthonia, Dichosporidium, and Herpothallon in the broad sense. Sagenidiopsis isidiata is distinct from its South American relative Sagenidiopsis undulata, as the latter lacks pseudoisidia and produces apothecia. The presence of diploschistesic acid in S. isidiata is unusual, as this lichen product was previously known to occur only in Diploschistes species.