Sporopodium soredioflavescens
Sporopodium soredioflavescens is a foliicolous lichen in the family Pilocarpaceae. It forms a thin, pale greenish film on living leaves in primary rainforest in central Brazil. It is the first known member of its genus to produce soredia, which spread across the leaf surface. It was formally described in 2022 from material collected in the Reserva Cristalino region of Mato Grosso and has since been recorded in São Paulo State.
Taxonomy
Sporopodium soredioflavescens was described in 2022 by André Aptroot from material collected on living leaves in primary rainforest in the Reserva Cristalino at an elevation of. The holotype is deposited in the herbarium of the Federal University of Mato Grosso do Sul. Within Sporopodium, the species was considered most similar to S. aeruginascens but differs in having a thallus with soredia and well-developed. At the time of description, soralia had not been reported in any other known species of the genus, and the combination of a leaf-dwelling habit and a sorediate thallus supported recognition of S. soredioflavescens as a distinct species.
Description
The thallus of Sporopodium soredioflavescens is crustose, continuous, and dull, forming a pale greenish film up to about across and under 0.1 mm thick; it lacks a . The surface has even paler, hemispherical warts about 0.05 mm wide, spaced roughly 0.1 mm apart, and lacks a distinct . The thallus bears, mostly towards the thallus margin. The soredia form a powdery layer that is slightly darker green than the surrounding thallus and lies on the surface. The is . Sexual fruiting bodies have not been observed. are present and stain blue with iodine. They are 0.2–0.3 mm in diameter and up to 0.3 mm high, strongly concave, deep yellow inside and pale yellow outside, and attached to the thallus by a white hyphal base. Asexual spores have not been observed. All standard spot tests were negative. Thin-layer chromatography was not performed because too little material was available. The yellow pigment was inferred to be a xanthone based on its colour and comparison with other Sporopodium species.
Habitat and distribution
Sporopodium soredioflavescens grows on living leaves in primary rain forest in the Reserva Cristalino region of Mato Grosso, Brazil, at elevations between about. When it was described in 2022, it had not been reported from outside Brazil. Later records extended its known range to São Paulo state.