Staurothele rugosa
Staurothele rugosa is a species of saxicolous crustose lichen in the family Verrucariaceae. The species was first described in 1991 from specimens collected on sandstone at Dakota Ridge in Colorado. It forms a conspicuously rough, ashy gray crust made up of tightly packed, angular blocks that give the rock surface a corrugated, mosaic-like appearance. The lichen is found in the Rocky Mountain region of Colorado and Utah, growing on sandstone at elevations of around 5,400 to 6,000 feet.
Taxonomy
Staurothele rugosa was described as a species by John W. Thomson in his 1991 revision of the North American species of Staurothele. This genus, which belongs to the family Verrucariaceae, comprises a group of crustose lichens with immersed perithecia and multi-celled ascospores. The species was based on a type collection from Dakota Ridge, just southwest of Fort Collins in Larimer County, Colorado, where it was growing on sandstone of the Lytle Formation at elevation.Thomson distinguished S. rugosa from other superficially similar species by the combination of its very roughened, ashy gray thallus and large brown ascospores. He contrasted it in particular with Staurothele lecideoides, which has smaller, tile-like areoles, a less strongly rugose surface, and much smaller, hyaline spores, as well as with more typical Staurothele species that lack the conspicuously coarse, angular areoles that characterize S. rugosa.
Description
Staurothele rugosa forms a crustose thallus made up of flat, angular that are about 0.2–0.7 mm across. The upper surface of these areoles is ashy gray and conspicuously roughened, with a dense, finely powdered coating that is arranged in an angular pattern; under a lens this gives the surface an almost worm-like, corrugated appearance. The sides of the areoles are steep and black, so the thallus looks like a tightly packed mosaic of dark-edged blocks set into the rock surface.The reproductive structures are completely immersed within the areoles, so that only the tiny opening is visible at the surface. Unlike some other Staurothele species, S. rugosa lacks a distinct, separate ; instead, the upper part of the perithecial wall is dark and becomes paler toward the base. Each ascus usually contains one or two spores. The ascospores are brown and —divided by numerous transverse and longitudinal septa into many small, brick-like compartments—and are large for the genus, measuring about 52–70 × 35–37 μm.