Sticta venosa
Sticta venosa is a species of terricolous, foliose lichen in the family Peltigeraceae. It is known only from Pichincha Province, Ecuador, and from Colombia. It was described as new to science in 2011.
Taxonomy
Sticta venosa was first formally described in 2011 by lichenologists Robert Lücking, Bibiana Moncada, and Javier Robayo. The type specimen was discovered by the first author in Río Guajalito Protected Forest, Ecuador, at an altitude of, nestled among mosses in a montane rainforest. The species name venosa is derived from the prominent formed by the ridges and on the lower side of the lichen.Description
General features
The thallus of Sticta venosa can reach up to in diameter, with individual extending up to long. The lobes are linear to slightly, wide, and exhibit extensive branching, especially near the tip. Both upper and lower surfaces of the lobes display strong and ridges, creating a appearance. The photobiont associated with Sticta venosa is from the cyanobacterial genus Nostoc.The upper surface of the lobes is blue-grey with a brownish tinge when fresh, turning pale brownish-grey when dry. The lower surface is white to yellowish-white and, apart from thin lines of dark brown tomentum that grow atop the ridges and form distinct, thin, radiating veins. The lobe margins are highly incised and, with tufts of dark brown hairs emerging from the incisions, particularly at the lobe tips. Marginal isidia are also present, which are terete to flattened and unbranched to branched, bearing a resemblance to.