Trypethelium xanthoplatystomum
Trypethelium xanthoplatystomum is a species of corticolous crustose lichen in the family Trypetheliaceae. This tropical lichen forms yellowish to greyish-green crusty patches on tree bark and is distinguished by its bright orange-yellow, raised, wart-like structures that contain clusters of small fruiting bodies. It can be identified by its yellow fluorescence under ultraviolet light, caused by the presence of lichexanthone in the lichen's tissues. It was described as new to science in 2016 by Adam Flakus and André Aptroot from material collected in lowland Bolivia.
Taxonomy
The species was described from a type specimen collected in 2009 in Ríos Blanco y Negro Wildlife Reserve, Guarayos Province, Santa Cruz Department, Bolivia. Its name refers both to the presence of the compound lichexanthone in the thallus and to its close resemblance to Trypethelium platystomum. The two are distinguished by chemistry: T. xanthoplatystomum contains lichexanthone, while T. platystomum lacks it.Description
The thallus is, with a up to 60 μm thick. It is smooth to slightly swollen, somewhat shiny, continuous, yellowish to greyish green, and up to 4 cm across, about 0.3 mm thick. It does not cause swellings in the host bark and is not bordered by a black.The are distinct from the thallus, raised, irregular in outline, and 1.0–1.5 × 1.5–3.0 mm and 0.9 mm high. They are orange-yellow, with almost vertical to basally constricted sides, and contain a yellow-orange pigment but no embedded bark tissue. The ascomata are pear-shaped, 0.3–0.5 mm in diameter, aggregated within the pseudostromata. Their walls are greyish to fully, uniform, and up to 60 μm thick. Each ascoma has an apical, unfused pore that is flat and black. The is clear. The asci contain eight spores each. The ascospores are colorless, spindle-shaped, with rounded ends, divided by 8–14 septa, and measure 45–65 × 9–12 μm. They usually have a thin gelatinous sheath up to 3 μm thick. Pycnidia have not been observed.
The thallus surface is UV+ yellow, consistent with lichexanthone, while the medulla is K−. The pseudostromata surface is UV+ and reacts K+, while the inner yellow-orange pigment reacts K+. Thin-layer chromatography confirmed the presence of lichexanthone and parietin.