Upretia
Upretia is a genus of lichen-forming fungi in the family Teloschistaceae. Species in this genus form rounded, crust-like growths on rock, typically olive-grey to brownish grey in colour, with lobed or scale-like margins. The genus is known from India and China, with one species also recorded from Mexico, and currently includes five described species. It occurs on exposed rock in habitats ranging from low-elevation bauxite outcrops and arid valley systems to high-elevation alpine deserts on the Tibetan Plateau. A 2023 molecular study confirmed the genus as a distinct lineage, with its closest relative being the Himalayan genus Ioplaca.
Taxonomy
Upretia was circumscribed by the lichenologists Sergey Kondratyuk, Arne Thell, and Jae-Seoun Hur in 2017, with Upretia amarkantakana assigned as the type species. Upretia is a member of the subfamily Caloplacoideae of the Teloschistaceae. The genus is named in honour of the Indian lichenologist Dalip Kumar Upreti, recognizing his contributions to the study of Indian lichens.A 2023 phylogenetic study based on internal transcribed spacer sequences recovered Upretia as a well-supported monophyletic genus, with Ioplaca as its closest sampled relative. In that analysis, the newly described Chinese species U. zeorina formed a distinct lineage that was sister to U. squamulosa. The authors also noted that available sequence data leave the limits of the type species U. amarkantakana unclear, and that broader sampling will be needed to settle its circumscription. Two further Chinese collections were treated as distinct but were left undescribed because each is known from only a single specimen.
In 2025, Yang and colleagues described Upretia xizangensis from the Tibet [Autonomous Region] of China, based on material collected on rock at about 2,742–3,011 m elevation. In an ITS-based phylogenetic analysis, the new species was recovered within Upretia with strong support, in a clade associated with three other members of the genus.
The monotypic genus Ioplaca from the eastern Himalayas differs from Upretia in thallus colour, areolae structure, and apothecial characters.
Description
The genus Upretia is characterized by a crustose thallus that is typically orbicular in shape and ranges from to somewhat in form. The central part of the thallus often has a subsquamulose appearance but can sometimes be to. Its colour varies from olive-grey to brownish grey or ash-grey. The thalline lobes of Upretia are generally narrow to wide, branched, and have a flat to slightly convex surface, often covered with a fine dusting known as.The outermost layer of the thallus, or layer, is thin and made of tightly interwoven cells. The uppermost cells in this layer are typically brownish, but there is no distinct. The inner layer of the thallus, or medulla, is white. Both a prothallus and are usually present and are characterized by their black colour.
The apothecia of Upretia are to in form, and in some species the is present early in development but an inner becomes visible later. The disc colour varies by species, ranging from bright orange or brownish orange through to dark brown or blackish. The, the layer beneath the thalline margin, also has a paraplectenchymatous structure. The paraphyses, or sterile filaments within the apothecia, contain oil droplets. Each ascus typically contains eight spores. These are clear and, meaning they are divided into two components separated by a central septum with a hole. The, or asexual spores, are narrowly and small.
Standard spot test reactions vary among species. The thallus is typically K−, but taxa with gyrophoric acid can show a C+ reaction in the thallus or thalline margin. In U. xizangensis, the thallus is K− and C+, while the apothecial surface and epihymenium are K+ purple-red. In the type species, parietin and an additional olive spot at RF class 4 have been reported from the apothecial disc. Reported secondary metabolites in the genus include gyrophoric acid and, in some taxa, parietin.