Xanthocarpia


Xanthocarpia is a genus of mostly crustose lichens in the family Teloschistaceae. It has 12 species with a largely Northern Hemisphere distribution.

Taxonomy

The genus was originally circumscribed in 1859 by Abramo Bartolommeo Massalongo and Giuseppe [De Notaris], with Xanthocarpia ochracea as the type species. This species has tetralocular ascospores.

Description

Xanthocarpia has a thallus that is either crust-like or like a shield or plate attached on the lower surface at a single central point. In some cases, the thallus is absent; in all cases, a cortex is absent. The lichen contains anthraquinones compounds. Xanthocarpia species often have apothecia, which are coloured yellow to orange. These apothecia are zeorine, meaning that the proper exciple is enclosed in the thalline exciple. Pycnidia can be present or absent; the conidia have a bacilliform to narrowly ellipsoid shape.

Species

Most Xanthocarpia species occur in the Northern Hemisphere. Several are found in southeastern Europe, with a collective distribution extending from the Mediterranean to the Arctic., Species Fungorum accepts 14 species of Xanthocarpia.