Xanthoparmelia pseudepheboides
Xanthoparmelia pseudepheboides is a species of foliose lichen in the family Parmeliaceae. It has a dark brown, highly branched thallus that grows loosely attached to rock surfaces. The species is found in mountainous areas of the Cape Floristic Region in South Africa.
Taxonomy
It was first described by Theodore Lee Esslinger in 2000 from specimens found in South Africa. He originally classified it in Neofuscelia, but that genus was later synonymized with Xanthoparmelia. Its appearance shares some similarities with Pseudephebe minuscula and Melanelia stygia, particularly in the texture and form of its thallus.Description
The thallus of Xanthoparmelia pseudepheboides is either foliose or partly prostrate and cushion-like, loosely attached or slightly elevated above the. It grows up to in diameter, though it can form larger colonies. The are narrow and highly branched, with a smooth, glossy, dark brown surface that becomes irregular and dull inward. It lacks common reproductive propagules like soredia or isidia, but forms pseudocyphellae, which are depressed, rounded to irregular patches on the thallus surface.The underside of the thallus is tan to pale brown, moderately to sparsely covered with rhizines, which help anchor the lichen to its substrate. The lichen's chemical spot test reactions include a bluish-green color change when treated with nitric acid, but no other secondary metabolites have been detected in this species.