Zeora confusa
Zeora confusa is a species of corticolous crustose lichen in the family Lecanoraceae. It was described from Sweden in 1955 as Lecanora confusa. A later molecular study of Lecanora supported resurrecting the genus Zeora for the former Lecanora symmicta group, and the species was transferred accordingly. It grows on the bark of trees and shrubs, particularly in coastal areas of Europe and North America. First identified in Sweden in 1955, this small, greenish-grey lichen forms smooth patches and is recognized by its pale yellowish-green reproductive structures. Once thought extinct in the Netherlands, it was rediscovered in 2000 growing primarily on poplar trees.
Taxonomy
It was described as new to science in 1955 by the Swedish lichenologist Ove Almborn. The type specimen was collected by Almborn himself on 26 August 1950, in Hallands Väderö, located in Torekov parish, Skåne, Sweden. The specimen was found growing on alder in an area called Kapellhamnskärret. This specimen is preserved as a lectotype in the Lund University Botanical Museum herbarium, having been formally designated as the lectotype by Arup and Ekman in 1991.It belongs to a group of yellow-green, usnic acid-containing lichens that were long treated informally within Lecanora but are now placed in Zeora.