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Lithogyalideopsis

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Lithogyalideopsis
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Lecanoromycetes
Order: Graphidales
Family: Gomphillaceae
Genus: Lithogyalideopsis
Lücking, Sérus. & Vězda (2005)[1]
Type species
Lithogyalideopsis poeltii
(Vězda) Lücking, Sérus. & Vězda (2005)
Species

L. aterrima
L. poeltii
L. vivantii
L. zelandica

Lithogyalideopsis is a genus of lichen-forming fungi in the family Gomphillaceae.[2] It comprises four rock-dwelling, crust-forming lichens that adhere tightly to siliceous rock in temperate to montane habitats. The genus was established in 2005 when these rock-dwelling species were separated from a related group based on their distinctive reproductive structures. These lichens are characterized by jet-black fruiting discs and unique bristle-like structures that release thread bundles for reproduction, resembling tiny chimney brushes.

Taxonomy

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Lithogyalideopsis was circumscribed in 2005 by the lichenologists Robert Lücking, Emmanuël Sérusiaux and Antonín Vězda as part of their major revision of the family Gomphillaceae. They segregated four rock-dwelling (saxicolous) members of the Gyalideopsis aterrima species complex into a separate genus because those lichens share a distinctive Aulaxina-type hyphophore—a minute bristle that releases bundles of propagules (diahyphae). In Lithogyalideopsis the hyphophore is black, needle-like and finishes in a small, hand-shaped (palmate) spray of threads; this architecture differs from the flabellate or simpler setae seen in Gyalideopsis (in the strict sense). Lithogyalideopsis is further characterised by dark, rim-less (lecideine) apothecia and relatively small, transversely-septate spores, features that together mark it out from its parent lineage.[1]

The type species is Lithogyalideopsis poeltii (originally described as Gyalideopsis poeltii). All species are confined to mineral substrates, often damp siliceous rock, and share the almost coal-black fruiting bodies that inspired the generic name (litho- = 'stone').[1]

Description

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The thallus of Lithogyalideopsis species is thin, inconspicuous and grey-green to blackish, lacking any erect sterile hairs (setae) that occur in some relatives. Because these species live on bare rock (they are saxicolous rather than leaf-dwelling) the surface is usually matt and finely cracked, without the crystalline sheen common in many foliicolous members of the family. Cells of the green algal photobiont are dispersed through a largely undifferentiated fungal layer, so the thallus has no real cortex.[1]

Sexual structures (apothecia) are minute, circular to slightly irregular discs that sit directly on the thallus. They appear jet-black even when wet and have a true fungal margin (true exciple) but no rim derived from thallus tissue (thalline margin); this margin type is termed lecideine. The proper exciple extends only a short distance below the disc, and the hymenium produces eight very small, colourless ascospores divided by a few transverse walls (septa).[1]

A distinctive diagnostic character is the genus' asexual propagules, or hyphophores. These are stiff, bristle-like black stalks (up to about 1 mm high) whose tip flares into a tiny palmate fan; from that fan radiate 3–5 repeatedly branched threads called diahyphae. The whole apparatus resembles a miniature chimney-brush and releases bundles of hyphae that can start new lichens when they land on suitable rock. This Aulaxina-type hyphophore, together with the black lecideine apothecia and small spores, sets Lithogyalideopsis apart from its parent genus Gyalideopsis.[1]

Habitat and distribution

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Lithogyalideopsis is confined to bare rock: every species in the genus is saxicolous, growing as a thin, crustose film on hard, usually siliceous surfaces and producing blackish, lecideine apothecia directly from the stone. Unlike the predominantly leaf-inhabiting members of the family Gomphillaceae, Lithogyalideopsis belongs to a small, non-foliicolous contingent that favours cool, moist rock faces in temperate or tropical-montane belts, with collections extending upward into upper-montane and occasionally subalpine zones where constant humidity prevails.[1]

Species

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Species Fungorum accepts four species of Lithogyalideopsis:[3]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g Lücking, Robert; Sérusiaux, Emmanuël; Vězda, Antonín (2005). "Phylogeny and systematics of the lichen family Gomphillaceae (Ostropales) inferred from cladistic analysis of phenotype data". The Lichenologist. 37 (2): 123–170. doi:10.1017/s0024282905014660.
  2. ^ Wijayawardene, Nalin; Hyde, Kevin; Al-Ani, Laith Khalil Tawfeeq; Somayeh, Dolatabadi; Stadler, Marc; Haelewaters, Danny; et al. (2020). "Outline of Fungi and fungus-like taxa". Mycosphere. 11: 1060–1456. doi:10.5943/mycosphere/11/1/8.
  3. ^ "Lithogyalideopsis". Catalogue of Life. Species 2000: Leiden, the Netherlands. Retrieved 30 June 2025.