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Coenogonium pineti

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Coenogonium pineti is a species of crustose lichen in the family Coenogoniaceae. It was first formally described by Erik Acharius in 1810, as Lecidea pineti.[2] Robert Lücking and H. Thorsten Lumbsch transferred it to Coenogonium in 2004 after molecular phylogenetic analysis suggested its placement in that genus. The lichen has a widespread distribution in cooler, temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere, but has also been recorded from southeastern mainland Australia and Tasmania.[3]

Although usually found growing on bark, Coenogonium pineti has also been found growing on mosses. Its thallus is smooth, greyish-green to greenish-black in colour, and lacks a prothallus; it measures 5–20 mm (0.2–0.8 in) in diameter. The apothecia are small (0.2–0.5 mm in diameter) and pale with a wide margin. Ascospores are ellipsoid with a single septum, measuring 9–14 by 2.3–4.5 μm.[4]

References

  1. ^ "Synonymy. Current Name: Coenogonium pineti (Ach.) Lücking & Lumbsch, in Lücking, Stuart & Lumbsch, Mycologia 96(2): 290 (2004)". Species Fungorum. Retrieved 21 June 2022.
  2. ^ Acharius, Erik (1810). Lichenographia Universalis (in Latin). Gottingen: Apud Iust. Frid. Danckwerts. p. 195.
  3. ^ Lücking, Robert; Stuart, Bryan L.; Lumbsch, H. Thorsten (2004). "Phylogenetic relationships of Gomphillaceae and Asterothyriaceae: evidence from a combined Bayesian analysis of nuclear and mitochondrial sequences". Mycologia. 96 (2): 283–294. doi:10.1080/15572536.2005.11832978.
  4. ^ Wu, Xiao-han; Liu, Fei-yu; Xin, Zhao; Jia, Ze-feng (2018). "A preliminary study on the lichen genus Coenogonium from China". Journal of Tropical and Subtropical Botany. 26 (4): 421–428. doi:10.11926/jtsb.3880.
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Coenogonium pineti: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Coenogonium pineti is a species of crustose lichen in the family Coenogoniaceae. It was first formally described by Erik Acharius in 1810, as Lecidea pineti. Robert Lücking and H. Thorsten Lumbsch transferred it to Coenogonium in 2004 after molecular phylogenetic analysis suggested its placement in that genus. The lichen has a widespread distribution in cooler, temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere, but has also been recorded from southeastern mainland Australia and Tasmania.

Although usually found growing on bark, Coenogonium pineti has also been found growing on mosses. Its thallus is smooth, greyish-green to greenish-black in colour, and lacks a prothallus; it measures 5–20 mm (0.2–0.8 in) in diameter. The apothecia are small (0.2–0.5 mm in diameter) and pale with a wide margin. Ascospores are ellipsoid with a single septum, measuring 9–14 by 2.3–4.5 μm.

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cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipedia authors and editors
original
visit source
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