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555 Color photographs<br />

55 Black and white photos and drawings<br />

996 Distribution maps<br />

Volume 1 -2 edition 1995<br />

Volkmar Wirth<br />

(English translation by Doyle Anderegg)<br />

The <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

<strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong><br />

1


Foreword<br />

In the last ten years studies <strong>of</strong> the lichen flora <strong>of</strong><br />

the region have made substantial progress. This<br />

progress goes hand in hand with a general<br />

advance in the knowledge <strong>of</strong> the lichens in and<br />

around central Europe – a phenomenon who’s<br />

parallel is found in many other fields <strong>of</strong><br />

knowledge and not ultimately associated with our<br />

days <strong>of</strong> easy circumstances.<br />

The strongly rising interest in lichens reflects<br />

also in the large number <strong>of</strong> new publications,<br />

which makes an entrance into lichen studies and<br />

lichen floristics possible. To these publications<br />

are to be added also the “Lichen Flora” and “The<br />

<strong>Lichens</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong>” by the author,<br />

which are sold out in spite <strong>of</strong> later editions. The<br />

first <strong>of</strong> these books aids in the determination <strong>of</strong><br />

species and refers to the surrounding ecological<br />

characteristics <strong>of</strong> single lichens; the other<br />

introduces the results <strong>of</strong> an extensive charting <strong>of</strong><br />

the lichens <strong>of</strong> the region and it is richly<br />

illustrated. Both have been completed. It was<br />

then obvious, a synthesis <strong>of</strong> the two – or more<br />

precisely – the expense <strong>of</strong> the two books, that<br />

was important. Basic work on the lichens <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong> to include keys and to<br />

expand the ecological diagnoses was repeatedly<br />

suggested in the interval. This synthesis is<br />

herewith submitted.<br />

Whereas the ecological characteristics <strong>of</strong> the<br />

lichens <strong>of</strong> the vicinity are unaltered from the<br />

lichen flora <strong>of</strong> 1980, the determination keys had<br />

to be entirely new work. They required not only<br />

considerable research into the knowledge <strong>of</strong><br />

characteristics <strong>of</strong> species, but also the numerous<br />

new records <strong>of</strong> species <strong>of</strong> the region. On the side<br />

<strong>of</strong> the “Lichen Atlas” over 50 new species have<br />

been recorded for <strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong> alone.<br />

Newly added were descriptions <strong>of</strong> the<br />

systematic and diagnostically important<br />

characteristics <strong>of</strong> the representative genera.<br />

These previous species keys with morphologicalanatomical<br />

characterizations <strong>of</strong> genera, which<br />

have had a long tradition in comprehensive keys<br />

and e.g. also are contained in the newer lichen<br />

flora <strong>of</strong> POELT & VÉZDA and PURVIS et al. seem for<br />

this work especially necessary, since the genus<br />

key is <strong>of</strong>ten only introduced in the interest <strong>of</strong> an<br />

easier keying <strong>of</strong> “accumulated genera.”<br />

For Renatem, Gesine and Johannes<br />

Numerous special publications <strong>of</strong> the genera<br />

served with regard to more modern characters,<br />

which refer to lichen flora and the guiding work<br />

<strong>of</strong> HAFELLNER (1984) as a well <strong>of</strong> information.<br />

The portion with color photographs was<br />

supplemented. In the species distribution maps<br />

extensive further charting has been allowed. We<br />

have however shown on a series <strong>of</strong> charts the<br />

unsatisfactory mapping <strong>of</strong> generally known<br />

species. We have the general desire <strong>of</strong> the land<br />

owner for environmental protection in<br />

establishing oversight in retaining the genera,<br />

although the known circumstantial data at the<br />

moment was handled in connection with special<br />

interests.<br />

The preparation <strong>of</strong> this book was made<br />

possible in this lavish form, first <strong>of</strong> all by the<br />

financial support <strong>of</strong> the Foundation for the<br />

Protection <strong>of</strong> Nature in the Environmental<br />

Ministry (Stiftung Naturschutzfonds beim<br />

Umwelt-Ministerium). I sincerely thank the<br />

managing director <strong>of</strong> the foundation, Dr. E.<br />

HEIDERICH, for the extensive uninterrupted<br />

support. The book could not have begun without<br />

the essential financial help in support <strong>of</strong> the<br />

printing. Because the work stands on the<br />

shoulders <strong>of</strong> almost all other fundamental works<br />

and with the greater financial support made<br />

available, the lichen work rather than being the<br />

single handed work <strong>of</strong> one, the writing and daily<br />

managing was an equal effort with others. The<br />

free space for the work in this book was always<br />

restricted and the print is to provide greater<br />

continuity. Inadequacies, which may not be<br />

found in small number but which like to be<br />

avoided, have their cause here. I am therefore<br />

grateful to those, who assisted with patience,<br />

encouragement and support, to manage and to<br />

ease these situations: Dr. W. KRAHL, Dr. K. H.<br />

HARMS and Dr. J. Marx and the publisher ULMER<br />

with Miss U. STAMMEL, Mr. D. KLEINSCHROT, Dr.<br />

S. VOLK and Mr. R. ULMER. I recognize also<br />

those who have assisted, in giving an attractive<br />

format to the first edition <strong>of</strong> these basic works:<br />

Dr. G SCHMID and Dr. U. KÜHL <strong>of</strong> the Foundation<br />

for the Protection <strong>of</strong> the Environment for<br />

beginning the venture, later – in the realization --<br />

especially Dr. S. KÜNKELE.<br />

2


One by one I thank numerous colleagues for<br />

particulars <strong>of</strong> taxonomy, chemistry, and<br />

diagnostics, besides finding evidence and sundry<br />

other assistance.<br />

For finding evidence I thank R. Cezanne,<br />

Miss M. EICHLER, Dr. K. H. HARMS, M. HEKLAU,<br />

Dr. V. JOHN, Dr. H. MAYRHOFFER, Dr. M. NEBEL,<br />

Dr. H. SCHÖLLER, U. SCHWARZ, Dr. M. WITSCHEL<br />

as well as (for the first edition) Dr. H. BIBINGER,<br />

Dr. U. BUSCHBOM, Dr. R. DÜLL, Dr. O. KLEMENT,<br />

Dr. H. MUHLE, H. OBERHOLLENZER, H. PAYERL, Dr.<br />

G. PHILIPPI, Dr. H. SCHINDLER, Dr. F. SCHUHWERK,<br />

Dr. F. SCHUMM, Dr. O. SEBALD, Dr. SEYBOLD, P.<br />

TOBIES, and Dr. R. TÜRK.<br />

For giving me particulars <strong>of</strong> single genera<br />

especially Dr. O. BREUSS (Catapyrenium, and<br />

Endocarpon), Dr. PH. CLERC (corrections and<br />

substantial improvement <strong>of</strong> the Usnea keys), Dr.<br />

H. CZEIKA (Leptogium and other blue green<br />

algae genera), Dr. J. HAFELLNER, and Dr. A.<br />

HENSSEN (Heppia, various blue green algae<br />

genera) Dr. H. HERTEl (above all Porpidia), Dr.<br />

J.-G. KNOPH (Carbonea), Dr. J. Poelt, and CH.<br />

PRINTZEN (Biatora, and Mycoblimbia), Dr. R.<br />

SANTESSEN, and Dr. Ch. SCHEIDEGGER (Buellia),<br />

Dr. A. VÉZDA, besides Dr. T. LUMBSCH, and Dr.<br />

R. MOBERG. The following stimulated<br />

improvement <strong>of</strong> the keys <strong>of</strong> the first edition: Dr.<br />

P. JACOBSEN, Dr. V. John, Dr. U. KIRSCHBAUM,<br />

and Dr. H. Schöller.<br />

The electronic data distribution was entered<br />

to begin with by Mr. N. HIRNEISEN; later it was<br />

taken over by a flora program developed by the<br />

federal organization for the protection <strong>of</strong> the<br />

environment (Mr. R. May) in cooperation with<br />

the University <strong>of</strong> Regensburg (Mr. W. SUBAL).<br />

The adaptation <strong>of</strong> the programs in relation to<br />

<strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong> was carried out above all by<br />

Mr. W. SUBAL and Mr. G. SCHOEPE, they deserve<br />

especial thanks.<br />

For illustrations heartfelt thanks to: Dr. B.<br />

BÜDEl, Dr. A. Henssen, Miss S. LEIDENROTH, Dr.<br />

MOELLENHAUEr, Dr. Ch. SCHEIDEGGER as well as<br />

above all Mr. & Ms. (Dr.) K. RASBACH.<br />

For the sacrifice <strong>of</strong> their time in the correction<br />

<strong>of</strong> the manuscripts above all Dr. Mayrh<strong>of</strong>fer, and<br />

Dr. W. OBERMAYEr, besides Ms. M. KOCH as well<br />

as M. GRUBE, M. MATZER, K. ROPIN and B.<br />

WIESER <strong>of</strong> the Botanical Institute in Graz.<br />

Supplementing examinations <strong>of</strong> the lichen<br />

substances were carried out by Dr. CH. LEUCKERT<br />

and associates, I thank them also for very<br />

numerous particulars. Very heartfelt thanks also<br />

to my assistant M. Heklau for his frequent<br />

assistance, in the identification <strong>of</strong> lichen<br />

substances in the correction <strong>of</strong> the manuscript.<br />

At the beginning and end <strong>of</strong> this foreword is<br />

an expression <strong>of</strong> thanks to my family for their<br />

patience and forbearance.<br />

Stuttgart, Herbarium 1994 Volkmar Wirth<br />

3


Foundations and Illustrations<br />

1 Introduction<br />

1.1 What are lichens?<br />

<strong>Lichens</strong> are not homogeneous organisms, but<br />

consist <strong>of</strong> two entirely distinct organisms, and<br />

indeed <strong>of</strong> one fungus and at least one alga, living<br />

together in close contact. Their double nature is<br />

outwardly not recognizable. Often the lichen<br />

resembles neither <strong>of</strong> the synthetic partners. The<br />

lichen is first rate in numerous specific<br />

attainments in structural independence. These<br />

are possible only through ”cooperative work” <strong>of</strong><br />

the partners. Several phenomena are only known<br />

from this plant group.<br />

One such, the common living together in<br />

harmony by two different organisms one calls<br />

symbiosis. Symbiosis is known in several<br />

animal and plant groups, yet rarely is the<br />

symbiosis so perfected as in the case <strong>of</strong> lichens.<br />

The lichen symbiosis brings fungus and alga<br />

substantial pr<strong>of</strong>its. The fungus receives<br />

carbohydrate from the algae necessary for its<br />

existence. The alga is protected in the<br />

enveloping intertwining fungus from rapid water<br />

loss, from intensive solar rays, or from easy<br />

clutches <strong>of</strong> algae feeding animals. With the help<br />

<strong>of</strong> symbiosis in the lichen the involved fungus<br />

and alga have their ecological potentiality<br />

considerably widened and are in the position, to<br />

colonize habitats, where each alone could not be<br />

successful.<br />

The vegetative body <strong>of</strong> the lichen is known as<br />

a “thallus.” According to the growth form <strong>of</strong> the<br />

thallus, one differentiates crustose lichens, leafy<br />

or foliose lichens, and fruticose lichens having<br />

shrubby to beard-like forms, foliose lichen lobes,<br />

more flat developing thallus, and crustose lichens<br />

crust-like or scruffy, the thallus grows together<br />

with the substrate, from which they can not be<br />

removed uninjured. Gelatinous lichens are brittle<br />

in the dry state, when moist they are swollen and<br />

more or less like tough-gelatin (see further<br />

below).<br />

1.2 The Ecology <strong>of</strong> <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

<strong>Lichens</strong> are distributed world wide. Also in<br />

Central Europe they are species rich represented<br />

in a truly large number <strong>of</strong> forms and variety <strong>of</strong><br />

colors. We find them on tree bark and wood, on<br />

rocks, walls, grave stones and tiles, on the soils<br />

<strong>of</strong> open forests, in heaths and moors. Most <strong>of</strong> the<br />

species live under very specific habitat<br />

conditions. One knowing these conditions, can<br />

search according to the species.<br />

Many lichen species live almost exclusively<br />

on bark, others on wood, still others on<br />

calcareous rock (e.g. limestone, or dolomite) or<br />

on lime-free silicate rock (e.g. granite, gneiss, or<br />

basalt), others live on soil.<br />

The mostly epiphytic, i.e. species living on<br />

tree bark do not occur equally on all tree species,<br />

but display a definite emphasis. One reason for<br />

that is that the barks <strong>of</strong> various tree species<br />

exhibit differing chemical-physical properties,<br />

above all, differing pH-conditions produced have<br />

accommodated single lichen species under<br />

certain conditions. Many occur on “acid” bark<br />

(e.g. spruce, birch, or alder), others on “base-<br />

rich” (bark) (e.g. walnut, Norway maple, or<br />

alder). Many species are limited to smooth bark<br />

and then disappear, when the tree, with<br />

increasing age, develops a rough cracked bark;<br />

others establish first on such older stems. Such<br />

relationships between the lichen species and the<br />

habitat conditions, hence ecological<br />

characteristics, can be fully valued key<br />

characters.<br />

Similarly single lichen species are more or<br />

less limited to certain substrate attributes,<br />

“preferences” by definite light and moisture<br />

conditions. Many are “sun species”, others<br />

“shade species”, many are limited to cool, humid<br />

habitats and are more <strong>of</strong>ten found in forests,<br />

others tolerate even sunny, dry conditions and<br />

live on free-standing trees. Some are able to live<br />

on rain-protected flanks and in bark crevices –<br />

they cover their water budget from the water<br />

vapor <strong>of</strong> the air --, others are dependent upon the<br />

frequent soaking <strong>of</strong> the thallus with water. Such<br />

ecological characteristics are presented in the<br />

main part <strong>of</strong> the species descriptions.<br />

One <strong>of</strong> the fundamental properties for the<br />

appreciation <strong>of</strong> the biology <strong>of</strong> lichens is the<br />

inability <strong>of</strong> these double organisms to continue<br />

constant metabolic activity, as we know it in the<br />

flowering plants during the vegetative period as<br />

an indedpedent activity. <strong>Lichens</strong> can not regulate<br />

their water budget. They have no true roots.<br />

They can neither actively take up water nor in the<br />

case <strong>of</strong> dryness appreciably slow down the water<br />

loss; they have no evaporation protection. This<br />

means that in case <strong>of</strong> dry weather they gradually<br />

lose water that is necessary for the maintenance<br />

4


<strong>of</strong> metabolism and in metabolic inactivity, turn<br />

into an almost “lifeless” condition. At first in the<br />

case <strong>of</strong> renewed water supply, above all in the<br />

form <strong>of</strong> rain or dew, the metabolic process begins<br />

anew. The lichen thallus takes up the water with<br />

their entire upper surface like a sponge in a<br />

relatively short time.<br />

These properties compel the lichen to lead a<br />

true alternating half life with constantly<br />

alternating pauses and times <strong>of</strong> activity. The<br />

inability to establish an enduring stable metabolic<br />

activity presence itself however on a few habitats<br />

is an advantage and makes them here superior to<br />

flowering plants. On tree bark and on naked<br />

rock flowering plants have no superiority<br />

because <strong>of</strong> the lack <strong>of</strong> root accommodation and<br />

with that the corresponding water shortage.<br />

<strong>Lichens</strong> have no problems thriving here. In the<br />

case <strong>of</strong> moisture they take up water from the<br />

atmosphere and utilize it for metabolic activity,<br />

in the case <strong>of</strong> drought they fall into a resting<br />

condition, surviving the difficulty.<br />

Many lichens are not restricted, in their water<br />

budget directly by the direct wetting by rain and<br />

dew. Thanks to their remarkable ability to take<br />

up humidity ( even when not saturated) from the<br />

atmosphere, they are active even at times <strong>of</strong> high<br />

humidity. Many species grow even in habitats,<br />

which are not touched by rain, as e.g. on<br />

overhanging rocks or deep in bark cracks and<br />

root hollows.<br />

The quality <strong>of</strong> the described “changing<br />

moisture” and the frequent resting periods are<br />

one <strong>of</strong> the causes for the, to some extent, extraordinarily<br />

slow development <strong>of</strong> lichens. Yet a<br />

stronger basis for the phenomenon for all <strong>of</strong> that<br />

is the symbiotic nature <strong>of</strong> lichens: in the main a<br />

smaller part <strong>of</strong> the lichen mass – algae which<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten makes up about 10% <strong>of</strong> the volume – must<br />

support an unequally very much larger fungus<br />

part, so that for the growth <strong>of</strong> the double<br />

organism only negligible reserves <strong>of</strong> energy rich<br />

combinations remain for disposition.<br />

Crustose lichens have, in our climate, a<br />

growth <strong>of</strong> about one to few millimeters per year,<br />

foliose lichens to little more than a centimeter,<br />

sometimes even less. This indicates that larger<br />

lichen thalli are already truly old. A greater age<br />

is reached especially in rock lichens, where the<br />

substrate subjected to atmospheric weathering is<br />

only very slowly altered and thereby the<br />

prerequisite is <strong>of</strong>fered for a long time<br />

undisturbed growth. Such rock-dwelling lichens<br />

become, as a rule, at least several scores <strong>of</strong> years,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten several hundred years, old. In the case bark<br />

lichens, especially foliose and fruticose lichens,<br />

the dynamic forces are on the other hand<br />

accepted as having much larger role than the fact<br />

<strong>of</strong> the slowness <strong>of</strong> growth. Leaf- and foliose<br />

lichens fall from the bark <strong>of</strong>ten early after aging a<br />

few years above all in the winter months, when<br />

they, because <strong>of</strong> higher water content, become<br />

heavy and the attachment <strong>of</strong> the thallus is<br />

loosened by frequent freezing and thawing.<br />

The lichens are in principle, so far as rain and<br />

dew falls, active throughout the year. Cool moist<br />

conditions are favorable. This is expressed e.g.<br />

also in that lichens are especially rich in species<br />

and individuals in humid, high precipitation<br />

regions and in the mountains. One extraordinary<br />

achievement <strong>of</strong> lichens is the ability <strong>of</strong> very<br />

many species, even at temperatures which lie<br />

substantially below the freezing point, to still<br />

carry on photosynthesis, also to remain<br />

metabolically active and grow. In cold regions<br />

lichens can thank this ability for being able to<br />

compete with flowering plants and produce soil<br />

dwelling lichen heaths.<br />

1.3 Distribution <strong>of</strong> <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

Every plant species colonizes a well-defined, for<br />

it, characteristic region (see also chapter 4.5).<br />

Extension and form <strong>of</strong> these habitats or areas<br />

depend among other things intimately with the<br />

ecology and species together. Thus are the<br />

base-rich substrate directed soil lichens<br />

constrained within calcareous regions or<br />

moisture-requiring directed lichens, limited to<br />

strongly humid regions frequently dampened<br />

with rain.<br />

Areas are not constant. Over a long time<br />

period they are altered, e.g. as a reaction to a<br />

climatic change. By way <strong>of</strong> example occurrence<br />

<strong>of</strong> ice-age relicts successively collected out <strong>of</strong><br />

alpine Central Europe in a natural process, while<br />

the climatic changes <strong>of</strong> the refugium are moving<br />

further away from the optimum for these species.<br />

In the case <strong>of</strong> lichens and mosses growing on<br />

trees, their distribution may be altered as a result<br />

<strong>of</strong> the change in the area <strong>of</strong> their “favorite”<br />

carrier tree.<br />

The natural alteration or oscillation <strong>of</strong> the<br />

frequency and distribution <strong>of</strong> lichen species have<br />

been since historical time overlaid and furthered<br />

exaggerated by changes caused by man. Thereby<br />

came about both the decline and advance, the<br />

shrinkage <strong>of</strong> area as well as the expansion <strong>of</strong><br />

area.<br />

5


1.3.1 Decline <strong>of</strong> <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

Many lichen species are becoming rare, while<br />

their living area due to the activities <strong>of</strong> man is<br />

destroyed or all to frequently is subjected to<br />

change. Their slow growth, <strong>of</strong>ten also in<br />

association with the late onset <strong>of</strong> reproduction,<br />

brings about an always stronger and more<br />

frequent meshing with the onset <strong>of</strong> an ominous<br />

environment. The dwindling <strong>of</strong> the occurrence<br />

<strong>of</strong> lichens has reached a dismaying degree. In<br />

<strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong> alone, that by its richly<br />

variable landscape <strong>of</strong>fers much better conditions<br />

for the existence and the survival <strong>of</strong> lichens than<br />

many other regions <strong>of</strong> Germany, clearly over<br />

10% <strong>of</strong> the species are missing or extinct.<br />

Dozens <strong>of</strong> lichens here are immediately<br />

threatened with extinction. Many have only a<br />

few refugia where especially favorable climatic<br />

and pure air conditions as well as little<br />

disturbance make survival possible up to this<br />

time. By stopping stronger decimation <strong>of</strong> the<br />

incidence and populations is to reckon with the<br />

complete disappearance <strong>of</strong> these lichens within<br />

the next year or next two decades.<br />

Evidence for the decline is produced by old<br />

publications about the lichen flora, from others<br />

still maintaining access to collections <strong>of</strong> lichens<br />

from an earlier time. In old herbaria species are<br />

represented, which no longer exist today; many<br />

lichens extremely rare today are present from<br />

places, where they in the meantime have<br />

certainly disappeared.<br />

The reasons for the decline <strong>of</strong> lichens are<br />

many fold. The intensive land and economic<br />

utilization in the widest sense, e.g. “destoning”<br />

and fertilization <strong>of</strong> poor turf (especially in the<br />

Black Forest) and the shifting <strong>of</strong> vineyards with<br />

the destruction <strong>of</strong> the typical vineyard wall on<br />

sloping sites. The massive clearing <strong>of</strong> farm land<br />

in the severe style <strong>of</strong> the years <strong>of</strong> the sixties and<br />

seventies have led to a scarcely assessable<br />

decimation <strong>of</strong> the lichen populations. A greater<br />

loss to the occurrence <strong>of</strong> the typical bark lichen<br />

flora came about through cutting down the street<br />

trees. From topographic maps we can determine<br />

that within the past forty years at least four fifths<br />

<strong>of</strong> the rows <strong>of</strong> trees along avenues and streets<br />

were exterminated. Methods <strong>of</strong> forestry<br />

utilization have lead to considerable<br />

impoverishment and to a change in the lichen<br />

vegetation <strong>of</strong> the forest, which had the effect <strong>of</strong><br />

habitat alteration on large areas, especially clearcutting<br />

and afforestation with exotic tree species,<br />

above all conifers. The scarcity <strong>of</strong> old trees in<br />

today’s managed forests produces a very<br />

negative effect upon the species diversity. It<br />

demonstrates that near natural richly structured<br />

forests with a correspondingly high portion <strong>of</strong><br />

older trees and dead trees are especially rich in<br />

lichen species.<br />

The most important causes <strong>of</strong> lichen decline<br />

includes the air pollution by power stations,<br />

industry, domestic combustion, and traffic.<br />

<strong>Lichens</strong> react to the emissions in many ways<br />

essentially as susceptible as other organisms; the<br />

modest resistance depends likely upon their<br />

(already referred to) special constitution,<br />

particularly their symbiotic nature, the lack <strong>of</strong> an<br />

effective protective tissue and their longevity.<br />

According to our knowledge, acid producing<br />

emissions are especially devastating, on the one<br />

hand directly as toxic substances, on the other<br />

hand indirectly by acidifying rain water, that as a<br />

rule is directly taken up by the lichen thallus.<br />

Sulfur dioxide is especially injurious to lichens,<br />

as it leads to injury <strong>of</strong> fundamental metabolic<br />

processes, which arise by acidifying the water<br />

and the substrates, resulting in many lichen<br />

species being no longer supported.<br />

The impoverishment <strong>of</strong> the lichen flora is<br />

further advanced, as the increase in the burden <strong>of</strong><br />

acid emissions. Many species are especially<br />

sensitive and therefore only still occur in regions<br />

with nearly pure air. Other species disappear in<br />

the case <strong>of</strong> moderate or at first stronger<br />

concentration <strong>of</strong> harmful materials. One can<br />

correlate the reading <strong>of</strong> the lichen flora, as an<br />

approximation <strong>of</strong> the degree <strong>of</strong> the burden <strong>of</strong><br />

lichen damaging air pollution; that apparently the<br />

sulfur dioxide and the acid content <strong>of</strong> the rain<br />

water are most significant in the decimation <strong>of</strong><br />

lichens, leading to indexing the region with more<br />

or less higher burden with respect to these factors<br />

with the help <strong>of</strong> certain lichen species (Wirth<br />

1987). Numerous widespread species <strong>of</strong> barkdwelling<br />

lichen species in this book allow – by<br />

the knowledge <strong>of</strong> the ecology <strong>of</strong> these groups –<br />

the use <strong>of</strong> bio-indication <strong>of</strong> that kind <strong>of</strong> burden.<br />

Lately – as a result <strong>of</strong> decreasing sulfur<br />

dioxide emissions – a recovery has been<br />

identified in many species. The acid emissions,<br />

especially sulfur dioxide, are an especially<br />

important factor in emission caused lichen<br />

decline, but by no means the only one. Even dust<br />

and heavy metals play a role. In earlier times<br />

eutrification (fertilizing) increased air pollution<br />

and led then to extensive alteration <strong>of</strong> the lichen<br />

vegetation.<br />

6


1.3.2 Extension <strong>of</strong> Areas<br />

Occasionally one seeks vainly in old herbaria<br />

after lichen species, which today are more or less<br />

widespread. In a series <strong>of</strong> this kind <strong>of</strong> failures it<br />

is likely that it is in the order <strong>of</strong> the past one<br />

hundred fifty years that an increase in the<br />

frequency and an expansion <strong>of</strong> the region <strong>of</strong><br />

distribution has occurred. This concerns e.g.<br />

several subatlantic distributed bark lichens. As a<br />

result <strong>of</strong> the missing continuity and intensity <strong>of</strong><br />

the lichenological exploration we are left<br />

certainly – other than in the case <strong>of</strong> higher plants<br />

– with scarce data to bring to the history <strong>of</strong><br />

expansion. The final conclusion in the case <strong>of</strong><br />

tree-dwelling lichens is not entirely excluded, in<br />

that the species earlier were only overlooked and<br />

– <strong>of</strong> course substantially more rare – already was<br />

on hand in the region under consideration.<br />

In one series <strong>of</strong> rock lichens, which also grow<br />

upon habitats from man’s activities, such as<br />

walls, boundary stones, and grave monuments, is<br />

the record <strong>of</strong> the distribution almost certainly<br />

leading (to man’s activities), since rock lichens in<br />

nature, from stone free regions only develop on<br />

these anthropogenic substances which promise<br />

necessary habitat. Possibly an exception are<br />

pioneer species, which are able to colonize small<br />

stones (e.g. river transported). Calciphytic<br />

lichens, which in nature are missing even from<br />

rock-rich regions, where the geologic basis is<br />

built upon acid silicate rock, find in the substrate<br />

ecology, very diverse <strong>of</strong>ferings <strong>of</strong> human created<br />

materials and woodworks which likewise are<br />

existence requisites for lime-avoiding species in<br />

limestone regions. These lichens have expanded<br />

their areas more or less widely in geologically<br />

“inappropriate” regions and accordingly<br />

occupied only substrate-, not climate-caused<br />

spaces. These “opportunistic” species show a<br />

tendency to, with the help <strong>of</strong> humans in their<br />

potentials, take in an area limited only by<br />

climatic factors.<br />

In contrast to the rock lichens existing in the<br />

region <strong>of</strong> <strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong>, bark lichens are<br />

substrate-determined in limits <strong>of</strong> their area, since<br />

the tree species limits <strong>of</strong> lichens with few<br />

exceptions is unimportant and the lichen ecology<br />

is accepted as <strong>of</strong> more significance (base-poor or<br />

base-rich) “bark qualities” in the entire region.<br />

The <strong>of</strong>t times very well marked area picture <strong>of</strong><br />

epiphytic lichens must be interpreted therefore as<br />

extensively climatic, if not in the meanwhile<br />

(overlooked) due to interfering air pollution<br />

associated factors, which have controlled the<br />

fluctuation <strong>of</strong> the areas.<br />

An appearance <strong>of</strong> neophytes, also non<br />

indigenous taxa earlier in the entire region, may<br />

in <strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong> in the case <strong>of</strong> lichens be<br />

proved for only very few, almost always<br />

inconspicuous and easy to confused species were<br />

drawn for consideration. An indication, that a<br />

certain species did not occur at one certain point<br />

in time in the region, is naturally scarcely to be<br />

furnished. By incorporation <strong>of</strong> ecological and<br />

plant geographic viewpoints it must be accepted<br />

in most cases, that the species in question<br />

certainly might formerly have been definitely<br />

more rare, but likely however having a natural<br />

occurrence, from which they spread out. It is<br />

indeed remarkable that even in the last 30 years<br />

numerous subatlantic species new to southwest<br />

Germany or larger parts <strong>of</strong> Germany have been<br />

identified; among these are a few meanwhile not<br />

only widespread, but locally frequent. These<br />

exceptions may be even a result <strong>of</strong> the milder<br />

climate <strong>of</strong> recent years.<br />

2 Collection and Herbarium Preparation<br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

The collection <strong>of</strong> lichens is easy. As far as<br />

removing them without more <strong>of</strong> the substrate<br />

(many soil lichens), they are removed with a<br />

knife or with hammer and flat chisel together<br />

with a piece <strong>of</strong> the substrate. One wraps the<br />

lichens on the spot in paper bags and notes<br />

habitat, substrate and date. Plastic bags are<br />

suitable only for short-time transport, since fresh<br />

material mildews in longer storage in plastic<br />

bags.<br />

One must dry fresh material; after that it may<br />

be placed in herbarium packets (covers) without<br />

further expense. Shrubby fruticose lichens take<br />

much room and break easily. One must, while<br />

they are still fresh and elastic, press them lightly<br />

(usually slightly moistened beforehand). One<br />

places a thin card in these herbarium packets for<br />

stabilization and support <strong>of</strong> the lichens.<br />

Specimens <strong>of</strong> lichens on bark, rock etc. may also<br />

be glued to the card; a gluing <strong>of</strong> soil lichens<br />

avoids a breaking up <strong>of</strong> the specimen. However<br />

the (foliose and fruticose) lichen itself should<br />

never be glued by their undersides, since then the<br />

character <strong>of</strong> the underside could not be analyzed.<br />

Herbarium specimens ought to be furnished<br />

with a label, on which is noted the locality,<br />

7


habitat (to facilitate determination), date and<br />

collector.<br />

Without any doubt impending in the<br />

consequences <strong>of</strong> the precipitous increase in the<br />

number <strong>of</strong> those interested in lichens is a further<br />

danger to these already richly collected<br />

organisms: is the decimation and extirpation by<br />

lichenologists. In collecting lichens one ought to<br />

consider that many lichens are rare and<br />

endangered. In many cases the collection <strong>of</strong> only<br />

five to ten specimens would have the result <strong>of</strong><br />

extirpation <strong>of</strong> the species in Germany. One<br />

collection <strong>of</strong> rare species is without justification,<br />

especially so, when the lichen already is known<br />

and documented from the region. Occasionally<br />

one can in a certain region collect species<br />

endangered in other regions, where they are still<br />

frequent, without an aggravating result being<br />

“provided.”<br />

A completely removed specimen growns no<br />

longer. The decimation <strong>of</strong> a population can lead<br />

to the endangering <strong>of</strong> the rest <strong>of</strong> the population.<br />

A resettling <strong>of</strong> a species on a locality, on which it<br />

was obliterated, seems in the case <strong>of</strong> rare foliose<br />

and fruticose lichens in many ways extremely<br />

unlikely. This is valid especially for species,<br />

which reproduce with the help <strong>of</strong> relatively heavy<br />

soredia and isidia.<br />

3. Investigations and<br />

Determinations <strong>of</strong> <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

3.1 Introduction<br />

Most foliose and fruticose lichens may be<br />

determined without more than the aid <strong>of</strong> a<br />

handlens, a few without the aid <strong>of</strong> optical<br />

devices. Important are e.g. form and color <strong>of</strong> the<br />

thallus and the fruiting body, occurrence <strong>of</strong> warty<br />

outgrowths (isidia) and “mealy” eruptions<br />

(soralia) and other organs. For the determination<br />

<strong>of</strong> crustose lichens the use <strong>of</strong> a microscope is as a<br />

rule necessary. Indeed the experienced lichen<br />

specialist can easily distinguish almost all lichens<br />

including the crustose lichens by habitat and<br />

ecological characteristics alone, but in<br />

determination one can not commonly by<br />

external characteristics alone, sufficiently<br />

through our grammatical potentiality, be exact<br />

enough about the fine distinctions in coloring and<br />

structures to define them in keys. For this reason<br />

measurable and clearly defined microscopic<br />

characteristics must be applied, e.g. spore form<br />

and size, structure <strong>of</strong> the fruiting body, coloring<br />

<strong>of</strong> the fruiting body parts etc. For the<br />

determination <strong>of</strong> such characteristics sections<br />

through the fruiting body are <strong>of</strong>ten necessary.<br />

The producing <strong>of</strong> sections is not difficult.<br />

They are made much easier, when a binocular or<br />

a dissecting scope is used, under which one can<br />

work with both hands. At least in the larger<br />

fruiting bodies, sections may be prepared without<br />

the aid <strong>of</strong> lenses.<br />

With one hand one holds the lichen fast, with<br />

the other hand one draws an unused razor blade<br />

parallel (vertical) sectioning through the fruiting<br />

body. At best one removes to begin with a<br />

marginal part, perhaps a fourth or a third <strong>of</strong> the<br />

fruiting body and next cuts the thinnest possible<br />

slice, as from a loaf <strong>of</strong> bread, in many lichens the<br />

fruiting body is easily broken loose and then is<br />

more difficult to manipulate. In this case one can<br />

capture the fruiting body with a tweezers or a<br />

preparation needle and glue it to a wooden or<br />

paper support. The section can be accomplished<br />

dry or (above all, in the case <strong>of</strong> hard fruits better)<br />

with objects swollen with water. It can be very<br />

helpful when one holds the object fast with one<br />

finger so that the fingernail is almost at a right<br />

angle and is used as “backdrop” for the razor<br />

blade. The section may be lifted easily from the<br />

object with the (under the circumstances)<br />

moistened edge <strong>of</strong> the razor blade or with the<br />

point <strong>of</strong> a preparation needle. It is then placed in<br />

a small water drop on the slide and covered with<br />

a cover glass. If the section is not thin enough,<br />

one may squash it somewhat. For which one<br />

places the slide with the cover glass beneath<br />

upon a page <strong>of</strong> filterpaper and presses.<br />

A considerable aid in determination is <strong>of</strong>fered<br />

by color reactions <strong>of</strong> the lichen thallus with<br />

designated chemicals. Many lichens contain the<br />

same substances, which with these substances<br />

yield colored reaction products. The most<br />

important reagents are calcium hydroxide<br />

(KOH), calcium or sodium hypochlorite<br />

(Ca(OCl)2 / NaOCl2) and para-Phenyldediamin<br />

(H2NC6H4NH2). The procurement <strong>of</strong> reagents<br />

becomes increasingly more difficult. Chemical<br />

handling comes into question, under<br />

circumstances even for apothecaries and<br />

druggists. Druggists <strong>of</strong> commercial chains<br />

today do not accept individual orders.<br />

3.2 Important Diagnostic Characteristics<br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

3.2.1 Color <strong>of</strong> the Thallus<br />

8


The lichen species are for the most part<br />

white-gray to bluish-gray, greenish-gray, or<br />

yellow-greenish, rarely brown, yellow or orange<br />

colored. Although the color <strong>of</strong> the thallus is an<br />

important character, the proper specification <strong>of</strong><br />

thallus color is problematic. The lichen colors<br />

are frequently difficult to describe. At first the<br />

practice was to show to the reader a key little by<br />

little, whatever he was to understand under many<br />

color descriptions. Here the aid <strong>of</strong> color photos<br />

is a way around the deficiency <strong>of</strong> our language.<br />

Thus documenting a picture <strong>of</strong> Parmelia<br />

caperata or the beard lichen Usnea, it becomes<br />

understood what blue-greenish to<br />

yellow-greenish is in lichens, while the mere<br />

color description without picture documentation<br />

always leads to further misunderstanding.<br />

3.2.2 Structure and Organs <strong>of</strong> the Thallus<br />

Growth Forms<br />

Three main types <strong>of</strong> growth forms <strong>of</strong> lichens are<br />

described: crustose lichens with pure crustose<br />

thallus, foliose lichens with leaf-like, ± lobed<br />

thallus and fruticose lichens with shrubby to<br />

filamentous thallus. Between foliose and<br />

crustose lichens are intermediate forms with<br />

squamulose thallus and such crustose lichens,<br />

whose margins are clearly lobed. These crude<br />

divisions do not do justice to the majority <strong>of</strong> the<br />

forms <strong>of</strong> the lichens. They are however very<br />

useful for a first response. The more precise<br />

characterization or the growth form arises from<br />

the preparation <strong>of</strong> key parts. The group <strong>of</strong><br />

gelatinous lichens is characterized by the<br />

gelatinous consistency <strong>of</strong> the thallus (in the moist<br />

condition swelling gelatin-like); they can include<br />

various growth forms.<br />

Especially in the level <strong>of</strong> organization the<br />

crustose lichens are differentiated into many<br />

types <strong>of</strong> thallus forms, whereby above all their<br />

position is accepted on the degree <strong>of</strong> division <strong>of</strong><br />

the thallus and upon nature <strong>of</strong> the upper surface.<br />

Organization and Nature <strong>of</strong> the Upper<br />

Surface <strong>of</strong> the Thallus<br />

The upper surface <strong>of</strong> the foliose and fruticose<br />

lichens is – apart from the occurrence <strong>of</strong> isidia<br />

and soralia (see below) – smooth to rugose or<br />

from time to time weakly organized raised<br />

ridges. In many crustose lichens the thallus is<br />

cracked or subdivided into ± separated areoles;<br />

it may even consist or more or less closely<br />

crowded to scattered granules or sometimes<br />

completely mealy disintegrate. One speaks <strong>of</strong> a<br />

coralloid thallus when it is made up <strong>of</strong> elongate<br />

branched “granules.”<br />

Organization <strong>of</strong> the Thallus <strong>of</strong> Crustose <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

Egg-shaped, varnish-like, or membranous<br />

(not or scarcely cracked)<br />

Cracked<br />

Cracked areolate (reticulate cracked, thereby<br />

consisting <strong>of</strong> areas, area flat)<br />

Areolate (clearly separate areas)<br />

Warty areolate (Areoles convex)<br />

Squamulose (Areoles isolated, in the form <strong>of</strong><br />

± overlapping other areoles, the edges <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

crenate or lobed, usually raised from the<br />

substrate at the edges; if squamules more<br />

strongly divided <strong>of</strong> clearly erect: crossing over to<br />

“small foliose”)<br />

Upper Surface Condition <strong>of</strong> the Thallus <strong>of</strong><br />

Crustose <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

Mealy (very finely granular, “dusty”; when<br />

the upper surface is totally disintegrated it is<br />

called “leprose”)<br />

Granular (finely or coarse granular)<br />

Warty (Thallus uneven, unevenness warty<br />

convex)<br />

Wrinkled (Thallus irregularly uneven)<br />

Coralloid (<strong>of</strong> coral-like branched granules)<br />

Smooth<br />

Soralia and Isidia<br />

The soralia and isidia are among the most<br />

important diagnostic organs <strong>of</strong> the lichen thallus.<br />

They serve for vegetative reproduction.<br />

Existence and form <strong>of</strong> soralia and isidia are<br />

species specific characters.<br />

Isidia are usually simple peg or clavate form<br />

to coralloid branched or even almost spherical<br />

outgrowths <strong>of</strong> the upper side (see illustration),<br />

they are easily broken <strong>of</strong>f and may grow into<br />

young lichens. They are generally colored<br />

similar to the thallus and are even anatomically<br />

not basically constructed other than the thallus<br />

from which they are an outgrowth.<br />

Soralia are a somewhat mealy, usually whitish<br />

to greenish-gray outgrowth <strong>of</strong> the thallus, which<br />

9


consists <strong>of</strong> an accumulation <strong>of</strong> tiny, ± spherical<br />

reproductive granules, the soredia. The soredia<br />

usually lie close to the algae layer <strong>of</strong> the thallus.<br />

Position and form <strong>of</strong> the soralia are species<br />

specific distinctions. They may sit upon the<br />

surface, at the edge or on the ends <strong>of</strong> lobes, have<br />

a long streak linear or rounded outline and be<br />

concave to strongly convex or lip-form. The<br />

various types <strong>of</strong> soralia are considered in the list<br />

<strong>of</strong> technical terms. An oversight <strong>of</strong> distinct<br />

forms results in the following illustration. Many<br />

lichen species produce no normal bordered<br />

soralia, but large areas <strong>of</strong> the upper surface<br />

becomes sorediate or even the entire thallus.<br />

Rhizines, Cilia, and Pseudocyphellae<br />

On the underside <strong>of</strong> foliose lichens are found<br />

attachment organs which serve to attach the<br />

thallus to the substrate. The most frequent are<br />

rhizines (fastening filaments); which may be<br />

regarded as simple, forked or like a brush or<br />

bottle cleaner (Illustrated on page 729). In the<br />

case <strong>of</strong> many foliose lichens the underside is<br />

covered with a ± thick hairy layer, in others a<br />

network develops. Soil-dwelling fruticose<br />

lichens sit loosely on the substrate, rock and bark<br />

dwellers are generally attached with a somewhat<br />

broader base, an attachment disk.<br />

In the case <strong>of</strong> some few species <strong>of</strong> foliose and<br />

fruticose lichens the indigenous flora the lobe<br />

margins or lobe ends are provided with<br />

characteristic setiform projections (also known as<br />

cilia) (See page 75). Pseudocyphellae are also<br />

important diagnostic structures. These are very<br />

delicate point or linear whitish eruptions or<br />

lacunae in the cortex above all <strong>of</strong> foliose and<br />

fruticose lichens (See page 75 and 276).<br />

Sometimes the lines are reticulate and sit upon<br />

very weakly raised ridges (See page 663).<br />

3.2.3 Structure <strong>of</strong> the Thallus<br />

In the lichen the fungus envelops with a mesh <strong>of</strong><br />

filamentous structures (hyphae) usually<br />

numerous single, rarely multicellular algae the<br />

partner species. The algae are commonly<br />

concentrated in a zone, in the case <strong>of</strong> gelatinous<br />

lichens mostly distributed over the whole thallus.<br />

The residual space in the lichen is taken up by<br />

the fungus partner, which also by the<br />

arrangement <strong>of</strong> the hyphae <strong>of</strong>ten determines the<br />

form <strong>of</strong> the lichen.<br />

Toward the outside the fungus hyphae <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

produces a thick protective, especially structured<br />

cortex. The algae layer, in which the algae are<br />

entwined by fungus hyphae, lies under the cortex.<br />

Under the algae layer is developed a usually<br />

relatively thick medulla <strong>of</strong> loosely interwoven<br />

hyphae. In the case <strong>of</strong> crustose lichens, the<br />

thallus with the medulla rests upon the substrate.<br />

In the case <strong>of</strong> foliose and fruticose lichens, a<br />

cortex is usually also developed on the<br />

underside, i.e. the lichen is encircled by a<br />

surrounding cortex layer. Special attachment<br />

organs <strong>of</strong>ten also occur on the underside, e.g.<br />

rhizines.<br />

The cortex in section shows a structure <strong>of</strong><br />

more or less rounded-multiangular cells (see<br />

page 24), which are called paraplectenchymous<br />

or pseudoparenchymous (reminiscent <strong>of</strong> a<br />

parenchyma <strong>of</strong> higher plants). If they are more<br />

parallel structured <strong>of</strong> elongated cells, they are<br />

called prosoplectenchymous (see page 24).<br />

Almost all lichen fungi belong to the<br />

ascomycetes, to which e.g. also are numbered the<br />

cup-fungi and morels. Yet the lichen fungi do<br />

not <strong>of</strong>ten occur free-living, but have become<br />

completely dependent upon the lichen symbiosis.<br />

The lichen algae belong for the most part to the<br />

green algae, to a smaller degree to the blue-green<br />

algae or cyanobacteria. Each lichen species is<br />

characterized by a specific fungus, occurring<br />

only in it, as well as by a mostly definite species<br />

<strong>of</strong> algae. One and the same alga species may<br />

occur in various lichen species. For an oversight<br />

<strong>of</strong> the most frequent algae see page 64 and<br />

illustrations on page 64 and 65.<br />

3.2.4 Form and Structure <strong>of</strong> the Fruiting<br />

Body<br />

General<br />

Fruiting bodies are relatively frequent in the case<br />

<strong>of</strong> crustose lichens. Many native foliose and<br />

fruticose lichens on the other hand do not<br />

commonly fruit and reproduce instead<br />

vegetatively with the help <strong>of</strong> soredia, isidia,<br />

thallus fragments. Conversely, as a rule,<br />

regularly fruiting species do not produce<br />

vegetative reproductive organs.<br />

Fruiting bodies appearing in lichens result in<br />

connection with sexual process <strong>of</strong> the lichen<br />

fungus. Since almost all lichen fungi belong to<br />

the Ascomycetes, the fruiting bodies are the so<br />

called ascocarps. When the spore generating<br />

tissue (hymenium) lies open to view, it is an<br />

apothecium, if it is enclosed in a more or less<br />

spherical structure and only open to the world<br />

10


through a pore, as a rule it is a perithecium.<br />

Apothecia are generally sharply set <strong>of</strong>f from the<br />

thallus, in outline rounded, disk- to bowl-form or<br />

hemispherical structures, which may be variously<br />

colored. In many groups the apothecia have an<br />

elliptic to elongate form; which may even branch<br />

or be stalked. Often the apothecia are clearly<br />

bordered (see illustration). If the margin is<br />

colored like the remaining part, the so-called<br />

disk, it is called a proper margin; if it has the<br />

color <strong>of</strong> the thallus and includes it, corresponding<br />

to the structure <strong>of</strong> the thallus, and algae, it is<br />

considered a thalloid margin.<br />

The apothecium consists fundamentally <strong>of</strong> the<br />

hymenium, and the hypothecium which lies<br />

under the hymenium and is a ring- to bowl-form<br />

enclosing tissue. These structures protecting the<br />

hymenium may be similarly constructed like the<br />

thallus and contain algae; they are then outwardly<br />

recognizable as a thalloid margin. Apothecia<br />

with a thalloid margin are designated as<br />

lecanorine. In apothecia without a thalloid<br />

margin whose structure is algae-free and is<br />

constructed only <strong>of</strong> hyphae and is called an<br />

excipulum (proprium). The excipulum <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

externally recognized as a proper margin;<br />

sometimes is completely lacking. Excipulum and<br />

hypothecium are colorless or pigmented. In<br />

lecideine apothecia the excipulum is at least<br />

partially carbonaceous hardened.<br />

The upper surface <strong>of</strong> the hymenium is<br />

externally visible as the disk. The uppermost<br />

region <strong>of</strong> the hymenium, the epihymenium, is<br />

generally colored, sometimes also interspersed<br />

by the smallest crystals. The whole hymenium is<br />

rarely ± colored. It is made up <strong>of</strong> more or less<br />

perpendicularly arranged hyphal threads, the<br />

paraphyses, a structure which is easy to<br />

recognize in the section <strong>of</strong> the fruiting; between<br />

the paraphyses sit the cylindrical, clavate, or<br />

bulging asci, in which the spores grow to<br />

maturity. Up to eight spores are generally<br />

produced and they are single or multicellular,<br />

colorless or colored.<br />

The crustose lichens may be divided into<br />

groups according to the form and structure <strong>of</strong> the<br />

fruiting body, which makes the first response<br />

easy, e.g. pyrenocarpic lichens (with perithecia),<br />

coniocarpic lichens or goblet lichens (species<br />

with delicately stalked fruiting bodies) or<br />

lirellocarpic lichens (species with “streak form”<br />

fruiting bodies).<br />

Morphologic Characteristics<br />

The determination <strong>of</strong> the size, structure, color,<br />

margin and position <strong>of</strong> the fruiting body on the<br />

thallus plays a role in the morphologic<br />

characteristics <strong>of</strong> the fruiting body.<br />

Size<br />

With respect to the width (diameter), rarely (in<br />

the case <strong>of</strong> “pin-shaped” fruiting bodies) the<br />

height; <strong>of</strong>ten only the maximum size is given<br />

(without the whole range <strong>of</strong> values), sometimes<br />

minimum- and maximum size.<br />

Form<br />

Here the outline <strong>of</strong> the fruiting body (e.g.<br />

rounded or elongate), form and upper surface<br />

structure <strong>of</strong> the disk (concave, flat, convex,<br />

channeled) plays a role.<br />

Margin<br />

The external visible border <strong>of</strong> the apothecial disk<br />

is described as the margin. A very prominent<br />

margin is called “bulging.” With increasing age<br />

<strong>of</strong> the apothecium <strong>of</strong>ten there are changes in the<br />

curvature <strong>of</strong> the disk and the prominence <strong>of</strong> the<br />

margin: in youth the disk is flat, the margin is<br />

clearly developed, in old age the disk becomes<br />

convex and the margin gradually disappears. A<br />

thalloid margin (see above) is commonly thallus<br />

colored, a proper margin is generally the color <strong>of</strong><br />

the disk.<br />

Position<br />

It varies between sessile, partially (±) sunken,<br />

completely sunken (i.e. not penetrating the<br />

thallus upper surface) and deeply sessile fruiting<br />

bodies. Sessile apothecia may be closely<br />

attached to the thallus or somewhat more loosely,<br />

i.e. sitting on a narrow base.<br />

Anatomic (microscopic) Characteristics<br />

Characteristics under the microscope <strong>of</strong><br />

importance in determination are color and<br />

structure <strong>of</strong> the excipulum and hypothecium,<br />

form and branching as well as color <strong>of</strong> the end<br />

cells <strong>of</strong> the paraphyses as well as coloring,<br />

septation, form and size <strong>of</strong> spores.<br />

Excipulum, Hypothecium, and Hymenium<br />

11


The color intensity <strong>of</strong> the excipulum,<br />

epihymenium and hypothecium depends on the<br />

section selected. The color given in the keys, so<br />

far as possible, relates to that which would be<br />

perceived from a thin hand section. The<br />

structure <strong>of</strong> the excipulum is <strong>of</strong>ten only<br />

perceptible on really thin sections, at best on<br />

microtome sections <strong>of</strong> 15-20 µm thick. The<br />

height <strong>of</strong> the hymenium is measured from the<br />

base <strong>of</strong> the ascus to the outer boundary <strong>of</strong> the<br />

epihymenium, therefore including the<br />

epihymenium. The hymenium height<br />

corresponds to the height <strong>of</strong> the paraphyses.<br />

Here the outermost colored region <strong>of</strong> the<br />

hymenium is designated as the epihymenium, no<br />

matter where the color is located. The hymenium<br />

is commonly colorless. Sometimes rays <strong>of</strong> color<br />

penetrate deep into the hymenium.<br />

Paraphyses and Paraphyses-like Structures<br />

It is the practice, in the determination keys <strong>of</strong> this<br />

book, to call all sterile filamentous structures<br />

within the hymenium paraphyses. According to<br />

the developmental layering viewpoint one may<br />

therefore distinguish more forms <strong>of</strong><br />

paraphyses-like structures. True paraphyses<br />

grow from the underlying region <strong>of</strong> the<br />

hymenium toward the upper and are from the<br />

first free at the ends. Paraphysoids, in contrast to<br />

the true paraphyses, originate largely from ascus<br />

production; they are <strong>of</strong>ten especially thin, the cell<br />

septa wide apart. Pseudopara-physes grow from<br />

the upper part perithecia-like fruiting bodies<br />

developing between the asci and binding to the<br />

base <strong>of</strong> the hymenium; they are commonly<br />

regularly septate, relatively thick, branched and<br />

bound to one another. Diagnosis <strong>of</strong> genera<br />

depend upon the various types <strong>of</strong> “paraphyses.”<br />

The paraphyses may be thickened at the tip or<br />

not thickened, may be branching or reticulate<br />

bound (anastomosing). Simple, entirely, or<br />

predominantly unbranched paraphyses are<br />

known. The relationships are <strong>of</strong>ten difficult to<br />

judge. Adding KOH <strong>of</strong>ten results in greater<br />

clarity. Weakly cemented paraphyses are<br />

loosened from one another by a slight pressure<br />

on the cover glass, at least after addition <strong>of</strong> KOH<br />

(characteristic “paraphyses easily free”). In rare<br />

instances paraphyses are missing or deliquescing<br />

and are then only to be recognized in the young.<br />

Periphyses occur in perithecia; they are<br />

filamentous hyphae, which project from the<br />

mouth region (ostiole).<br />

Asci<br />

The structure <strong>of</strong> the ascus has attained great<br />

importance for systematics in recent years. This<br />

is reflected also in the diagnostics <strong>of</strong> lichens.<br />

Fissitunicate (or bitunicate) asci have walls<br />

whose layers are loose from one another at the<br />

opening <strong>of</strong> the ascus, they are also functionally<br />

distinct in action; the more frequent<br />

non-fissitunicate (or unitunicate) asci have walls<br />

which are not made up <strong>of</strong> functionally distinct<br />

layers. At the tip <strong>of</strong> the asci are frequently found<br />

the so called apical structures, which serve as the<br />

opening <strong>of</strong> the asci. An analysis <strong>of</strong> these<br />

structures which are especially recognizable after<br />

coloring with iodine, aids in genus determination.<br />

Their study requires however a great deal <strong>of</strong><br />

experience and accurate observation. The tholus,<br />

the thickened inner part <strong>of</strong> the ascus apex, has<br />

especial importance. A protrusion <strong>of</strong> the ascus<br />

interior into the tholus in certain respects a<br />

trench-like recess <strong>of</strong> the tholus into the ascus<br />

lumen is called “chambre oculaire” or ocular<br />

chamber. Within the tholus one can <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

distinguish a region not or weakly colored with<br />

iodine (“axial mass”). A table (page 30) gives<br />

illustrations <strong>of</strong> important ascus forms and apical<br />

structures.<br />

Spore<br />

Spore size and form are very important<br />

characteristics. The size is carefully measured<br />

with the ocular micrometer (length and breadth).<br />

Significant forms: spherical, broadly ellipsoidal<br />

(less than twice as wide as long), narrowly<br />

ellipsoidal (more than twice as long as wide),<br />

elongate, fusiform, peg-like, or needle-form (see<br />

illustration on the right p.31).<br />

Pycnidia<br />

Pycnidia are as a rule spherical to pear shaped<br />

receptacles, which commonly are sunken in the<br />

thallus and resemble perithecia. In their interior,<br />

pycnospores (=pycnidiospores) are segmented<br />

<strong>of</strong>f <strong>of</strong> specialized hyphae and expelled to the<br />

outside through a narrow opening (ostiole). The<br />

pycnospores are mostly single celled and<br />

colorless. They function as asexual reproductive<br />

bodies (conidia), in other cases it is very<br />

probable that they have a sexual function, as<br />

male sex cells (spermatia). In a few species two<br />

or three different types <strong>of</strong> pycnidia are found<br />

with various sizes and shapes <strong>of</strong> pycnospores,<br />

12


which are then described as macro-, meso-, and<br />

microconidia; microconidia are always single<br />

celled.<br />

Pycnidia are usually recognized as very small<br />

blackish points on the thallus; in many cases the<br />

pycnidia are stalked or are sessile on the thallus<br />

as warts.<br />

3.2.5 The Chemistry <strong>of</strong> <strong>Lichens</strong>:<br />

Determination with the Aid <strong>of</strong> Color<br />

Reactions<br />

Many lichens contain well-defined secondary<br />

metabolic products, so called lichen substances.<br />

These are organic compounds <strong>of</strong> most variable<br />

structure, which for the most part are known only<br />

from lichens. Well versed lichenologists can<br />

discover them by means <strong>of</strong> various processes,<br />

e.g. thin layer chromatography. A few <strong>of</strong> these<br />

substances are colored (pigments). These<br />

pigments are commonly localized in the cortex <strong>of</strong><br />

the lichen thalli and are responsible for the<br />

yellow, yellow-greenish, brown, or red coloring<br />

<strong>of</strong> many species. Most <strong>of</strong> the lichen substances<br />

are colorless; with few exceptions they are<br />

localized in the medulla <strong>of</strong> the lichen thalli.<br />

The awareness <strong>of</strong> lichen substances is <strong>of</strong><br />

considerable importance, in some for the<br />

systematics <strong>of</strong> lichens, in others even for the<br />

determination <strong>of</strong> species. One part <strong>of</strong> the lichen<br />

substance reacts with the reagents such as<br />

calcium hydroxide or sodium hypochlorite to<br />

produce a color. Since similar appearing species<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten have truly varying lichen substances, these<br />

color reactions provide worthwhile additional<br />

information and a simple determination aid.<br />

(Table page 34-36).<br />

In practice the smallest possible drops <strong>of</strong> the<br />

reagent is placed upon the site <strong>of</strong> the lichen<br />

thallus to be tested and the reaction ascertained,<br />

whether immediate or gradual, commonly<br />

occurring within 15 seconds. The reaction <strong>of</strong> the<br />

lichen cortex (i.e. the upper side <strong>of</strong> the lichen)<br />

and <strong>of</strong> the lichen medulla is <strong>of</strong>ten distinct<br />

because <strong>of</strong> differing lichen substances in these<br />

thallus parts. Since sometimes interesting<br />

diagnostic lichen substances lie in the medulla, it<br />

is in these cases important to test the reaction <strong>of</strong><br />

the medulla. Therefore the medulla must be<br />

uncovered in a sufficiently large surface through<br />

a section almost parallel to the upper surface.<br />

Each must develop his own technique. One can,<br />

for example, “clamp” the razor blade at the<br />

narrow side between the thumb and index finger,<br />

bringing it by the slightest pressure <strong>of</strong> the finger<br />

into a weak concave form and in very small angle<br />

section through the upper surface <strong>of</strong> the lichen.<br />

This manipulation and the observation <strong>of</strong> the<br />

reaction is most easily carried out under the<br />

binocular scope. The large reagent drop spreads<br />

over a large surface. The differentiation <strong>of</strong> the<br />

reaction between lichen cortex and lichen<br />

medulla may then be made difficult. In foliose<br />

lichens the best section for testing the medulla<br />

reaction is from the underside <strong>of</strong> the lichen, since<br />

here an eventual reaction <strong>of</strong> the lichen upper<br />

cortex can be avoided or less bother.<br />

For doing the color reactions one transports<br />

the reagent e.g. with a pipette or on the tip <strong>of</strong> a<br />

glass rod. Often the bore <strong>of</strong> commercial pipettes<br />

is too large and the droplet adhering to the<br />

pipette is too large, so that the reagent spreads<br />

out on the lichen over an unnecessarily large<br />

surface. It is better to bring a droplet from the<br />

pipette to the edge <strong>of</strong> a razor blade or onto a<br />

toothpick, scraping <strong>of</strong>f excess liquid and only<br />

then applying it.<br />

For testing the reaction one takes a piece <strong>of</strong><br />

the lichen which will be disposed <strong>of</strong> later. One<br />

avoids the testing <strong>of</strong> original portions that must<br />

be placed in the herbarium. It may be spoiled by<br />

dispersion <strong>of</strong> the drops. In other cases the<br />

customary reagent is toxic and easily stains the<br />

paper envelop. The clarity <strong>of</strong> the reaction<br />

depends upon the concentration <strong>of</strong> the lichen<br />

substance. In many cases it cannot be clearly<br />

determined whether the reaction is positive or<br />

negative. This reaction arises, when the reaction<br />

<strong>of</strong> the thallus is questionable or not otherwise<br />

specific, as carried out on the upper side <strong>of</strong> the<br />

thallus.<br />

In testing for color reaction on dark lichens<br />

(e.g. Bryorias) one lays the lichen tested upon a<br />

piece <strong>of</strong> white filterpaper on a slide. Then a few<br />

drops <strong>of</strong> reagent, e.g. P, are dropped upon it: the<br />

reagent diffuses into the white paper, so that the<br />

color reaction is better recognized than upon the<br />

dark lichen. Also when the lichen has the same<br />

color as the anticipated color <strong>of</strong> the reaction or in<br />

the case <strong>of</strong> very weak coloring (e.g. K+<br />

yellowish), it ought to dealt with in the way<br />

described (color is <strong>of</strong>ten more definite after<br />

drying the paper).<br />

Contact <strong>of</strong> the reagents with the skin and<br />

with materials <strong>of</strong> sundry type ought to be<br />

avoided. Above all para-Phenylendiamine is<br />

very injurious to health and not infrequently<br />

causes in the process damage to garments,<br />

paper and furniture. Calcium hydroxide and<br />

13


hypochlorite produce corrosion and bleaching. It<br />

is self evident that contact with the eyes is<br />

hazardous. If this comes to pass, immediately<br />

rinse the region <strong>of</strong> the eye with flowing water.<br />

Reagents for the Determination <strong>of</strong> <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

The following reagents are required: 1.<br />

Potassium hydroxide (Abbreviation: K), 2.<br />

Calcium or sodium hypochlorite (C), 3.<br />

Para-Phenylediamine (P), and 4. Iodine solution<br />

(J). The regents keep longer when stored in<br />

brown bottles and in the dark.<br />

Potassium hydroxide: 2-4 g <strong>of</strong> potassium<br />

hydroxide is dissolved in 20 cc <strong>of</strong> water. The<br />

solution is infinitely stable. A false judgment <strong>of</strong><br />

the yellow reaction is sometimes possible, since<br />

K makes the cortex transparent and the<br />

underlying yellow-green algae layer gives a<br />

misleading ± yellow-greenish coloring (see<br />

remedy below: white filter paper).<br />

Calcium Hypochlorite or Sodium<br />

Hypochlorite Solution: Calcium hypochlorite is<br />

obtained by dissolving chloride <strong>of</strong> lime<br />

(bleaching powder) in water to saturation. Since<br />

at best the solution is stable for one day and in<br />

addition the precipitating chloride <strong>of</strong> lime may<br />

cause annoying whitish flecks, it is better to use<br />

sodium hypochlorite solution. They must<br />

however be renewed from time to time, at best<br />

every two months. Equally effective are chlorine<br />

containing household cleansers (e.g. Clorox, also<br />

only <strong>of</strong> finite stability). Verification <strong>of</strong> the<br />

strength <strong>of</strong> the solution is produced by a simple<br />

test with a test lichen (e.g. Hypocenomyce<br />

scalaris). The reaction with C is <strong>of</strong>ten very<br />

fleeting, therefore observe immediately!<br />

In the case <strong>of</strong> the occasionally needed KC<br />

reaction, first potassium hydroxide is used, then<br />

C is brought to the same test site. As a rule, in<br />

this way the C reaction is stronger and more<br />

definite; the KC reaction is not however always<br />

identical to the C reaction. In rare instances a<br />

CK reaction is asked for (first C, then K!).<br />

In the case <strong>of</strong> the test with KC on yellowish<br />

species proceed in the following manner: lay a<br />

piece <strong>of</strong> lichen on a slide and drop a little K over<br />

it. After a little time take up the K with white<br />

filter paper. Afterwards put a drop <strong>of</strong> C on the<br />

paper and observe the color.<br />

Para-Phenylendiamine solution: This reagent<br />

is poisonous and leaves behind flecks on clothing<br />

etc. (see above). Do the reaction with P when it<br />

is stated in the species description. Avoid<br />

however the reaction with P on principle, when it<br />

is not essential for the determination.<br />

The reagent (according to Steiner) is prepared<br />

as follows: 1 g para-Phenylenediamine, 10 g<br />

sodium sulfite and 1ml <strong>of</strong> a detergent in 100 ml<br />

water. In this form it is stable for more than a<br />

month.<br />

An alternative to the health threatening para-<br />

Phenylenediamine is <strong>of</strong>fered by the Color<br />

Developer 1 <strong>of</strong> Merck; it was formulated for the<br />

color film developer process. According to the<br />

formula: 10 g sodium sulfite, as (Na2SO3)<br />

completely dissolved in distilled water + 3 g<br />

N 4 ,N 4 -Diethyl-1,4-phenylene-diaminesulfate<br />

(color developer) + 1 ml <strong>of</strong> a detergent, shake<br />

until completely in solution. The solution is<br />

stable for more than a month. The reactions with<br />

this reagent appear merely somewhat later on and<br />

the color is in the majority <strong>of</strong> cases pale (orange<br />

instead <strong>of</strong> red).<br />

Iodine Solution, for the study <strong>of</strong> the reactions <strong>of</strong><br />

the hymenium and <strong>of</strong> asci best in the form <strong>of</strong><br />

Lugol’s Solution (Merck): 0.5 g iodine, 1.5 g<br />

potassium iodide, 100 ml distilled water. A<br />

pretreatment with 10% potassium hydroxide is<br />

advantageous, in making possible reliable<br />

statements in studies <strong>of</strong> ascus structure. The<br />

abbreviation for this is K/I.<br />

Over sight <strong>of</strong> the most important lichen substances and their reactions<br />

Explanation: Indicated color reaction only with a sufficient concentration <strong>of</strong> the lichen substance. Above all<br />

in the case <strong>of</strong> P the reaction <strong>of</strong>ten alternates between yellow-orange and red. In parenthesis: in practice the<br />

reaction (on the lichen) is <strong>of</strong>ten unclear or fails to appear, therefore to be carried out on isolated material.<br />

Without indication: reaction the lichen negative, not proven on isolated material.<br />

Reagent K C KC P<br />

α-collatolic acid - - (red) -<br />

Alectorialic acid yellow red red yellow<br />

Alectoronic acid - - (red) -<br />

Angardianic acid - - - -<br />

Aotearon - - - -<br />

14


Argopsin - - - orange<br />

Arthothelin - orange orange -<br />

Aspiclin - - - -<br />

Antranorin yellow - - yellow<br />

Baeomycesic acid yellow - - yellow<br />

Barbatic acid - - - -<br />

Barbatolic acid yellow - - yellow<br />

Bourgeanic acid - - - -<br />

Caloploicin - - - -<br />

Calycin - - - -<br />

Caperatic acid - - - -<br />

Capistraton - - - -<br />

Chloratranorin yellow - - yellow<br />

Confluentinic acid - - - -<br />

Constictic acid yellow - - orange<br />

Coronaton - - -<br />

Cryptochlorophaeia acid (yellow-red) (red) red -<br />

Didymic acid - (green) -<br />

Diffractic acid - - - -<br />

Diploicin - - - -<br />

Diploschistesic acid - (blue) -<br />

Divaricatic acid - - - -<br />

Epanorin - - - -<br />

Erythrin - red red -<br />

Eugenitol - yellow yellow -<br />

Evernic acid - - - -<br />

Fumarprotocetraric acid yellow-brown - - red<br />

Gangaleoidin - - - -<br />

Glaucophaeic acid - - - -<br />

Glomelliferic acid - - red -<br />

Granuloson - orange orange -<br />

Grayanic acid - - - -<br />

Gyrophoric acid - red red -<br />

Hiascinic acid yellow-red red red -<br />

Homosekicaic acid - - - -<br />

Imbricaric acid - - - -<br />

Isousninic acid - - (yellow) -<br />

Jackinic acid - - - -<br />

Lecanoric acid - red red -<br />

Lepraric acid - - - -<br />

Lesdainin - - - -<br />

Lichesterinic acid - - - -<br />

Lichexanthon - - - -<br />

Lobaric acid - - (red) -<br />

Merochlorophaeic acid (yellow-red) (red) (red) -<br />

2’-O-Methylmicrophyllin. - - - -<br />

2’-O-Methylperlatolic acid - - - -<br />

Miriquidic acid - - - -<br />

Murolic acid - - - -<br />

Nephrosteranic acid - - - -<br />

Norstictic yellow/red - - yellow<br />

O-Demethyl-Planic acid - - - -<br />

Obtusatic acid - - - -<br />

Olivetoric acid - red red -<br />

4-Oxypannaric acid<br />

15


-2-methyl ester - red-orange<br />

Oxypannaric acid<br />

-6-methy ester - red-orange<br />

Pannaric acid - (green) -<br />

Pannaric acid-6-methyl ester - -<br />

Pannarin - - - orange<br />

Parietin red - - -<br />

Perlatolic acid - - - -<br />

Physodic acid - - (red) -<br />

Physodalic acid yellow-brown - - red<br />

Picrolicheninic acid - - violet -<br />

Pinastrinic acid - - - -<br />

Placodiolic acid - - (yellow) -<br />

Planaic acid - - - -<br />

Porphyrilic acid - (green) -<br />

Protocetraric acid yellow-brown - - red<br />

Protolichesterinic acid - - - -<br />

Psoromic acid - - - yellow<br />

Pulvinic acid dilacton - - - -<br />

Rangiformic acid - - - -<br />

Rhizocarpic acid - - - -<br />

Rhodocladonic acid dark red - - -<br />

Roccellic acid - - - -<br />

Salazinic acid yellow/red - - yellow<br />

Schizopeltic acid - - - -<br />

Scrobiculin (yellow-red) (red0 red -<br />

Sekikaic acid - - - -<br />

Skyrin red - - -<br />

Sordidon - yellow yellow -<br />

Sphaerophorin - - - -<br />

Squamatic acid - - - -<br />

Stenosporic acid - - - -<br />

Stictic acid yellow - orange<br />

Strepslin - green - -<br />

Thamnolic acid yellow - - orange<br />

Thiophanic acid - orange orange -<br />

Thiophaninic acid - yellow orange -<br />

Thuringion - - - -<br />

Usnic acid - - (yellow) -<br />

Variolaric acid - - - -<br />

Vicanicin - - - -<br />

Vinetorin - - - -<br />

Vulpinic acid - - - -<br />

Zeorin - - - -<br />

Oversight <strong>of</strong> the most important Pigments<br />

Calycin orange-red<br />

Parietin yellow-orange<br />

Pulvinic acid yellow<br />

Pulvinic acid dilacton yellow<br />

Rhizocarpic acid yellow<br />

Skyrin yellow-red<br />

Sordidon yellow<br />

Usnic acid light yellow<br />

Vulpinic acid yellow<br />

Use <strong>of</strong> UV-light as an aid to Determination<br />

Many substances – corresponding as well to the<br />

lichen parts containing these substances – glow<br />

white, blue-white, or other colors, in the light <strong>of</strong><br />

commercial UV-lamps (e.g. as used for postage<br />

stamps). As a rule, these phenomena are to be<br />

seen in the medulla <strong>of</strong> lichens, therefore a<br />

16


abrasion or a cut is to be recommended. The<br />

UV-lamp is used in the dark; the eyes ought to be<br />

protected by spectacles. The test ought to be<br />

done on a base, which does not glow in UV-light.<br />

White paper <strong>of</strong>ten glows strongly and interferes<br />

with observing the UV-reaction. Many UVlamps<br />

allow observing in short wave (254 nm)<br />

and long wave (e.g. 366 nm) UV. In the short<br />

wave region one generally gets the clearer result.<br />

4 Explanation for Geobotanical<br />

Characterization <strong>of</strong> Species<br />

In the attachment to the Key the species <strong>of</strong> each<br />

genus is presented in alphabetical order under the<br />

title “Ecology and Distribution.” If necessary<br />

synonyms with author names and species names<br />

are provided after them in parenthesis. The<br />

description, which follow the method <strong>of</strong><br />

OBERDORFERS plant sociological excursions flora,<br />

include in the first line data about the habitat, the<br />

association, the vegetation, the higher divisions,<br />

distribution and frequency in southwest Germany<br />

and environs as well as about the entire<br />

distribution in Europe. In addition to the<br />

frequency indications, the estimate about the<br />

threat <strong>of</strong> the species in <strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong> is<br />

presented in parentheses. An enclosed in<br />

parentheses ecological conception signifies an<br />

attenuation: example: “extreme-considerable<br />

(moderately) acidophytic” means that the plant is<br />

extremely to considerably acidophytic, less<br />

strongly even moderately acidophytic.<br />

Ecological and sociological characteristics<br />

become <strong>of</strong> considerable value when a similarity<br />

with other lichen species is present.<br />

4.1 Evidence about Vertical<br />

Distribution and Large Scale<br />

Climate<br />

The evidence about the vertical distribution and<br />

the large scale climatic conditions play a large<br />

role in the distribution <strong>of</strong> the species in each case<br />

<strong>of</strong> examination <strong>of</strong> territory. These data may not<br />

without addition be carried to other regions, and<br />

one must always be conscious <strong>of</strong> their systematic<br />

characters. Following altitude readings were<br />

employed (applicable to Central Europe, altitude<br />

readings for southwest Germany and environs) :<br />

Foothills: Hilly country, below mountainous<br />

country up to ca. 400 m, with warmth loving<br />

communities, e.g. oak-hornbeam forests; growing<br />

susceptible fruits and vineyards.<br />

Submontane: the transition between the foothills<br />

and montane phase.<br />

Montane: Mountain region, approximately<br />

between 500 and 100 m. Predominantly <strong>of</strong><br />

beech- and beech-fir forests.<br />

High montane: Mountainous country<br />

approximately between 1100 and 1600 m.<br />

beech-fir, fir-spruce, spruce-forests, high<br />

shrubs-mountain mixed forests, shrubby heaths<br />

and setaceous grass turf.<br />

Subalpine: Krumholtz zone between 1600 and<br />

1800 m, shrubby Scot’s pine, and pine forest<br />

outposts.<br />

Alpine: Mountain region above the forest and<br />

tree line, alpine meadows, dwarf shrubby heaths,<br />

and rock fields. The snow level is not included<br />

here.<br />

Dealpine: From the alpine level down to the<br />

submontane (or foothills region) locations (in<br />

lower locations occurring e.g. as ice age relicts<br />

and by flooding).<br />

The amount <strong>of</strong> rainfall is very significant. It is<br />

within known limits also a measurement <strong>of</strong><br />

relative humidity, since rainfall charts and<br />

humidity charts show a rather good correlation<br />

with one another. The following representation<br />

was employed for characterizing the rainfall<br />

level:<br />

very low -600 mm/year<br />

precip. precip. poor<br />

moderately low<br />

precipitation 600-750 mm<br />

moderately high 750-1000 mm<br />

precipitation<br />

rather high 1000-1400 mm<br />

precip. high precip.<br />

very high 1400- >2000 mm<br />

precipitation<br />

Areas were designated as Warm sites, in which<br />

vineyards are possible, as fairly warm such areas<br />

in which fruit trees are favored, as moderately<br />

cool sites in which corn growing is favored.<br />

Mild sites are distinguished by relatively little<br />

annual variation in temperature, a small number<br />

<strong>of</strong> freezing days and late frosts.<br />

4.2 Evidence about the Habitat<br />

4.2.1 The Substrate<br />

17


Many lichen species are fairly substrate specific<br />

to the extent that they are limited for the most<br />

part on bark or wood or silicate rock or limestone<br />

or soil and scarcely ever change over to other<br />

substrates. A further substrate related<br />

specialization is caused by pH conditions,<br />

nutrient supply, water capacity (water storage<br />

capacity) and other chemical and physical<br />

properties <strong>of</strong> the substrate. A few examples:<br />

Many bark lichens are limited to acid and<br />

nutrient poor bark and therefore are found<br />

predominately on conifer trees, others are<br />

specialized on base-rich bark, certain rock<br />

lichens live only on heavy-metal rich silicate<br />

rocks, others prefer fine granular, relatively<br />

porous calcareous rock. Very rotted wood is<br />

floristically distinct from tough and hard wood.<br />

pH Value<br />

Soil- as well as bark- and rock-dwelling lichens<br />

at times show pH characterized dependence. For<br />

example certain lichen species occur only upon<br />

calcareous and base rich soils, others only on<br />

very acid.<br />

The evidence for the critical point pHvalue<br />

<strong>of</strong> sites colonized by the species is<br />

supported by extensive pH-measurements with<br />

a portable pH-meter with a flat membrane<br />

electrode (see WIRTH 1972); they were for the<br />

most part accomplished on site on rain moistened<br />

or distilled water moistened substrates. The pH<br />

conditions were described as follows:<br />

Substrate Plants<br />

extremely acid - pH 3.3 extreme.<br />

acidophytic<br />

very acid pH 3.4-4.0 very acidophytic<br />

rather acid pH 4.1-4.8 rthr acidophytic<br />

moderately acid pH 4.9-5.6 mod acidophytic<br />

sub neutral pH 5.7-7.0 sub neutrophic<br />

neutral pH 7 neutrophic<br />

moderately basic pH 7.1-8.5 mod basic<br />

basic over pH 7 basic<br />

embracing a wide pH range euryion<br />

The non eutrophic and substantially unaltered by<br />

air pollution bark <strong>of</strong> conifers and birch is mostly<br />

very acid (stem); <strong>of</strong> spruce and black alder rather<br />

acid; <strong>of</strong> pear rather (-moderately) acid; <strong>of</strong> beech,<br />

ash, apple, and basswood moderately acid; while<br />

most poplars, Norway maples, sycamore, and<br />

elm, moderately acid to sub neutral; and black<br />

elder usually sub neutral.<br />

The buffering capacity in size and range nearly<br />

parallels the pH value: the higher the pH value<br />

the higher the buffering capacity. The buffering<br />

capacity attains a great significance, above all<br />

through the onset <strong>of</strong> wide distribution <strong>of</strong> acid air<br />

pollution, which acidifies the tree bark. A<br />

relatively high buffer capacity possessed by the<br />

bark <strong>of</strong> the ash, which <strong>of</strong>ten bears a flora, which<br />

is typical for trees with higher pH values. The<br />

sycamore is unchanged. Here a relatively small<br />

buffer capacity in the case <strong>of</strong> a relatively higher<br />

pH goes along with an <strong>of</strong>ten narrow acidophilic<br />

lichen flora.<br />

Mineral Content, Nutrient Content, and<br />

Eutrophication<br />

Only little is known today about mineral content<br />

and above all about the nutrient content ( in a<br />

narrower sense, foremost nitrogen and<br />

phosphorus compounds) <strong>of</strong> lichen inhabited<br />

substrates. Justifiable are statements about the<br />

extent <strong>of</strong> eutrophication <strong>of</strong> the habitat by animal<br />

manuring (e.g. bird roosts), by dust films (tree<br />

bark, rocks, walls, etc.) and by mineral fertilizer<br />

(vineyard walls). For the ecological characterization<br />

<strong>of</strong> the lichens <strong>of</strong> this kind <strong>of</strong> habitat one<br />

can use the relatively appropriate and neutral<br />

expression “coniophytic” (in the case <strong>of</strong> dust<br />

impregnation) and “coprophytic” (in the case <strong>of</strong><br />

animal manuring). Here is employed a known but<br />

without doubt truly problematic term based on<br />

the nitrogen content: “nitrophytic”; here it makes<br />

use <strong>of</strong>, the quantity <strong>of</strong> nutrient supply to<br />

illustrate.<br />

Substrate: Plant:<br />

not eutrophic anitrophytic<br />

moderately eutrophic m. nitrophytic<br />

(m. nutrient-rich)<br />

rather eutrophic rthr. Nitrophytic<br />

( rather-nutrient rich)<br />

very eutrophic v. nitrophytic<br />

(strongly nutrient-rich)<br />

extremely eutrophic ext. nitrophytic<br />

(extremely nutrient-rich)<br />

Perhaps tree bark on the interior <strong>of</strong> extensive<br />

forests are not eutrophic, bark <strong>of</strong> field and<br />

avenue trees rather eutrophic, extremely etrophic<br />

are very nitrogen-rich habitats as well as very<br />

strongly dunged tops <strong>of</strong> bird roosts, the dog urine<br />

impregnated base <strong>of</strong> walls, and the surfaces near<br />

manure piles. Rock habitats naturally nutrientpoor<br />

are not eutrophic, but not counting others in<br />

18


the case <strong>of</strong> bark habitats, since bark (especially<br />

on young twigs) nutrients (e.g. nitrogen<br />

compounds) may be contained in no small<br />

measure. Rocks or wall habitats in the drip zone<br />

<strong>of</strong> the foliage <strong>of</strong> trees are usually relatively<br />

mineral-rich habitats, since the water drops<br />

contain plant sediment as well as minerals wafted<br />

onto the leaves.<br />

A close connection exists between the mineral<br />

content <strong>of</strong> bark (total concentration as<br />

electrolytes, measured as ash content) and the<br />

epiphytic lichen flora. Very mineral-poor barks<br />

are species poor and are floristically very<br />

strongly distinct from mineral-rich barks.<br />

The barks e.g. <strong>of</strong> elder, aspen, Norway maple<br />

and walnut are mineral-rich; ash, beech, and oak,<br />

very mineral rich; birch, spruce, and fir, mineralpoor<br />

A sharp floristic caesura (cut <strong>of</strong>f) exists in<br />

general between calcareous and lime-free rocks.<br />

Also the amount <strong>of</strong> the lime content <strong>of</strong> the<br />

calcareous rock and the amount <strong>of</strong> the SiO2<br />

content <strong>of</strong> the lime-free silicate rock has a<br />

floristic differentiating influence. Indeed floristic<br />

distinctions were first evident in the case <strong>of</strong><br />

significant quantitative differences in the<br />

chemical composition <strong>of</strong> the rock, as a<br />

comparison <strong>of</strong> lime-poor rock (as e.g. <strong>of</strong><br />

siliceous limestone, or calcareous slate) and<br />

lime-rich marl or refined pure lime and dolomite.<br />

Very SiO2 - rich rock (acid silicate rock e.g.<br />

quartzite, quartz-rich sandstone) bear an altered<br />

and poorer flora than SiO2 -poor (basic and<br />

ultra-basic rock, e.g. basalt, melaphyrite, and<br />

serpentine). Rock with a content <strong>of</strong> more than<br />

70% SiO2 as crude true value was designated<br />

here as acid silicate rock, as neutral silicate were<br />

those with a SiO2 content somewhere between<br />

65-70 and 50%, as basic those with a SiO2<br />

content <strong>of</strong> less than 50%.<br />

In lichenological circles the expression<br />

“mineral-rich” is <strong>of</strong>ten used with quartz-poor,<br />

above all characterizing feldspar-rich (above all<br />

plagioclase-rich) rock; is treated approximately<br />

as basic and neutral silicate rock.<br />

As calcareous rock (= carbonate rock) here<br />

was understood to be rock with a homogeneous<br />

distribution <strong>of</strong> calcium. Limestone is more or<br />

less pure lime (CaCO3). Silicate rocks (=<br />

sandstone) are, when not otherwise noted,<br />

lime-free.<br />

Hardness and Porosity <strong>of</strong> Rocks<br />

About the hardness, porosity and the weathered<br />

condition we are presenting only the stronger<br />

deviations from the norm (e.g. extremely hard<br />

rocks as many basalts, and porphyries). Porous<br />

rock (many sandstones, and many dolomites)<br />

produce by relatively high water absorption and<br />

water-holding ability (even at the upper surface)<br />

favorable moisture relations at their upper<br />

surface; moreover from outcrops <strong>of</strong> porous rocks<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten even humidity is drawn out (mountain<br />

humidity). These rocks may therefore bear a<br />

relatively hygrophytic lichen flora; humidity<br />

requiring species descend farther into lower sites<br />

on them than on compact (dense) rocks.<br />

Decay <strong>of</strong> Wood Substrates<br />

The following expressions are used for the<br />

degree <strong>of</strong> progress <strong>of</strong> decay <strong>of</strong> stems and stumps:<br />

hard, tough (- decay): Wood hard through and<br />

through, only difficult to work with a pocket<br />

knife<br />

rather decayed: Upper surface <strong>of</strong> stumps and<br />

stems still intact, but the interior already<br />

significantly decomposing. Wood pieces with<br />

the center breakable<br />

very decayed: Upper surface no longer intact i.e.<br />

very slightly decayed, inner wood spongy, rotten,<br />

or disintegrating<br />

Slope <strong>of</strong> the (rock-) surface: as varying from<br />

horizontal-, inclined-, steep- (= subvertical-),<br />

vertical- and overhanging surfaces (=<br />

overhanging surfaces or surfaces under<br />

overhangs).<br />

Moisture (content) <strong>of</strong> Substrates<br />

Species which favor flooded substrates, which<br />

hold the moisture a long time i.e. relatively much<br />

water may be hoarded (moss covered, soaked,<br />

spongy bark, long-time dewy rock, porous rock<br />

[see above]), are known as “substrate<br />

hygrophytic.”<br />

A significant and typical lichen habitat is<br />

‘moisture seeping’ rock surfaces. Habitats <strong>of</strong> this<br />

kind are sporadically to frequently moistened by<br />

seeping water and always dry out again. In the<br />

typical case the surfaces are more or less<br />

discreet. The water comes out <strong>of</strong> crevices or out<br />

or the grasses overlaying the top <strong>of</strong> the rock and<br />

is this way through the soil and through soil filled<br />

cracks <strong>of</strong>ten relatively nutrient rich. The<br />

seep-water emerges first <strong>of</strong> all according to<br />

rainfall. For characterizing this type <strong>of</strong> plant site<br />

19


in the descriptions the term “subhydrophytic” is<br />

used.<br />

Amphibious species are temporarily flooded<br />

(streams, or rivers). Species living submerged<br />

colonize almost constantly flooded sites.<br />

4.2.2 Climate<br />

The climatic reality <strong>of</strong> the lichen habitat is<br />

indicated in the main with the aid <strong>of</strong> a statement<br />

about the light available, relative humidity, the<br />

measure “rainfall” and frequently the<br />

temperature relations.<br />

Moistening by rain: The measure <strong>of</strong> the<br />

moistening <strong>of</strong> the habitat with rain is <strong>of</strong><br />

considerable influence on the habitat selection.<br />

Many species live only on rain excluded sites.<br />

Habitat: Lichen:<br />

very rain-protected very anom-<br />

bryophytic<br />

rather rain-protected anombrophytic<br />

moderately rained-on m. ombrophytic<br />

rather rained-on r. ombrophytic<br />

very (strongly) rained-on v. ombrophytic<br />

The habitats not or only exceptionally rain<br />

moistened were designated as very rain<br />

protected sites. In the case <strong>of</strong> rather rain<br />

protected sites, moistening occurs only<br />

occasionally and relatively belatedly. The<br />

stem-dwelling lichens and the species on vertical<br />

and subvertical surfaces may be counted as<br />

normally in a moderately rained-on habitat. Here<br />

designated as very ombrophytic were only<br />

lichens <strong>of</strong> frequently rained-on surfaces in heavy<br />

precipitation regions.<br />

Humidity: Statements about the humidity<br />

relationships are only to be understood as a crude<br />

orientation. They are only made with difficulty<br />

and are problematic. The following gradations<br />

are found:<br />

Habitat: <strong>Lichens</strong>:<br />

extremely humid e. hygrophytic<br />

very humid v. hygrophytic<br />

rather humid r. hygrophytic<br />

moderately humid, or<br />

moderately dry air mesophytic<br />

rather dry air r. xerophytic<br />

very dry air v. xerophytic<br />

Oceanic (as a climatological conception):<br />

<strong>Lichens</strong> were designated as strongly oceanic<br />

(very oceanic), which depend upon very high<br />

rainfall or foggy and very/extremely humid<br />

places with mild temperatures (relatively small<br />

temperature variations) (above all high places<br />

and west exposures <strong>of</strong> the Vogesen, or the Black<br />

Forest). For rather oceanic lichens similar<br />

values, but less pronounced conditions (mostly<br />

high rainfall, rather mild climate). Rainfall<br />

occurring is <strong>of</strong> paramount importance <strong>of</strong> the<br />

factors determining moisture relationships. Fog<br />

and (less so) humidity may partially compensate<br />

for the amount <strong>of</strong> rainfall.<br />

Light: Light conditions are characterized as<br />

follows:<br />

Habitat: Plants:<br />

v. poorly v. skiophytic deep shade<br />

lighted plants<br />

r. poorly r. skiophytic shade plants<br />

lighted<br />

m. well m.photophytic half-shade<br />

lighted plants<br />

v. well v. photophytic Full light<br />

lighted plants<br />

Plants with a relatively very wide ecological<br />

amplitude <strong>of</strong> light use were designated as<br />

photoindifferent.<br />

Statements about the preferred occurrence <strong>of</strong><br />

lichen species in certain vegetation types or land<br />

forms may give further indication about climatic<br />

conditions <strong>of</strong> the habitat. Thus species which are<br />

designated as characteristic for forest regions,<br />

commonly live on wind-protected sites with<br />

relatively balanced moisture conditions.<br />

4.3 Statements About the Sociology<br />

Like flowering plants certain lichen species<br />

frequently occur associated with one another.<br />

Numerous such typical combinations <strong>of</strong> lichen<br />

species found again and again have been<br />

described as lichen communities. For the naming<br />

<strong>of</strong> such communities certain rules are valid,<br />

which are laid down in a code <strong>of</strong> plant sociologic<br />

nomenclature.<br />

So far as the community names are produced from<br />

species names, which are no longer in use, they were<br />

altered here according to today’s valid species names,<br />

without the code <strong>of</strong> plant sociologic nomenclature<br />

20


providing a process for this in the title. The retention<br />

<strong>of</strong> community names, which are made up following no<br />

longer familiar species names, gave information about<br />

the community, but does not make substantially more<br />

difficult the using <strong>of</strong> sociological evidence on<br />

systematic and nomenclatural problems holding<br />

interest for users <strong>of</strong> these books. In the cases, where<br />

the community names used here deviate as a result <strong>of</strong><br />

taxonomic (not syntaxonomic) alteration from original<br />

names, the original name is placed in parenthesis with<br />

an “!”.<br />

Class: Chrysotrichetalia chlorinae Wirth 1972<br />

(!Leprarietea chlorinae), community on rain sheltered<br />

silicate rock walls – Order: Chrysotrichetalia chlorinae<br />

Hadac 1944 (!Leprarietalia Hadac 1944)<br />

Alliance: Cystocoleion nigri Wirth 1972 --<br />

Association: Cystocoleo-Racodietum Schade 1932 ex<br />

Kelm. 1955 (!Coenogonio-Racodietum rupestris),<br />

Enterographetum zonatae (Degel. 1939) Wirth 1972<br />

(!Opegraphetum horistico-gyrocarpae Wirth 1969)<br />

Alliance: Chrysotrichion chlorinae Smarda & Hadac<br />

1944 (!Leprarion chlorinae) – Association:<br />

Lecideetum lucidae Schade 1934 ex Klem. 1950,<br />

Chrysotrichetum chlorinae Schade 1934 ex Wirth<br />

1972 (!Leprarietum chlorinae), Lecanoretum<br />

orostheae Hil. 1927<br />

Class: Rhizocarpetea geographici Wirth 1972,<br />

community <strong>of</strong> rain exposed silicates<br />

Order: Rizocarpetalia obscurati Wirth 1972 –<br />

Alliance: Porpidion tuberculosae Wirth 1972<br />

(!Lecideion tumidae) – Association: Porpidietum<br />

crustulatae Kelm. 1950 (!Lecideetum crustulatae),<br />

Lecideetum lithophilae Wirth 1969, Porpidietum<br />

tuberculosae Kelm. 1946 ex 1955 (!Lecideetum<br />

soredizae), Lecideetum erraticae James et al. 1977,<br />

Pertusarietum corallinae Frey 1922<br />

Order: Aspicilietalia gibbosae Wirth 1972<br />

Alliance: Pertusarion aspergillae Egea & Llim. 1987<br />

(!Pertusarion leucosorae) – Ass.: Pertusarietum<br />

aspergillo-flavicantis Wirth 1972 (!Pertusarietum<br />

leucosoro-flavicantis)<br />

Alliance: Umbilicarion hirsutae Cern. & Hadac 1944 –<br />

Umbilicarietum hirsutae Klem. 1931 , Umbilicarietum<br />

griseae (Masse 1964) Wirth 1972 (!Umbilicarietum<br />

murinae), Lasallietum pustulatae Hil. 1925<br />

(!Umbilicarietum pustulatae)<br />

Alliance: Parmelion conspersae Cern. & Hadac 1944<br />

– Ass.: Aspicilietum cinereae Frey 1922, Buellio-<br />

Rhizocarpetum Wirth 1972, Lecanoretum rupicolae<br />

Hil. 1923 (!Lecanoretum sordidae), Candelarielletum<br />

corallizae Almb. 1955 ex Massé 1964, Parmelietum<br />

somloensis Klem. 1955 (!Parmelietum molliusculae,<br />

!Parmelietum stenophyllae), Lecanoretum<br />

argopholidis (Cern. 1940) Wirth 1980 (Lecanoretum<br />

garov.-argopholis (Cern. 1940) Wirth 1972),<br />

Aspicilietum serpentinicolae Wirth 1972 –<br />

Lecidelletum carpathicae Wirth 1981<br />

Order: Acarosporetalia sinopicae Creveld 1981 –<br />

Alliance: Acarosporion sinopicae Wirth 1972 – Ass.:<br />

Acarosporetum sinopicae Hil. 1924, Lecanoretum<br />

epanorae Wirth 1972 – Position unclear: Acarosporo<br />

sinopicae-Pleopsidietum chlorophanae (Wirth 1972)<br />

Creveld 1981 (!Acarosporetum sinopicochlorophaenae)<br />

Order: Umbilicareitalia cylindricae Wirth 1972<br />

Alliance: Rhizocarpion alpicolae Frey 1933 ex Klem.<br />

1955 – Ass.: Rhizocarpetum alpicolae Frey 1923,<br />

Lecideetum obscurissimae Frey 1933, Fuscideetum<br />

kochianae (Ullrich et Wirth 1969) Ullirch & Wirth<br />

1972 (!Lecideetum kochianae)<br />

Alliance: Umbilicarion cylindricae Gams 1927 – Ass.:<br />

Umbilicarietum deustae Hil. 1925, Umbilicarietum<br />

cylindricae Frey 1922, Umbilicarietum<br />

cinereorufescentis Frey 1933, Pertusario-<br />

Ophioparmetum Wirth 1972 (!Pertusario-<br />

Haematommatetum)<br />

Order: Parmelietalia saxatilis Wirth 1972 – Alliance:<br />

Crocynio-Hypogymnion Wirth 1972 – Ass.:<br />

Parmelietum omphalodis Du Rietz 1921<br />

Order: Rinodino confragosae-Xanthorietalia elegantix<br />

Creveld 1981 – Alliance: Dimelaenion oreinae (syn.<br />

Lecanorion rubinae Frey 1933 ex Klem. 1955) Ass.:<br />

Rhizoplaco chrysoleucae-Dimelaenetum oreinae (Frey<br />

ex Klem. 1955) Creveld 1981, Dimelaenetum oreinae<br />

Hil. 1925 (!Rinodinetum oreinae), Lecanoro<br />

rupicolae-Pleopsidietum flavi Mot. 1926 (!Lecanoro<br />

soridadea-Acarosporetum oxytonae)<br />

Order: Physcietalia caesiae Mattick 1951 em. Creveld<br />

1981 – Alliance: Ramalinio capitatae Rübel 1933 –<br />

Ass.: Ramalinetum capitatae Frey 1923<br />

(!Ramalinetum strepsilis)<br />

Class: Aspicilietea lacustris Wirth 1972, community<br />

<strong>of</strong> sweet water lichens. – Order: Aspicilietalia lacustris<br />

Drehwald 1993 (syn. Hydeoverrucarietalia Cern. &<br />

Hadac 1944 em. Wirth 1972<br />

Alliance: Verrucarion funckii Wirth 1972<br />

(!Verrucarion siliceae) – Ass.P Verrucarietum funckii<br />

Ullrich & Wirth 1972 (!Verrucarietum siliceae),<br />

Verrucarietum hydrelae ass. prov. (syn.<br />

Verrucarietum laevato-denudatae) – Position unclear:<br />

Verrucarietum elaeomelaenae ass. prov.<br />

Alliance: Verrucarion praetermissae Cern. & Hadac<br />

1944 em. Wirth 1972 – Ass.: Porpidietum hydeophilae<br />

Ullrich 1992 (!Lecideetum hydrophilae, syn.<br />

Aspicilietum lacustris Frey ex Wirth 1972,<br />

Ionaspidetum chrysophanae Frey 1922 (!Ionaspidetum<br />

suaveolentis)<br />

Alliance: Porinion lectissimae Wirth 1980 – Ass.:<br />

Porpidietum glaucophaeae Wirth 1969 (!Lecideetum<br />

glaucophaeae)<br />

Alliance? -- Ass.: Ephebetum lanatae Frey 1922<br />

Class: Dermatocarpetea miniati Wirth class. nov.,<br />

subneutrophytic silicate lichen community. – Alliance:<br />

Physcion dimidiatae Wirth 1972 – Ass.: Xanthorietum<br />

fallacis Schindler 1935 (Type, !Xanthorietum<br />

substellaris), Lecanoretum dimissae Wirth 1969 –<br />

Position unclear: Caloplacetum obliterantis Wirth<br />

1972<br />

21


Class: Aspicilietea candidae Asta & Roux 1977, class.<br />

prov., community <strong>of</strong> upper surface delimed limestone<br />

<strong>of</strong> the subalpine and alpine zones, with Aspicilion<br />

mastrucatae Asta & Roux 1977, all. prov., e.g. with<br />

Lecideetum confluescentis Asta & Roux 1977 –<br />

Position unclear: Stenhammarelletum turgidae Hertel<br />

ex Asta, Clauz. & Roux 1977<br />

Class: Protoblastenietea immersae Roux 1978, class.<br />

prov., community <strong>of</strong> lime lichens <strong>of</strong> nutrient poor<br />

rocks (?Xeroverrucarietietea Hadac 1962<br />

Order: Thelidietalia decipientis Roux 1978, ord. prov.<br />

– Alliance: Hymenelion coeruleae Roux 1978<br />

(!Aspicilion coeruleae) – Ass.: Arthopyrenietum<br />

saxicolae Clauz & Roux 1975 ex Roux 1978,<br />

Hymenelio coerulae-Farnoldietum juranae Kaiser<br />

1926 em. Klem. 1955 (!Aspicilio coerulear-<br />

Lecideetum juranae, “Lecedeetum juranae” Kelm.<br />

1955, ? Encephalographetum cacuminum Asta &<br />

Roux 1978<br />

Order: Verrucarietalia parmigerae Roux 1978, ord.<br />

prov.<br />

Alliance: Rinodinion immersae Roux 1978 (?<br />

Verrucarion sphinctrinae Cern. & Hadac in Klika<br />

1948) – Ass.: Farnoldio juranae-Verrucarietum<br />

marmoreae Kaiser 1926 em. Roux 1978 (!Lecideo<br />

juranae-Verrucarietum marmoreae, syn.<br />

Verrucarietum marmoreae Kaiser 1926 em. Roux<br />

1978)<br />

Alliance: Acrocordion conideae Roux 1978, all. prov.<br />

– Ass.: Gyalectetum leucaspidis Wirth & Roux 1980,<br />

Petractinetum hypoleucae Roux & Wirth 1980 –<br />

Position unclear: Gyalectetum jenensis Kaiser em.<br />

Roux & Wirth 1978<br />

Class: Verrucarietea nirtescentis Wirth 1980, Soc:<br />

nutrient-rich limestone – Order: Verrucarietalia Klem.<br />

1950<br />

Alliance: Caloplacion decipientis Klem. 1950 – Ass.:<br />

Caloplacetum citrinae Beschel in Klem. 1955,<br />

Caloplacetum saxicolae (Du Rietz 1925) Kaiser 1926<br />

(!Caloplacetum murorum), Caloplacetum teicholytae<br />

Wilm. 1966, Physcio nigricantis-Candelarielletum<br />

mediantis Nowak 1960, Caloplacetum cirrochroae<br />

Poelt ex Breuer 1971, Caloplacetum granulosae Clauz.<br />

& Roux 1975 ex Roux 1978, Verrucario velanae-<br />

Caloplacetum xantholytae Nowak 1960 – (?)<br />

Dirinetum stenhammari Du Rietz 1925 em. Roux<br />

1978, Aspicilietum contortae Kaiser 1926 ex Klem.<br />

1955, Placocarpetum schaereri Klem. 1955 em. Roux<br />

1978 (!Dermatocarpetum monstrosi)<br />

Class: Collematetea cristati Wirth 1980, Soc. irrigated<br />

limestone – Order: Collematetalia cristati Wirth 1980<br />

Alliance: Collemation fuscovirentis Klem. 1955 corr.<br />

Wirth 1980 (!Collemation tuniformis, Collemion<br />

rupestrix Klem. 1955; not Collema flaccidum = C.<br />

rupestris but C. fuscovirens, which Klement<br />

misidentified as C. rupestris – Ass.: Toninietum<br />

candidae Kaiser 1926, Verrucario-Placynthietum nigri<br />

Kaiser 1926<br />

Alliance: Peltulion euplocae Moreno & Egea all. prov.<br />

– Ass.: Peltuletum euplocae Wirth 1972<br />

Alliance: Peccanion coralloidis Moreno & Egea all.<br />

prov. = Psorothchion schaereri all. prov. – Ass.:<br />

Peccanio-Thyreetum confusae Nowak 1960<br />

(!Peccanio-Thyreetum pulvinatae), Placynithium<br />

filiforme-P. subradiatum-Soc., Gonohymenia<br />

nigritella-Anema tumidulum-Soc.<br />

Class: Chrysotrichetea candelaris Wirth 1980<br />

(!Leprarietea candelaris), Bark lichen-Soc. rain<br />

sheltered sites – Order: Chrysotrichetalia candelaris<br />

Wirth 1980 (!Leprarietalia candelaris)<br />

Alliance: Calicion viridis Cern. & Hadac 1944<br />

(!Calicietum hyperelli), Lecanactidetum abietinae Hil.<br />

1925, Chaenothecetum ferrugineae Barkm. 1958<br />

(!Chaenothecetum melanophaeae), Calicietum<br />

glaucelli Kalb 1969 corr. Wirth (“Caliceitum abietini”,<br />

not Calicium abietinum, but Calicium glaucellum),<br />

Chaenothecetum furfuraceae Kalb 1969<br />

Alliance: Leprarion incanae Almb. 1948 – Ass.:<br />

Chrysotrichetum candelaris Mattick 1937 ex Barkm.<br />

1958 (!Leprarietum candelaris), Arthonietum<br />

pruinatae Almb. 1948 (!Arthonietum impolitae),<br />

Opegraphetum vermicelliferae Almb. 1948<br />

Class? -- Order: Lecanoretalia variae Barkm. 1958,<br />

predominantly wood dwelling soc.<br />

Alliance: Lecanorion variae Barkm. 1958 – Ass.:<br />

Xylographetum vitiliginis Kalb 1970,<br />

Hypocenomycetum scalaris Hil. 1925 (!Psoretum<br />

ostreatae, Lecideetum scalaris), Lecanoretum<br />

symmictae Klem. 1953<br />

Alliance: Lecanorion conizaeoidis all.nov. (Char.:<br />

Lecanora conizaeoides, Scoliciosporum<br />

chlorococcum): Lecanoretum conizaeoidis Barkm.<br />

1958 (Type) (!Lecanoretum pityreae),<br />

Pleurocoddetum vulgaris Hil. 1925<br />

Class: Hypogymnietea physodis Follm 1974, foliose-<br />

and fruticose lichen rich soc. acid bark – Order:<br />

Alectorietalia Dahl & Hadac 1944 (syn.<br />

Hypogymnietalia physodo-tubulosae Barkm. 58)<br />

Alliance: Cetrarion pinastri Ochsner 1928 – Ass.:<br />

Parmeliopsidetum ambiguae Hil. 1925<br />

Association: Hypogymnion physodis Beschel 1958<br />

(!Parmelion physodis, syn. Pseudevernion furfuraceae<br />

(Barm. 1958) James & al. 1977) – Ass.:<br />

Pseudevernietum furfuraceae Hil. 1925 (!Parmelietum<br />

furfuraceae)<br />

Alliance: Usneion barbatae Ochsner 1928 – Ass.:<br />

Alectorietum sarmentosae Frey 1927 (syn. Usneetum<br />

capillaris Bibinger 1970), Evernietum divaricatae Frey<br />

1952 ex Barkm. 1958 em Bibinger 1970 (!Letharietum<br />

divaricatae), Bryorio fuscescenti-Usneetum<br />

filipendulae Hil. 1925 (!Alectorio jubatae-Usneetum<br />

dasypogae, syn. Usneetum dasypogae sensu Bibinger<br />

1970), Usneetum silesiacae Bibinger 1970<br />

22


Alliance: Parmelion perlatae James et al. 1977 – Ass.:<br />

Parmelietum revolutae Almb. 1948 ex Klem. 1955<br />

Class: Frullanio dilatatae-Leucodontetea sciuroidis<br />

Mohan 1978 em. Marst. 1985 – Order:<br />

Orthotrichetalia Hadac 1944 (syn. Neckeretalia<br />

pumilae Barkm. 1958) -- Alliance: Lobarion<br />

pulmonariae Ochsner 1928 – Ass.: Lobarietum<br />

pulmonariae Hil. 1925, Nephrometum laevigati<br />

Barkm. 1958<br />

Class: Arthonio-Lecidelletea elaeochromae Drehwald<br />

1993 – Order: Graphidetalia scriptae Hadac 1944 (syn.<br />

Arthonietalia radiatae Barkm. 1958)<br />

Alliance: Graphidion scriptae Ochsner 1928 – Ass.:<br />

Pyrenuletum nitidae Hil. 1925 (syn.? Graphidetum scr.<br />

Hil. 1925), Pertusarietum hemisphaericae Almb. 1948<br />

ex Klem. 1955, Pertusarietum amarae Hil. 1925, (?)<br />

Thelotremetum lepadini Hil. 1925, Arthopyrenietum<br />

punctiformis James et al. 1977 ass. prov.,<br />

Opegraphetum rufescentis Almb. 1948 ex Klem. 1955<br />

(!Opegraphetum herpeticae)<br />

Allicance: Bacidion rubellae all.prov. – Ass.P<br />

Acrocordietum gemmatae Barkm. 1958; Badicia<br />

rubella-Aleurodiscus-Ass. Ritschel<br />

Alliance: Lecanorion subfuscae Ochsner 1928 – Ass.:<br />

Lecanoretum subfuscae Hil. 1925<br />

Class: Physcietea Tomaselli & De Micheli 1957 –<br />

Order: Physcietalia adscendentis Hadac 44 em.<br />

Barkm. 1958 – Alliance Buellion canescentis<br />

Barkman 1958 – Ass.: Buellietum punctatae Barkm.<br />

1958 (!Buellietum punctiformis) – Alliance:<br />

Xanthorion parietinae Ochsner 1928 – Ass.:<br />

Physcietum adscendentis Frey & Ochsner 1926,<br />

Parmelietum acetabuli Ochsner 1928, Ramalinetum<br />

fastigiatae Duvign. 1942, Parmelietum elegantulae<br />

Almb. 1948 ex Klem. 1955, Parmelietum caperatae<br />

Felf. 1941, Xanthorietum candelariae Barkm. 1958.<br />

1958 – Position unclear: Lecanoretum sambuci Wirth<br />

1980 ass. prov.<br />

Class: Cladonio-Lepidozietea Jecek & Vondr. 1962,<br />

Moss-Lichen-Soc. <strong>of</strong> decayed wood – Order:<br />

Lophocoleetalia heterophyllae Barkm. 1958 –<br />

Alliance: Tetraphido-Aulacomnion (Krus. 1945)<br />

Barkm. 1958 – Ass.: Ptilidio-Hypnetum pallescentis<br />

Barkm. 1958 – Alliance: Cladonio coniocraeae<br />

Duvign. 1942 ex James et al. 1977 – Ass.:<br />

Cladonietum coniocraeae Duvign. 1942 ex James et<br />

al. 1977, Cladonietum cenoteae Frey 1927 ex Frey<br />

1959<br />

Soil lichen-Soc. – The described soil lichen-Soc. may<br />

in part be organized into the sociological system <strong>of</strong> the<br />

society <strong>of</strong> higher plants, in part as free standing unit<br />

within the various societies <strong>of</strong> higher plant occurrence.<br />

Class: Psoretea decipientis Mattick ex Follm. 1974—<br />

Order: Psoretalia decipientis Mattick ex Follm. 1974 –<br />

Alliance: Toninietum sedifoliae Hadac 1948<br />

(!Toninion caeruleonigricantis), Soc. <strong>of</strong> lime soils –<br />

Ass.: Toninio-Psoretum decipientis Stodieck 1937 (!<br />

Thalloedema coer.-Lecidea dec.-Ass., syn.<br />

Fulgensietum fulgentis Gams nom. nudum),<br />

Endocarpetum pusilli Galle 1964, Cladonietum<br />

convolutae Kaiser 1926 (!Cladonietum<br />

endiviaefoliae), Cladonietum symphycarpae Doppelb.<br />

in Klem. 1955, Psoretum decipientis Frey 1922 (syn.<br />

Fulgensietum alpinum Poelt)<br />

Class: Ceratodonto-Polytrichetea piliferi Mohan 1978<br />

em. Drehwald – Order: Peltigeretalia Klem. 1950,<br />

Soc. acid soils<br />

Alliance: Baeomycion rosei Klem. 1955 – Ass.:<br />

Lecideetum uliginosae Langerf. ex Klem. 1955<br />

Alliance: Cladonion arbusculae Klem. 1950<br />

(!Cladonion sylvaticae), Fruticose lichen-Soc. acid<br />

soils – Ass.: Cladonietum mitis Krieger 1937,<br />

Cladonietum foliaceae Klem. 1955 (!Cladonietum<br />

alcicornis), Cladonietum destrictae Kreiger 1937 (Syn.<br />

Cladonio destrictae-Cornicularietum aculeatae<br />

Langerf. 1939)<br />

Alliance: Cetrarion nivalis Klem. 1955, alpine<br />

fruticose lichen Soc. – Ass.: Emperto-Cladonietum<br />

stellaris Du Rietz 1925 (!Empetro-Cladonietum<br />

alpestris, syn. Cladonietum alpestris Frey 1927 ex<br />

Klem. 1955), Loiseleurio-Alectorietum ochroleucae<br />

Du Rietz 1925 (Loiseleureitum Frey 1922)<br />

Alliance: Solorinion croceae Klem. 1955 (? Salicion<br />

herbaceae Br. bBl. 26), Soc. long time snoo coveres<br />

site – Ass.: Lecidomatetum demissae Frey 1923<br />

(!Psoretum demissae), Lecideetum limosae Klem.<br />

1955, Stereocauletum alpini Frey 1937, Calopalcetum<br />

nivalis Kalb 1970<br />

Alliance: Megasporion verrucosae Kalb 1970<br />

(!Lecanorion verrucosae), alpine and dealpine soc. on<br />

plant detritus and mosses – Ass.: Megasporetum<br />

verrucosae Frey 1927 (!Aaspicilietum verrucosae),<br />

Caloplacetum tiroliensis Kalb 1970<br />

4.4 Statements about Frequency,<br />

Endangering, and Toxic Tolerance<br />

The statements about frequency hold true for<br />

southwest Germany and the immediate bordering<br />

regions (without the Alps). The frequencies <strong>of</strong><br />

the species are stated in 6 intervals:<br />

very rare moderately frequent<br />

rare rather frequent<br />

rather rare very frequent<br />

Most <strong>of</strong> the lichen species are rare (v. - r. rare).<br />

Truly frequent species, as compared with<br />

dandelion or stinging nettle <strong>of</strong> higher plants, exist<br />

in very restricted numbers.<br />

Many lichens are in a more or less high<br />

degree <strong>of</strong> danger i.e. threatened with extinction.<br />

23


The causes are many, the sensitivity to air<br />

pollution plays an important role.<br />

For <strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong> (valid also for the<br />

immediate environs) after the frequency<br />

statements the statement in parentheses about the<br />

endangerment is in the form <strong>of</strong> the number from<br />

the Red List. They mean<br />

0: Extinct or missing<br />

1: In danger <strong>of</strong> extinction<br />

2: Strongly endangered<br />

3: Endangered<br />

R: Extremely rare<br />

Annotations <strong>of</strong> the categories (according to the<br />

definitions <strong>of</strong> the BfN/Institute for vegetation<br />

studies):<br />

1: Species which are so severely endangered that<br />

they face extinction, if the threatening causes<br />

continue. One <strong>of</strong> the following criteria must be<br />

fulfilled: (1) the species is so considerably<br />

regressed that they are rare; the remaining<br />

population is endangered; (2) they are now rare<br />

and because <strong>of</strong> continuing human influence<br />

extraordinarily strongly endangered.<br />

2: Species, which are extensively regressing or<br />

because <strong>of</strong> continuing or foreseeable human<br />

influence are strongly endangered. One <strong>of</strong> the<br />

following criteria must additionally be fulfilled:<br />

(1) the species has already disappeared in the<br />

greater part <strong>of</strong> the region; (2) it is very rare to<br />

rare; (3) it is still moderately frequent, but<br />

strongly endangered; (4) the diversity <strong>of</strong> their<br />

formerly colonized habitat is extensively<br />

restricted.<br />

3: Species, which are moderately regressing or<br />

because <strong>of</strong> continuing or foreseeable human<br />

influence are endangered. One <strong>of</strong> the following<br />

criteria must additionally be fulfilled: (1) the<br />

species is already very rare in the greater part <strong>of</strong><br />

the region; (2) it is rare to moderately frequent;<br />

(3) it is still frequent, but strongly endangered;<br />

(4) the diversity <strong>of</strong> the formerly colonized habitat<br />

is restricted.<br />

R: Extremely rare species at this time. They are<br />

not appreciably regressed or not noticeably<br />

endangered and they may on the basis <strong>of</strong> their<br />

scarcity be suddenly destroyed or essentially<br />

decimated due to unforeseen developments, e.g.<br />

by a combination <strong>of</strong> unexpected human intrusion<br />

or natural events like rock slides. A statement in<br />

italics means that the classification must be seen<br />

as relatively uncertain. An asterisk (*) after the<br />

Red List Rating means that the species in the<br />

environs around <strong>Baden</strong>-Württem-berg is clearly<br />

less endangered.<br />

In the case <strong>of</strong> species not occurring in<br />

<strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong> (as a rule after the statement<br />

<strong>of</strong> natural area) the following symbol was used:<br />

+: extinct, (+++): in danger <strong>of</strong> becoming extinct,<br />

(++): strongly endangered, (+): endangered, *:<br />

extremely rare. Species with especially<br />

remarkable value <strong>of</strong> resistance to (mostly acid)<br />

air pollution were designated as toxic tolerant.<br />

4.5 Statements <strong>of</strong> Plant Geography<br />

For the characterization <strong>of</strong> plant areas one uses<br />

certain geographical statements in which<br />

particularly the north to south extending<br />

(zonation), in addition to the west to east<br />

extending (continents) and the elevational<br />

distribution. The clarification <strong>of</strong> the concepts<br />

used here comes from the following combination.<br />

The definition <strong>of</strong> the individual geographic<br />

regions is from the diagram (refer to MEUSEL,<br />

JAEGER & WEINERT).<br />

4.5.1 Floral Regions and Floral Elements<br />

(Europe)<br />

arct = arctic: Tundra region north <strong>of</strong> the polar<br />

tree line. Many <strong>of</strong> the species occurring in this<br />

region are also to be found in the alpine zone <strong>of</strong><br />

the vegetation zones lying further south<br />

(arct-alp).<br />

bor = boreal: Region <strong>of</strong> the boreal pine belt.<br />

The species occurring in this region are further<br />

found for the most part in the montane and high<br />

montane zones <strong>of</strong> the temperate (central<br />

European) zone.<br />

s’bor = southern boreal: Southern region <strong>of</strong> the<br />

boreal zone (narrowing toward the east).<br />

mieur = middle European (or temperate):<br />

Temperate zone, region <strong>of</strong> green summer<br />

deciduous forests (in part intermixed with pine<br />

forests).<br />

s’mieur = southern middle European: Southern<br />

region <strong>of</strong> the temperate zone.<br />

smed = sub-Mediterranean: Region <strong>of</strong> green<br />

summer dry forests (above all oak forests) and<br />

steppes, northern Mediterranean region.<br />

med = Mediterranean: Non deciduous evergreen<br />

and pine forests, steppes and semi-desert<br />

southern Mediterranean.<br />

atl = Atlantic: Deciduous forested region near<br />

the Atlantic (in central Europe eastern to NW<br />

Germany, central and upper Rhine).<br />

subatl = Sub Atlantic: Region <strong>of</strong> the deciduous<br />

forest <strong>of</strong> west and central Europe. Species in the<br />

24


near desert region occurring or lacking, in the<br />

east European deciduous region lacking or<br />

culminating.<br />

subco = sub continental: East European<br />

deciduous forest region, east European boreal<br />

pine forest, westward to central Europe. Species<br />

lacking in west Europe.<br />

co = Continental: Steppes and semi-desert region<br />

<strong>of</strong> east Europe (and Asia). Species only isolated<br />

to advancing into the dryer region <strong>of</strong> central<br />

Europe. Continental boreal region.<br />

pralp = pre-alpine: Montane to high montane<br />

regions in the periphery <strong>of</strong> central-, east- and<br />

southeast European high mountains. The species<br />

seldom penetrating <strong>of</strong>ten also into the<br />

corresponding higher zones <strong>of</strong> the mountain.<br />

zentr = central Europe: Central Europe.<br />

Distribution focal point in central Europe, more<br />

or less clearly culminating in the periphery <strong>of</strong><br />

central Europe.<br />

oc = oceanic: Occurring in the lowlands <strong>of</strong> the<br />

near Atlantic region, decreasing toward the east<br />

in the interior increasingly up the mountain and<br />

only occurrence <strong>of</strong> isolated species (Attention: in<br />

the ecological characterization <strong>of</strong> the species the<br />

term oceanic is used only in the pure ecological<br />

sense: having an oceanic climate).<br />

4.5.2 Elevation Zones<br />

(Importance in region see p. 37)<br />

mo montane<br />

h’mo high montane<br />

subalp sub-alpine<br />

alp alpine<br />

4.5.3 Diagnosis <strong>of</strong> the Areas<br />

The statements made about the area <strong>of</strong> single<br />

lichen species in this book show only for Europe<br />

and use a rough orientation <strong>of</strong> the extent <strong>of</strong> the<br />

area. Often an extensive area is given as possible<br />

or probable. Thus many species distributed in<br />

Central Europe undoubtedly still occur in the<br />

montane region <strong>of</strong> the sub-Mediterranean or<br />

Mediterranean belts, even when the area<br />

diagnosis <strong>of</strong> these zones in not named.<br />

Statements about the zones were given priority.<br />

In many cases the vertical distribution and the<br />

east-west extensions is indicated; in this the<br />

Central European zone was especially<br />

considered.<br />

The area-zone statement in parentheses means<br />

that the species in the region concerned consists<br />

only <strong>of</strong> isolated occurrences. A continental<br />

designation <strong>of</strong> vertical zone in parentheses means<br />

that the corresponding distribution tendency<br />

exists or that the statement is relatively uncertain<br />

.<br />

Example <strong>of</strong> diagnosis <strong>of</strong> area:<br />

arct-mieur:<br />

The species occurs from the arctic to the<br />

Central European zone.<br />

bor-med:<br />

Occurring from boreal conifer forest into<br />

Mediterranean region.<br />

bor-mieur-mo:<br />

Occurring in the boreal and in the temperate<br />

(central European) zone, here however<br />

predominantly in the montane zone; for that<br />

reason in the southern part <strong>of</strong> the area mostly<br />

in definite distributional lacunae.<br />

arct-alp:<br />

Occurring in the arctic and in the alpine zone<br />

<strong>of</strong> the boreal to the Mediterranean zone. The<br />

area strongly disrupted (disjunct).<br />

arct-mieur-alp:<br />

Occurring in the arctic and in the alpine zone<br />

<strong>of</strong> the boreal and the Central European zone.<br />

mieur-subatl-med:<br />

Occurring in the sub-Atlantic region <strong>of</strong> the<br />

temperate zone over the sub-Mediterranean<br />

region to the Mediterranean zone. Thereby it<br />

is mostly though with a sub-Atlantic tendency<br />

in the sub-Mediterranean and Mediterranean<br />

region.<br />

A designation, which is separated by a comma<br />

from the remainder <strong>of</strong> the area diagnosis, covers<br />

the same area. Example:<br />

mieur-med, pralp:<br />

Occurring in the vicinity <strong>of</strong> the alpine<br />

mountains and in lower elevations <strong>of</strong> the<br />

mountains themselves, from the temperate to<br />

the Mediterranean zone.<br />

mieur-subatl-smed, oc:<br />

Occurring in the sub-Atlantic region <strong>of</strong> the<br />

temperate zone into the sub-Mediterranean<br />

region, toward the east where an increasing<br />

restriction to the mountains is observed.<br />

4.5.4 Habitat Remarks on Extent and Natural<br />

Uniformity/landscape<br />

Al Allgäu<br />

Av Foothills <strong>of</strong> the Alps (pre alpine hills<br />

and moors)<br />

Ba Baar<br />

25


BayW Bavarian Forest (with Bohemian<br />

Forest)<br />

Bit Bitburger Land<br />

Bo Lake Constance (Lake Constance basin<br />

and the Hegau)<br />

Do Danube (Iller valley and Danube<br />

pastures)<br />

Eif Upland region between the Rhine,<br />

Moselle and Ruhr valleys<br />

Erz Erzgebirge (and Fichtelgebirge)<br />

Fi Fichtelgebirge<br />

Fr Franconian Terrace<br />

FrJu Franconian Alp<br />

He Hessian upland, (Lahn valley, and the<br />

Taunus)<br />

HeBgl Hessian upland (with the Rhön and<br />

Vogelsberg)<br />

HRh Upper Rhine region<br />

Hü Hunsrück (southern part <strong>of</strong> Rhenish<br />

uplands)<br />

Hü Loess- and calcareous hilly land on<br />

both sides <strong>of</strong> the Rhine plains (with<br />

Kaiserstuhl)<br />

Hz Hartz<br />

Ju Schwäbische Alp and surroundings<br />

(Brown Jura-Malm-region)<br />

Lahn Lahn valley<br />

Lux Luxenburg<br />

Mfl Central Franconian<br />

Ml Central Switzerland (Hügelland<br />

Aargau/Zürich)<br />

Mn Mainfranken Plateau and barren land<br />

(with Windsheimer Bay,<br />

Stiegerwald-Vorland, and tomb stones)<br />

Mos Mosel valley<br />

MRh Central Rhine<br />

Ne Neckar region, Neckar-Gäu plateau<br />

and Alp foothills (Keuper-Lias region),<br />

with Baar<br />

nöHü Nothern Hügelland<br />

nöPf North Platinate mountains<br />

nöRh North upper Rhine<br />

nöSch North Black Forest<br />

O Odenwald<br />

Obay Upper Baravian Heights (foothills <strong>of</strong><br />

the Alps<br />

Opf Upper Platinate<br />

Pf Platinate (with Platinate Forest, Hardt,<br />

and North Platinate Mountains)<br />

PfW Platinate Forest<br />

Rh Upper Rhine<br />

RhL Rhine Land<br />

Rh-Mn-T Rhine-Main lowlands<br />

Rhön Rhöne<br />

RhSch Slate range <strong>of</strong> the Rhine (Hu, Mos,<br />

MRh, Ts, Eif)<br />

Ries Ries (a basin formed by meteorite<br />

impact)<br />

Saar Saar Land<br />

Sauerl Sauer Land<br />

Sb Schöbuch<br />

Sch Black Forest<br />

SFW Schwäbisch-Fränkischer Forest<br />

Sju Swiss Jura (northernmost part)<br />

Sp Spessart<br />

süHü Southern Hügelland (with Black Forest<br />

foothills)<br />

süRhön Southern Rhön foothills<br />

süSch Southern Black Forest<br />

Th Thüringer Hügelland<br />

ThW Thüringer Forest<br />

Ts Taunus<br />

Ubay Lower Baravian Hügelland<br />

Vgb Vogels Mountain<br />

Vgt Vogt Land<br />

Vog Vogesen<br />

We Wester Forest<br />

WeBgl Wesserbergland<br />

Habitat remarks set in italics means that the last<br />

known by the author to have been found from<br />

this region in the last hundred years<br />

5 The Distribution <strong>of</strong> <strong>Lichens</strong> in<br />

<strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong> in Chart<br />

Representation<br />

In <strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong> – the heart <strong>of</strong> the region<br />

considered in this work – the awareness <strong>of</strong> the<br />

distribution <strong>of</strong> lichens has been for some time so<br />

extensively advanced, that for most <strong>of</strong> the<br />

species, representative distribution charts may be<br />

produced. The charts consider, if not otherwise<br />

stated, the distribution in <strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong><br />

(Ordinance-Survey map with the<br />

<strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong> portion delimited see the<br />

chart page 49). In the case <strong>of</strong> many charts, the<br />

distribution in the region <strong>of</strong> the whole sector is<br />

shown, even beyond <strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong>. In<br />

these cases the species name is shown with an<br />

asterisk *.<br />

5.1 Natural Basis <strong>of</strong> the Regions Charted<br />

<strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong> lies in the southwest <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Federal Republic <strong>of</strong> Germany. It extends<br />

between 7°30’ and 10°30’ east latitude from<br />

26


Greenwich as well as 47°31’ and 49°47’ north<br />

longitude (Fig. page 47) and includes an area <strong>of</strong><br />

35,750 km 2 , The altitude lies between 85 m and<br />

1493 m above sea level. The region is<br />

geologically variable., Large flat portions<br />

resulted from sedimentation <strong>of</strong> the Jurassic<br />

period (especially the Malm) and the Triassic<br />

period (Bunt Sandstone, shell limestone and red<br />

marl) as well as from crystalline soil from the<br />

mountains. The predominantly occurring rocks<br />

are metamorphic (gneiss) and magmatic rock<br />

(granite) in the mountain ranges, non calcareous<br />

sandstone in the Bunt Sandstone and lime-rich<br />

sediments in the Malm and shell limestone (Fig.<br />

p. 51f.). The climatic specified extremes are<br />

rather diverse corresponding to the altitude<br />

differences and distinct weather- and leesituations<br />

(Fig. p. 53ff), it lacks, <strong>of</strong> course, alpine<br />

regions with their lichen favorable conditions. In<br />

<strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong> lies all or part <strong>of</strong> the nature<br />

zones Upper Rhine lowlands, Black Forest, Oden<br />

Forest, Swabian Alp, Swabian-Franconian<br />

Mountain Forest (Keuper-Lias-region), Neckar<br />

(Gäu plateau), Main Franconian plateau, and<br />

Upper Swabia (Fig. p. 48).<br />

5.2 Charting and Illustration Method<br />

The charting <strong>of</strong> lichens follows according to the<br />

point-raster or grid method, the analysis region<br />

was calibrated by the grid into practicable equal<br />

size charting units, the raster or base field. The<br />

evidence <strong>of</strong> one or more occurrences in the<br />

region <strong>of</strong> a raster field is given by a point in the<br />

corresponding field <strong>of</strong> the raster chart. The Area<br />

<strong>of</strong> a species is in agreement with a point raster <strong>of</strong><br />

definite extent and form in the chart.<br />

The advantage <strong>of</strong> the point raster method lies<br />

in the potentiality gained to unite, in the planning<br />

and economy <strong>of</strong> charting, and in addition to<br />

make full use <strong>of</strong> the data with the help <strong>of</strong> a<br />

statistical-mathematical analysis over EDV, e.g.<br />

to compare the distribution charts with<br />

factor-raster charts (e.g. climate charts). The<br />

economical element lies above all in the finding<br />

that the charting i.e. the inclusion <strong>of</strong> a species<br />

with entering the evidence in a base field, the<br />

quest after the species also may gradually find a<br />

conclusion. Among other things in the aspect <strong>of</strong><br />

the information on area it is not very intrinsic, as<br />

many single occurrences are concealed by one<br />

raster point.<br />

That the charts take as a basis raster or grid<br />

over another is in accord with the sectional view<br />

<strong>of</strong> the topographic charts 1:25000 (TK 25, so<br />

called ordnance-survey map). Each charting<br />

base field corresponds therefore with the surface<br />

<strong>of</strong> one such sheet <strong>of</strong> the TK 25 and encloses 10<br />

minutes geographic longitude and 6 minutes<br />

geographic latitude, in <strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong> that<br />

is equivalent to about a surface e.g. a rectangle <strong>of</strong><br />

11.1 times 12.2 km pages long. This raster was<br />

selected as first policy for this reason, because it<br />

also had been established for charting the higher<br />

plants <strong>of</strong> central Europe and because it is<br />

universally easy to obtain. <strong>Baden</strong>-Württem-berg<br />

is covered by 313 raster fields. These raster<br />

fields were designated with the established four<br />

digit number for the TK 25.<br />

In the case <strong>of</strong> minute grid small diverging <strong>of</strong><br />

the lateral line <strong>of</strong> the base field from north<br />

toward south, and corresponding increase in the<br />

base field in the same direction by chance in size,<br />

a fixed drawback compared with similar<br />

quadratic base fields. In the framework <strong>of</strong> the<br />

national project it was however the extensive<br />

declivity <strong>of</strong> the minute base field from the<br />

geographic latitude in the main did not interfere<br />

with the raster point illustration <strong>of</strong> the<br />

distribution, especially since these grids are able<br />

to be drawn to correct section (as in the case <strong>of</strong><br />

the present charts). For Europe-wide undertaking,<br />

a grid with 50 x 50 km units as a base was<br />

used. Regional and national charting in minuteraster<br />

may be undertaken without grave error in<br />

such small scale UTM grid charts.<br />

Transportation maps will work for this.<br />

5.3 Important Site Data<br />

The charting units were as a rule repeatedly<br />

called on and dealt with according to prevailing<br />

diversity <strong>of</strong> the habitat. In the site study various<br />

climatic and edaphic site-observations were<br />

undertaken to capture potential breadth <strong>of</strong> a<br />

species spectrum. Because <strong>of</strong> the wide ranging<br />

specialization <strong>of</strong> the lichen species on the<br />

substrate types bark, rock and soil, there was a<br />

corresponding observing <strong>of</strong> habitat presumption<br />

in the charting effort for each base field. A part<br />

<strong>of</strong> the basic plan <strong>of</strong> the site work – due to at the<br />

time truly differing lichen flora – was the<br />

consideration <strong>of</strong> various habitat types with regard<br />

to substrate and climate.<br />

The charting data was ordered according to<br />

base fields in the resulting lists, from which the<br />

data found are also apparent. Protocols in<br />

addition are in hand from each single excursion.<br />

27


The most important sample points were plotted<br />

onto topographic charts.<br />

Voucher collections (lichen specimens) are<br />

deposited in the herbarium <strong>of</strong> the Public Museum<br />

for Nature Study, Stuttgart (STU).<br />

5.4 Consideration <strong>of</strong> Old Data Found<br />

Numerous botanists and amateurs have in the<br />

past, through their collecting, contributed to a<br />

truly solid lichenological knowledge <strong>of</strong> the<br />

region <strong>of</strong> <strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong>, though the<br />

research was very uneven and the inconspicuous<br />

species are strongly under represented. From the<br />

published finds and the vouchers deposited in<br />

herbaria it appears that many species are, since<br />

that time extinct or strongly decreased (see topic<br />

1.3). Since earlier a systematic inclusion <strong>of</strong><br />

lichen occurrences was not given and as a rule<br />

only a narrow vicinity around home and some<br />

few excursion areas were collected, are also<br />

single discoveries outside the today proven areas<br />

<strong>of</strong> definite reference from one in the interval<br />

following shrinkage <strong>of</strong> the area <strong>of</strong> distribution;<br />

even less the climatic and edaphic divergence <strong>of</strong><br />

the former habitat from the wider surroundings,<br />

all the more in all likelihood the evidence is<br />

representative and not an isolated discovery.<br />

To document the decrease <strong>of</strong> lichens,<br />

herbarium data and reliable published statements<br />

were assimilated for the raster point charts and<br />

were emphasized with special signatures.<br />

Different time ranges were differentiated:<br />

1. recorded previous to 1900,<br />

2. recorded in the time range 1900 to 1949,<br />

3. recorded from 1950 to 1974,<br />

4. recorded after 1975<br />

Actual occurrences have “priority” over old<br />

records in the same base field. A regression <strong>of</strong><br />

area is documented accordingly by the<br />

corresponding symbol for old discoveries in the<br />

chart picture. Although the regression <strong>of</strong> lichens<br />

in the last hundred years has taken a dismaying<br />

dimension, it can be expressed only in especially<br />

grave cases because <strong>of</strong> the relatively coarse<br />

ordinance survey raster in the chart picture, since<br />

it <strong>of</strong>ten still has retained the residue population.<br />

5.5 Consideration <strong>of</strong> Anthropogenic Habitat<br />

As laid out in topic 1.3, numerous species have<br />

found new habitats on human created substrates,<br />

such as grave- and boundary-stones, walls and<br />

monuments or ro<strong>of</strong> tiles. It is <strong>of</strong> interest in area<br />

information to document, as an addition to the<br />

occurrence <strong>of</strong> a rock lichen on their spreading to<br />

such anthropogenic substrates. There were<br />

plotted separately in the distribution charts<br />

numerous species which are restricted to such<br />

anthropogenic substrates (used smaller than<br />

normal size point). So the natural and that area<br />

conquered, thanks to man, can to a certain extent<br />

be differentiated.<br />

6 Glossary<br />

Notice: Ecological and plant geographical terms<br />

were treated extensively in the previous topic.<br />

adventitious, adentitious plants: Plants which<br />

only immigrate with human assistance; not<br />

originally occurring in the floral region.<br />

Algal layer: in most lichens the algae lie in an ±<br />

continuous layer near the upper surface.<br />

amyloid: colored blue or violet by I (iodine).<br />

anastomosing: in the case <strong>of</strong> paraphyses:<br />

reticulate bound.<br />

angiocarp: fruiting body, in which the<br />

hymenium is enclosed until the asci are ripe;<br />

hemiangiocarp: fruiting body enclosed at first,<br />

in which the hymenium to begin with is covered<br />

by a protective layer, which when fully mature<br />

frees the asci.<br />

anisotomic: branching type; branching in a rather<br />

long and <strong>of</strong>ten thick main axis and in one (or<br />

more) shorter and weaker side axis.<br />

anticlinal: perpendicular to the upper surface.<br />

apical: at the tip, toward the tip.<br />

apical structure: structure at the tip <strong>of</strong> the ascus,<br />

which functions in taking over the releasing <strong>of</strong><br />

the spores, <strong>of</strong>ten in the form <strong>of</strong> a visible<br />

thickening, <strong>of</strong>ten colored blue (partially) with I.<br />

Of systematic importance.<br />

apothecium: fruiting body <strong>of</strong> ascomycetes e.g.<br />

the corresponding lichens, usually <strong>of</strong> disk<br />

forming, cup form or hemispherical form, with<br />

entirely free lying [exposed] hymenium (see<br />

perithecium).<br />

areolate: divided into small areas<br />

aspicilioid: Ap. sunken into the thallus.<br />

ascus (pl. asci): usually ± cylindric to clavate<br />

cells, in which the spores (usually 8) are<br />

produced in the fruiting bodies <strong>of</strong> the<br />

ascomycetes or in the corresponding lichens, sit<br />

in the hymenium.<br />

erect: inclined upward growing or toward the top<br />

<strong>of</strong> up turned end <strong>of</strong> lobes.<br />

28


axial mass: to be found in the tholus, <strong>of</strong>ten a<br />

region definitely weaker colored with iodine<br />

solution.<br />

beard lichen: beard-like pendant lichens with<br />

filamentous segments.<br />

basal thallus: primary thallus.<br />

pruinose: thallus or apothecium with whitish,<br />

yellow-gray, or bluish, frost-like layer.<br />

biatorin: apothecia with no black proper margin.<br />

bifusiform: weak dumbbell-form, with weak<br />

swelling near both ends.<br />

bipolar: in the case <strong>of</strong> spores: content ± two<br />

parts.<br />

bitunicate: fissitunicate.<br />

blastidiate: with blastidia.<br />

blastidia: (sing. blastidium) producing rounded<br />

diaspores by marginal budding <strong>of</strong> thallus areoles.<br />

foliose lichen: ± lobe-like divided lichen,<br />

predominantly growing on the surface with<br />

previously constructed underside.<br />

border soralia (margins sorediate): the margin <strong>of</strong><br />

the lobes border-like edged, ± long streaked<br />

soralia.<br />

calcicolous: lime-dwelling.<br />

calciphytic: growing on calcareous substrate.<br />

cephalodium: in green-algae lichens bearing<br />

separate region, containing blue-green algae,<br />

either in the interior or sessile on the thallus.<br />

chemotype: a group <strong>of</strong> chemically different<br />

individuals <strong>of</strong> smaller taxonomic importance.<br />

chemosyndrome: biogenetically closely related<br />

group <strong>of</strong> contents.<br />

chlorococcoid: single, ± spherical (also colony<br />

producing) algae related to the Chlorococcaceae<br />

(green algae).<br />

cilia: hair-like projections.<br />

coccoid, coccal: <strong>of</strong> approximately spherical form<br />

(in the case <strong>of</strong> single-celled, also colony building<br />

algae).<br />

dichotomous: forked branching into two<br />

branches.<br />

dimidiate: in the case <strong>of</strong> perithecia – outer wall<br />

reaching down to half the perithecium.<br />

effigurate: in the case <strong>of</strong> crustose lichens –<br />

margin <strong>of</strong> the thallus appearing lobed (e.g.<br />

through elongation <strong>of</strong> radially arranged lobe- like<br />

areoles). Thallus <strong>of</strong>ten rosetted.<br />

proper margin: (exciple without algae) margin <strong>of</strong><br />

the apothecium not or only a little distinct from<br />

the disk and the interior without algae.<br />

endolithic: lichen thallus living within the rock.<br />

endophloeic: lichen thallus living within the tree<br />

bark.<br />

epihymenium: outermost colored region <strong>of</strong> the<br />

hymenium, because <strong>of</strong> coloring <strong>of</strong> the paraphyses<br />

ends or a granular layer or diffuse coloring.<br />

epiphytic: growing on other plants, e.g. trees.<br />

epispore: (outer) wall <strong>of</strong> spores, sometimes<br />

sculptured.<br />

eroded: hollow, frayed.<br />

euryök: occurring over a broad habitat regions,<br />

under various habitat conditions.<br />

eutrophic: nutrient-rich.<br />

excipulum: (true exciple) which is clearly<br />

distinguished from the sterile envelop <strong>of</strong> the<br />

hymenium (without hypothecium), <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

recognized as the margin <strong>of</strong> the apothecium, here<br />

always understood as excipulum proprium<br />

(without algae), in contrast to excipulum<br />

thallinum = thalloid margin.<br />

fibril: predominantly used in the case <strong>of</strong> beard<br />

lichen description for short, mostly ± horizontal<br />

side branches.<br />

fissitunicate (= bitunicate): ascus consisting <strong>of</strong> 2<br />

functionally different layers. When ripe and<br />

emptying spores, the rigid outer layer separates<br />

from the inner layer and surges outward (only<br />

rarely observed).<br />

fleck soralia: delimited fleck-like soralia on the<br />

thallus upper surface.<br />

fruiting bodies: : very general term for the<br />

production <strong>of</strong> reproductive parts.<br />

fundort (locality): topographical concept, site <strong>of</strong><br />

an occurrence (not to be confused with habitat).<br />

gelatinous lichen: bluegreen algae lichens which<br />

when moist swell and take on a gelatin-like<br />

consistency.<br />

gelatinous layer: gelatin-like, usually thin<br />

envelop, in the case <strong>of</strong> spores (perispore) or in<br />

the case <strong>of</strong> asci the thin outer layer (fuzzy coat).<br />

gehause: (receptacle) general term for the sterile<br />

surrounding bowl-form or spherical surrounding<br />

<strong>of</strong> the hymenium and possibly hypothecium.<br />

layered: lichen thallus, in the case <strong>of</strong> which the<br />

algae lie in a layer.<br />

goniocyst: ± spherical group <strong>of</strong> algae cells<br />

surrounded by hyphae, <strong>of</strong> thallus construction,<br />

not used as a diaspore.<br />

haustorium: sucking organ with which the fungus<br />

hyphae bore into the algal cells or nestle closely<br />

to the algae.<br />

hemerochor: (introductions) plants, which arrive<br />

into a region only with the help <strong>of</strong> man.<br />

hemiendolithic: Thallus partially in the interior <strong>of</strong><br />

the rock.<br />

heterocyst: cells <strong>of</strong> bluegreen algae, which <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

differ in their lighter content and the wall<br />

29


thickening from the remaining cells; site <strong>of</strong><br />

nitrogen fixation.<br />

hymenial algae: algae which are in the interior <strong>of</strong><br />

the hymenium <strong>of</strong> perithecia and become ejected<br />

with the spores, smaller than the remaining algae.<br />

hymenial gelatin: gelatin-like filling material in<br />

the hymenium, cementing paraphyses etc.<br />

hymenium: layer <strong>of</strong> paraphyses and asci in the<br />

fruiting body <strong>of</strong> lichens (fungi).<br />

hyphae: filamentous organs, <strong>of</strong> which fungus or<br />

for the most part even the lichens are<br />

constructed, producing dense tissues in lichen<br />

thallus or in the fungus fruiting body.<br />

hypothallus: spongy tissue <strong>of</strong> the underside <strong>of</strong><br />

many foliose lichens.<br />

hypothecium: region within the hymenium.<br />

inspersed: (hymenium) having fine oil droplets.<br />

involucrellum: the receptacle partially or<br />

completely surrounding a perithecium, <strong>of</strong>ten a<br />

dark colored envelop or ± covering layer <strong>of</strong> the<br />

apex <strong>of</strong> the perithecium.<br />

isidium: warty, peg-form, coralloid branching or<br />

± spherical outgrowths <strong>of</strong> the thallus upper<br />

surface, used for vegetative reproduction.<br />

isidiate: with isidia.<br />

isotomic: in the case <strong>of</strong> branching; the branching<br />

equally strong and growing uniformly.<br />

core: interior <strong>of</strong> a perithecium.<br />

conidia: asexual reproductive body, e.g.<br />

produced in the pycnidia.<br />

capitate soralia: spherical soralia on the ends <strong>of</strong><br />

the lobes.<br />

coraloid: coral-like, i.e. <strong>of</strong> cylindric branching<br />

segments.<br />

crustose lichen: lichens one with the substrate<br />

lying closely bound crust-like, coherent, areolate<br />

or ± squamulose thallus, not or scarcely able to<br />

loosen without destroying.<br />

cryptolecanorine: apothecia sunken into the<br />

thallus, bordered by the thallus, but without a<br />

thalloid margin (set <strong>of</strong>f).<br />

spherical soralia: (capitate or laminal): ±<br />

spherical soralia on the upper surface <strong>of</strong> the<br />

thallus.<br />

Kurzzweig: short unbranched side branches.<br />

thalloid margin (thalline exciple): produced by<br />

the thallus and commonly ± thallus colored algae<br />

containing border <strong>of</strong> an apothecium.<br />

Laubflechte : foliose lichen.<br />

lecanorine: apothecium with thalloid margin.<br />

lecideine: apothecium with black proper margin.<br />

leprose: thallus completely erupted dusty,<br />

without cortex.<br />

lichenized: producing a lichen, i.e. the fungus is<br />

associated with algae, or algae with a fungus.<br />

lip soralia (labriform) lip-form curved soralia on<br />

the underside <strong>of</strong> the lobe end.<br />

lirellae: long narrow apothecia.<br />

macroconidia: in the case <strong>of</strong> species with at least<br />

two conidia forms (pycnospore forms) the larger<br />

conidia type.<br />

collar soralia: in the case <strong>of</strong> soralia, the ring<br />

form produced around a hole.<br />

medulla: loose hyphal tissue underneath the algal<br />

layer.<br />

muriform: cross and longitudinally divided spore;<br />

weakly muriform: with less cells.<br />

mazaedium: dusty mass <strong>of</strong> spores and remains <strong>of</strong><br />

asci and sometimes also paraphyses, covering the<br />

fruiting body.<br />

mesoconidia: in the case <strong>of</strong> species with at least<br />

three conidia forms (pycnospore forms) the<br />

middle sized conidia type.<br />

micareoid: algae small (4-7 µm), thin-walled,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten in pairs (in the case <strong>of</strong> Micarea).<br />

microconidia: in the case <strong>of</strong> species with at least<br />

two conidia forms (pycnospore forms) the<br />

smaller conidia type.<br />

modification: environmental influenced, non<br />

hereditary change.<br />

navel (umbilicus): ± central, <strong>of</strong>ten single<br />

attachment <strong>of</strong> a foliose lichen, also a pointed<br />

nipple-like outgrowth <strong>of</strong> the disk <strong>of</strong> an<br />

apothecium.<br />

navel lichen (umbilicate lichen): foliose lichen<br />

attached with a navel.<br />

needle-form (acicular): in the case <strong>of</strong> spores:<br />

long, narrow, long pointed on one end.<br />

net-ribbed (reticulately ridged): upper surface<br />

divided by weakly raised ridges surrounding<br />

weakly concave regions.<br />

ocular chamber: short finger-like projections <strong>of</strong><br />

the ascus interior region into the (inner) wall <strong>of</strong><br />

the ascus tip.<br />

ostiole: pore-form opening at the apex <strong>of</strong> the<br />

perithecium.<br />

palisade parenchyma: tissue, whose hyphae are<br />

oriented ± at right angles to the upper surface.<br />

papillae: small, usually ± regularly round,<br />

convex outgrowths <strong>of</strong> the thallus, not sharply<br />

separated from isidia.<br />

parallel multicellular (septate): spores in the<br />

case <strong>of</strong> 3 or more ordered one behind the other.<br />

paraphyses: filamentous, branched or<br />

unbranched, usually vertical ordered hyphae in<br />

the hymenium, attached at the base.<br />

30


paraphysoid: arising before or during the<br />

production <strong>of</strong> asci “tissue”, that through<br />

lengthening becomes similar to an accumulation<br />

<strong>of</strong> pseudoparaphyses, very flaccid and reticulate.<br />

paraplectenchymatous: a ± uniform fungus tissue<br />

consisting <strong>of</strong> rounded-multiangular, non<br />

elongated cells, resembling the parenchyma <strong>of</strong><br />

higher plants.<br />

parasymbiont: in lichenology: an additional<br />

fungus partner in the lichen symbiosis, living at<br />

the expense <strong>of</strong> the photobionts, but in contrast to<br />

a parasite not clearly damaging.<br />

periphyses: in the case <strong>of</strong> perithecia: true<br />

filamentous hyphae in the ostiole region.<br />

periphysoids: in the case <strong>of</strong> perithecia:<br />

filamentous hyphae growing down from near the<br />

tip <strong>of</strong> the ostiole.<br />

perithecium: spherical to pear-form fruiting<br />

body, which opens by a ± central pore, usually ±<br />

strongly sunken into the thallus.<br />

photobiont: the only photosynthesis capable<br />

partner in the symbiosis, i.e. bluegreen or green<br />

algae.<br />

phyllocladium: squamule-like finger-form, corallike<br />

to granular covering <strong>of</strong> fruticose lichens<br />

(above all in the case <strong>of</strong> podetia <strong>of</strong><br />

Stereocaulon).<br />

placoid: ± rosette growing, marginal lobed<br />

crustose lichens (with “radial” arranged<br />

elongated marginal lobes).<br />

plectenchyme: thick tissue <strong>of</strong> fungus hyphae.<br />

podetium (-ia): cup-, peg- to fruticose-form,<br />

usually ± erect part <strong>of</strong> a lichen thallus, apothecia<br />

arise on them (above all in the case <strong>of</strong> Cladonia).<br />

primary thallus (basal thallus): in the case <strong>of</strong><br />

species with a thallus <strong>of</strong> two different parts, the<br />

part spreading over the substrate is the first part<br />

developing.<br />

polar 2-celled, polar diblastic, polarilocular: 2celled<br />

spores with a thick dividing wall, which is<br />

penetrated by a thin canal connecting both cells.<br />

prosoplectenchymatous: fungus tissue made up<br />

<strong>of</strong> elongated cells.<br />

protococcoid = chlorococcoid.<br />

pseudocyphellae: delicate whitish points or<br />

(<strong>of</strong>ten branching) streaks or flecks, breaking<br />

through the cortex, used for air exchange.<br />

pseudoparenchyma = paraplectenchyma.<br />

pseudopodetia: podetia-like shrubby to peg-like<br />

structures in the case <strong>of</strong> Stereocaulon.<br />

pycnidium -ia: organ, in the asexual spore<br />

production (pycnospores), usually small point-<br />

like and sunken in the thallus, rarely projecting<br />

wart-form to cylindrical, in the interior with<br />

mostly spherical or pear-form lumen.<br />

pycnospores (conidia): asexual reproductive<br />

parts produced in the pycnidia.<br />

pyrenocarp (pyrenocarpous): lichens with<br />

perithecia as fruiting bodies.<br />

marginal soralia = border soralia.<br />

rhizine: hyphae producing grasping or bunches <strong>of</strong><br />

grasping, simple or branched (structures), usually<br />

used in attaching the lichen thallus.<br />

rind (cortex): the outer delimiting layer <strong>of</strong> thick<br />

backed fungus hyphae.<br />

disk: upper surface <strong>of</strong> the hymenium in the case<br />

<strong>of</strong> apothecia.<br />

scheitel (apex): the visible part <strong>of</strong> the<br />

perithecium.<br />

schizidium: squamulose-like outermost layers <strong>of</strong><br />

lichen thallus which peel <strong>of</strong>f or loosen as<br />

diaspores.<br />

slime envelop (gelatinous sheet, perispore):<br />

envelop <strong>of</strong> slime or gelatin-like substance around<br />

spores and asci.<br />

secondary thallus (vertical thallus): in the case<br />

<strong>of</strong> species (e.g. Cladonia and Stereocaulon) with<br />

one thallus <strong>of</strong> two different parts which consist <strong>of</strong><br />

the primary thallus and the ± vertical oriented<br />

part.<br />

septum: dividing wall.<br />

sceleroplectenchyma: plectenchyma <strong>of</strong> very<br />

thick-walled, cemented hyphae.<br />

soralium -ia: delimited dusty-granular structure<br />

(thallus eruption), that develops soredia.<br />

soredia: small, ± spherical granules used in<br />

vegetative reproduction (diaspores), which<br />

consist <strong>of</strong> a clump <strong>of</strong> algae surrounded by a web<br />

<strong>of</strong> hyphae.<br />

sorediate: with soredia.<br />

fissure soralia: soralia consisting <strong>of</strong> a streak or<br />

fissure-form crack in the thallus upper surface.<br />

sporodochia: pillow form, apothecia-like<br />

structure that produces pycnospores.<br />

peg-form: narrow cylindrical.<br />

habitat: the ecological condition <strong>of</strong> a growth type<br />

(e.g. sunny boulder, deep cracked bark, cold<br />

collecting basin); not to be confused with<br />

“fundort = locality where found”.<br />

stenök: with narrowly delimited habitat region.<br />

strahlig: radially ordered.<br />

fruticose lichen: bushy branched to simple pegform,<br />

erect growing or bushy or beard-form<br />

pendent, usually only attached to the substrate in<br />

a few places.<br />

stylospores: asexual spore-like reproductive<br />

parts, which are produced in pycnidia-like<br />

organs.<br />

31


subhymenium: structurally diverging from the<br />

hypothecium layer immediately below the<br />

hymenium, only rarely clearly developed.<br />

synanthrop: plants, whose occurrence have been<br />

widened through the activities <strong>of</strong> man (e.g.<br />

limestone dwelling species on walls).<br />

syndrom = chemosyndrom.<br />

thallinocarp: gall-like thallus swelling, in which<br />

asci develop.<br />

thermophytic: warmth loving.<br />

tholus (apical dome): the thickened inner part <strong>of</strong><br />

the ascus-wall at the ascus tip; loosely: clearly<br />

developing at the tip <strong>of</strong> an ascus.<br />

torus: ring structure around the separate lamellae<br />

in the septum <strong>of</strong> Rinodina-spores, in optical<br />

section recognized as a dark point on both sides<br />

<strong>of</strong> the septum near the outer wall.<br />

tuberculate: projecting warty.<br />

unlayered (homoiomerous): algae not limited to<br />

a certain layer or concentrated.<br />

unitunicate: ascus with a wall which does not<br />

split when into two layers when the spores are<br />

ripe (see bitunicate).<br />

cemented: in the case <strong>of</strong> hyphae: hyphae or<br />

paraphyses closely backed to one another,<br />

difficult to loosen from one another.<br />

vertical thallus = secondary thallus.<br />

prothallus: algae-free border about the margin <strong>of</strong><br />

the thallus or the thallus areoles, <strong>of</strong>ten colored<br />

blackish.<br />

warty: thallus with wart-like swellings (larger<br />

than “granules”); warty areolate; areoles convex.<br />

water capacity: water storing capability.<br />

cilia: hair- or bristle-like accessory organs at the<br />

margin <strong>of</strong> thallus lobes, rarely on the margin <strong>of</strong><br />

apothecia.<br />

central strand: in the case <strong>of</strong> Usnea: elastic,<br />

tough central hyphal strand in the filamentous<br />

thallus segment.<br />

dissolving (gelatinizing and disappearing): in the<br />

case <strong>of</strong> paraphyses: strongly slimy, so that in the<br />

ripe hymenium the paraphyses are scarcely or no<br />

longer visible, above all in the pyrenocarpic<br />

lichens.<br />

cilia = bristles.<br />

7 Abbreviations and Clarification Marks<br />

To reduce the size <strong>of</strong> the book, the use <strong>of</strong><br />

numerous signs and abbreviations was<br />

imperative.<br />

µm micrometer (1 µm -0.001 mm)<br />

± more or less<br />

Ap.: apothecium<br />

C+/C-: reaction with hypochlorite positive/<br />

negative (see chapter 3.2.5)<br />

Ch-: lichen substances lacking, no<br />

reaction with K, C, or P<br />

Char.: characteristic species<br />

CK+: reaction with C and later adding K<br />

positive (see chapter 3.2.5)<br />

Epihym.: Epihymenium<br />

Exc.: Exciple<br />

f(hf): photo shows lichen thallus in moist<br />

(semi moist) condition<br />

Ges.: society<br />

GS: Group Key. The key to this genus<br />

takes into consideration species <strong>of</strong><br />

other genera. Which in the genus<br />

key<br />

mentions characters <strong>of</strong> value for<br />

further understanding <strong>of</strong> other<br />

genera.<br />

H: photo <strong>of</strong> herbarium material<br />

Hym.: Hymenium<br />

Hyp.: Hypothecium<br />

Invol.: Involucrellum<br />

I+/I-: reaction with iodine solution (see<br />

chapter 3.2.5)<br />

KC+/KC- reaction with K and later adding C<br />

(see chapter 3.2.5)<br />

K/I+ reaction with I after previous<br />

treatment with K (see chapter<br />

3.2.5)<br />

P+/P-: reaction with P (see chapter 3.2.5)<br />

Paraph.: paraphyses and similar structures<br />

Per.: perithecia<br />

Pseudocyph: pseudocyphellae<br />

Pcynosp.: pycnospores<br />

R-: reactions with K, C, & P negative<br />

s.l.: in the broader sense<br />

Sp.: spores<br />

tol.: tolerant<br />

PT: (part <strong>of</strong> the key). In the case <strong>of</strong><br />

extensive genera the keys are<br />

divided in to various parts.<br />

UV+/UV- in UV light fluorescing or not<br />

fluorescing (see chapter 3.2.5)<br />

v.a. above all<br />

W.: forest, forests<br />

z.: rather, rather strong<br />

zus.: together<br />

7.2 Clarification <strong>of</strong> Symbols<br />

32


Symbols in the Keys:<br />

! refer to illustration<br />

* in connection with the species<br />

characteristics: the species contains<br />

(additional) lichen substances,<br />

which are in addition to those<br />

identified.<br />

* before the species name: the<br />

material <strong>of</strong> the species is probably<br />

non uniform in the region.<br />

! after the alternative number means<br />

that yet another possibility is given<br />

! before the species name: insuf-<br />

ficiently known species<br />

Symbols in the Literature Cited:<br />

* summary works without particular<br />

application<br />

** chemotaxonomically directed<br />

works<br />

Symbols in the Geobotanical Species<br />

Descriptions see page 43<br />

Symbols in the Distribution Charts<br />

‘open circle’ last verification <strong>of</strong> the<br />

species pre 1900<br />

‘half closed circle’ last verification <strong>of</strong> the<br />

species between 1900 and<br />

1949<br />

‘3/4 closed circle’ last verification <strong>of</strong> the<br />

species between 1950 to<br />

1974<br />

‘closed circle’ verified since 1975<br />

‘tiny closed circle’ occurring only on<br />

anthropomorphic substrate<br />

‘tiny open circle’ distribution strongly below<br />

average because <strong>of</strong><br />

taxonomic problem or<br />

insufficient observations.<br />

‘asterisk’ in the case where covering<br />

the distribution would<br />

consider the entire chart.<br />

33


Key to the Determination <strong>of</strong> Lichen Genera and Algae<br />

1 Organization and Use <strong>of</strong> the Key<br />

The general key makes possible the<br />

determination <strong>of</strong> the most important commonly<br />

distinguished lichen groups according to the<br />

growth form <strong>of</strong> the thallus or the form <strong>of</strong> the<br />

fruiting body. In a second step following after<br />

the lichen group, genus keys leads to the lichen<br />

genus. The species keys are likewise brought<br />

under the corresponding genera, where they are<br />

treated in alphabetical order.<br />

In front <strong>of</strong> the general key for the<br />

determination <strong>of</strong> the lichens is concise key for<br />

the determination <strong>of</strong> the most important algae<br />

occurring in lichens.<br />

The keys are alternative keys. Normally at any<br />

given time two contrasting possible choices are<br />

presented, <strong>of</strong> which one is correct for the species<br />

being keyed, the other is not. The two matching<br />

choice possibilities are designated with the same<br />

numeral. The correct alternative leads either<br />

directly or indirectly, by further alternative pairs,<br />

to the name <strong>of</strong> the species.<br />

Example: Determining a brown foliose lichen<br />

with a light underside:<br />

1 Thallus yellow 2<br />

1* Thallus brown 4<br />

2 Thallus with fruiting bodies Lichen A<br />

2* Thallus without fruiting bodies 3<br />

3 Thallus on bark Lichen B<br />

3* Thallus on rock Lichen C<br />

4 Lichen underside black . 5<br />

4* Lichen underside whitish Lichen D<br />

5 etc.<br />

The alternative 1/1* with the possible choice<br />

“Thallus brown” leading to 4. here leads to the<br />

fitting possible choice “Thallus underside<br />

whitish” to no further alternative, but directly to<br />

the name <strong>of</strong> the species keyed (Lichen D). A<br />

yellow lichen with fruiting bodies would key out<br />

by alternative 2 to (Lichen A).<br />

The keys are arranged so that the decisive<br />

differentiating characters are at the beginning, so<br />

that <strong>of</strong>ten a “rapid keying” is possible, that above<br />

all dispenses with the consideration <strong>of</strong> other<br />

mentioned characters. At the next place are <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

characteristic attributes, which will not be used<br />

under any circumstances in accordance with the<br />

contrast in the case <strong>of</strong> the alternative.<br />

The goal <strong>of</strong> the genus key is not the keying <strong>of</strong><br />

the entire genus. These keys frequently lead in<br />

the interest <strong>of</strong> easier keying to groups <strong>of</strong> genera<br />

(“GS”= group key), where differentiation<br />

according to taxonomically relevant characters<br />

avoids many unnecessary problems, because the<br />

keying out <strong>of</strong> the similar <strong>of</strong>ten presents no<br />

difficulties.<br />

In the determination keys are given in the<br />

case <strong>of</strong> keyed species at times also the lichen<br />

substances, as a rule however only so far as they<br />

may be determined with the help <strong>of</strong> thin layer<br />

chromatography and are significant. Abundant<br />

side by side lichen substances are as a rule not<br />

known (e.g. Lecanoric acid is side by side with<br />

Gyrophoric acid); accordingly known sometimes<br />

as the lichen substance syndrome, with which is<br />

designated a group <strong>of</strong> biosynthetic related<br />

substances. If the name <strong>of</strong> the lichen substance is<br />

in parentheses, it occurs only in low<br />

concentration (and is then <strong>of</strong>ten difficult to<br />

demonstrate with TLC), if before the name is<br />

placed “±”, then the material may also be<br />

lacking.<br />

The reference to an illustration (symbol )<br />

helps verify the keying result at hand by<br />

examining the photograph. Considering the large<br />

variability <strong>of</strong> many species one must<br />

notwithstanding from time to time choose<br />

between considerable habitual differences <strong>of</strong> that<br />

to be determined and the illustrated example. In<br />

the genus keys only judicious illustrations are put<br />

forward, when a large part <strong>of</strong> the species in<br />

question are illustrated and consequently<br />

essential habitual attributes <strong>of</strong> the genus are<br />

rendered. “↑” attached to the species name<br />

means that species in the corresponding genus<br />

were described earlier. A number in parentheses<br />

“(18)” behind the species name means that the<br />

species in the same key, keys out at another place<br />

(here at alternative 18). Author names behind a<br />

species name lets us know that the species<br />

concerned in the main part (in the case <strong>of</strong> the<br />

genus) will not be further considered. “!” after<br />

the alternative number means that still another<br />

possible choice is given. See topic 7 for<br />

additional symbols and abbreviations.<br />

2 Key to the Lichen Algae<br />

Presented are only genera and groups the<br />

knowledge <strong>of</strong> which is necessary or helpful for<br />

the keying <strong>of</strong> lichens in the following genus keys.<br />

Most <strong>of</strong> the algae treated are recognized without<br />

great difficulty. Squash preparations and<br />

sections through the lichen thallus are enough for<br />

identification. A thorough going determination<br />

becomes problematic, since the algae in the<br />

34


lichen thallus are <strong>of</strong>ten deformed and the typical<br />

form is only acquired after first isolating and<br />

cultivating.<br />

1 Cell content <strong>of</strong> the algae ± blue-green, rarely<br />

brown-green or ± brown. No defined<br />

chromatophore, no recognizable pyrenoid,<br />

coloring diffuse (blue-green algae) 2<br />

1* Cell content <strong>of</strong> the algae pure green,<br />

yellow-green, orange-green, orange, brown-<br />

orange, or yellow with defined chromatophore,<br />

sometimes with pyrenoids (green algae) 7<br />

2 Cells single or in 2-8 gelatin packets (colonies),<br />

spherical to ellipsoidal, all more or less similar<br />

formed, never branching threads (squash<br />

preparation !) . 3<br />

2* Cells in branching threads 4<br />

3 Cells surrounded by a thin, slimy, colorless, not<br />

or indefinitely layered gelatin envelop, usually in<br />

colonies <strong>of</strong> 2-4. In very rare silicate lichens<br />

(Phylliscum) Chroococcus<br />

3* Cells with ± thick, clearly encased together, for<br />

the most part inflated gelatin envelop. The<br />

envelop <strong>of</strong>ten reddish or violet near upper surface<br />

parts <strong>of</strong> the lichen thallus (“Gloeocapsa s.str) or<br />

yellow-brown to brown colored (“Xanthocapsa”)<br />

Gloeocapsa<br />

4 Threads made up <strong>of</strong> several cell series,<br />

branching. Cells mostly brown-green, in aspect<br />

mostly ± elliptical to rectangular, 9-15 x 3-11<br />

µm. In small shrubby to filamentous lichens on<br />

seeping moist silicate rocks (Ephebe, or<br />

Spilonema) Stigonema<br />

4* Threads made up a <strong>of</strong> single cell series,<br />

unbranched or false branching 5<br />

5 Cells uniformly rounded, about 3-7 µm wide, in<br />

unbranched threads (with occasionally<br />

intercalated colorless cells: heterocysts), either<br />

lying loose in a gelatin mass and then chain- or<br />

pearl necklace form (gelatin lichens) or clustered<br />

in gelatin spheres (e.g. in Sticta, Nephroma,<br />

Pannaria, and Parmeliella) Nostoc<br />

5* Cells usually not uniformly round, broader than 5<br />

µm, not rosary-like, sometimes branched<br />

(branching <strong>of</strong>ten not to be observed in the lichen)<br />

6<br />

6 Threads not tapered toward the tips, cells oval,<br />

about 9-16 µm long, with isolated intercalated<br />

cells (heterocysts). E.g. in Polychidium,<br />

Thermutis, and Petractis Scytonema<br />

6! Threads tapered toward the tips, heterocysts only<br />

basal (characteristic difficult to see)<br />

Calothrix and related genera<br />

6* With other characteristics: algae not surely<br />

accessible.<br />

7 Cell content orange, green-orange, orange-<br />

yellow, or red-brown, in the lichen thallus more<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten even yellow-green (to green). Cells very<br />

thick-walled, cylindrical to barrel shaped, rarely<br />

globose, to branching threads, but in the lichen<br />

thallus even occurring in single cells or short cell<br />

series. Lichen thallus in the case <strong>of</strong> abrasion<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten orange, gold-yellow, gold-brown, or<br />

brown-yellow. In crustose lichens or species<br />

with fine hairy thallus threads Trentepohlia<br />

7* Cell content pure green to yellow-green.<br />

Abraded thallus not colored orange, gold-brown<br />

etc.: “pure green” algae <strong>of</strong> the order<br />

Chlorococcales and Ulotrichales 8<br />

8 Cells ± subcylindrical with rounded to slightly<br />

regenerated ends, single or united into short in<br />

short threads. Chloroplasts along the wall. In<br />

coniocarpic lichens Stichococcus<br />

8* The majority <strong>of</strong> the cells spherical, ellipsoidal to<br />

egg-shaped, single or in clumps or in small<br />

packets, not in threads . 9<br />

9 Cells narrowly ellipsoidal to broadly fusiform,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten curved (with only one convex side), with<br />

one chloroplast against the wall, without<br />

pyrenoid (e.g. the leading species <strong>of</strong> green algae<br />

<strong>of</strong> Peltigera, and Solorina, in addition Dibaeis,<br />

and Omphalina) . Coccomyxa<br />

9* Cells spherical to short ellipsoidal 10<br />

10 Cells mostly in pairs, separated by a thin to<br />

normally thick wall, 4-7 µm in size, attacked by<br />

the lichen fungus in the form <strong>of</strong> haustoria . .<br />

micareoid green algae<br />

10* With other characteristics, if paired, then larger:<br />

(other) coccoid (coccoid or chlorococcoid) green<br />

algae (e.g. Trebouxia, predominantly spherical,<br />

1-celled, with central, ± lobed chloroplast;<br />

Myrmecia, spherical to ellipsoidal, peripheral<br />

chloroplast; Gloeocystis: cells rounded to eggshaped,<br />

surrounded by a thick gelatin envelop<br />

and united into colonies (in Bryophagus).<br />

3 Determining the <strong>Lichens</strong>:<br />

Overview <strong>of</strong> the Key<br />

1 The fruiting body is a 1-2.5 cm high stalked capfungus<br />

with lamellae on the underside. The basic<br />

thallus gray to deep green, squamulose <strong>of</strong> small<br />

globules Omphalina<br />

1 Fruiting body is not a cap-fungus or fruiting<br />

body is lacking 2<br />

2 Fruiting body is a nearly ephemeral, narrow<br />

club-like, unbranched, cream colored to above<br />

all slightly orange colored above, non lichenized,<br />

± fleshy fungus, -2 cm. Thallus <strong>of</strong> closely<br />

overlapping green, sometimes coalescing into a<br />

knobby crust. Sp. 8-12 x 1,2-3.5 µm. On peat or<br />

sandy soil Multiclavula vernalis<br />

2* Fruiting body otherwise, not a cap fungus, or<br />

fruiting body lacking . 3<br />

3 Lichen consisting <strong>of</strong> a basic small foliose,<br />

squamulose or crustose part covering the<br />

substrate and a ± upright, peg-form, cup-form or<br />

other formed, simple to branched part<br />

I: Fruticose <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

35


3* Lichen not differentiated into a basal, ±<br />

horizontal and a vertical part . 4<br />

4 Lichen beard-like pendent or shrub-like<br />

spreading or ± growing erect <strong>of</strong> thread-like and<br />

decumbent, <strong>of</strong> ± narrow, terete, angular or<br />

ribbon-like, usually branched segments,<br />

dominantly growing rather long .<br />

I: Fruticose <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

4* Thallus covering the substrate, closely appressed<br />

to loosely attached (or the margins somewhat<br />

turned up), crustose, lobed to squamulose or very<br />

indefinite, never <strong>of</strong> cylindrical or relatively<br />

thread-like segments, dominantly a flat growing<br />

form . 5<br />

5 Thallus foliose or lobed, loosely attached or<br />

appressed, yet not with the entire underside<br />

growing smoothly attached to the substrate, but<br />

attached with stalk-like attachment organs, with<br />

the typical underside <strong>of</strong>ten ± undifferentiated<br />

from the middle, both sides or only one side with<br />

a cortex II. Foliose <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

5* Thallus entirely crustose to definitely lobed at the<br />

margin, with the entire underside growing<br />

attached to the substrate or squamulose and ±<br />

free at the squamule margins or the thallus<br />

indefinite. Without typical attachment organs<br />

such as rhizines, the underside usually without a<br />

cortex, commonly consisting only <strong>of</strong> fragments or<br />

a single squamule 6<br />

6 Thallus with blue green algae (devoid <strong>of</strong> green<br />

algae), usually dark colored, gray to blackish,<br />

brown, at times gelatinous swollen; if on rock,<br />

then <strong>of</strong>ten growing on water streaks (in the keys<br />

the blue green lichens are considered fruticose<br />

and foliose lichens) III: Blue Green <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

6* Thallus with green algae (Algae green, yellow<br />

green, yellow, or orange), at times additionally<br />

with blue green algae in discrete organs. The<br />

moist thallus only very rarely swelling, then<br />

green .7<br />

7 <strong>Lichens</strong> without fruiting bodies (Includes<br />

frequently sterile species, usually with soralia or<br />

isidia . VIII: Sterile Crustose <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

7* <strong>Lichens</strong> with fruiting bodies . 8<br />

8 Fruiting bodies delicate and small, ± short<br />

needle-form (with a thin stalk and a thickened<br />

capitulum), usually -1, rarely -2 mm high or<br />

sessile to sunken, then usually covered with a<br />

dusty mass (mazaedium). Generally on rain<br />

protected sites. The indigenous species<br />

predominantly on bark and wood, if on soil, rock<br />

and mosses, than the thallus mealy and yellowish,<br />

green-yellow to whitish<br />

. IV: Coniocarpic <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

8* Fruiting bodies otherwise (if otherwise stalked,<br />

then the stalk robust, whitish to gray greenish, the<br />

capitulum brown or rose) . 9<br />

9 Fruiting bodies are perithecia and opening with a<br />

fine dot-like mouth, usually visible only under a<br />

hand lens <strong>of</strong> microscope, keg like to ± pear<br />

shaped, but generally sunken and therefore only<br />

the upper, ± convex shield is seen as rounded to<br />

oval V: Pyrenocarpic <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

9* Fruiting bodies are apothecia with ± wide<br />

openings, rarely crack-forms or openings like<br />

punctiform disks with concave, flat or convex<br />

upper sides, with or without margins 10<br />

10 Apothecia long streaks to shortly elliptical or<br />

lobed or star shaped, simple or branched .<br />

VI: Fleck or Streak Fruiting Crustose <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

10* Apothecia predominately rounded to somewhat<br />

wavy at the margins VII: Disk Fruiting<br />

Crustose <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

4 Keys for the <strong>Lichens</strong>:<br />

Genera and Sterile Species<br />

Genus Keys I: Fruticose <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

1 Thallus consisting <strong>of</strong> overlapping small foliose,<br />

squamulose or a crustose part on the substrate<br />

(basal thallus or primary thallus) and a ± erect to<br />

ascending, peg-, lance- or cup form or ± shrubby<br />

branched part (vertical thallus or podetium).<br />

Apothecium generally biatorin. . 2<br />

1* Thallus not differentiated into two types 5<br />

2 Podetia (vertical thallus) hollow, tubular, very<br />

polymorphic. Ap. usually terminal, brown, red,<br />

brown-yellow, <strong>of</strong>ten lacking. Sp. single celled.<br />

On various substrates Cladonia<br />

2* Podetia (vertical thallus) not hollow, never cup<br />

forming 3<br />

3 Podetia simple, short peg-form, always with a<br />

single terminal shield-form to spherical brown to<br />

rose colored apothecium., -7 mm high. Stalk<br />

robust, whitish to greenish in places, lacking<br />

squamules. Thallus crustose to appearing<br />

squamulose, ± coalescing, whitish to graygreenish.<br />

Sp. 1-2 celled. On soil or rock .<br />

Baeomyces<br />

3* Podetia usually branching, if simple, then<br />

generally without terminal ap . 4<br />

4 Primary thallus bright green to pale greenish,<br />

granular to mealy. Podetia very delicate, -0.3 mm<br />

thick, -10 mm high, whitish, covered with greenish<br />

granules, above all with open branches. In rainprotected,<br />

earthy rock crevices or directly on<br />

silicate rocks. Always sterile<br />

. Leprocaulon microscopicum<br />

4* Primary thallus and podetia whitish to gray,<br />

occasionally with ± blackish streaks or rose brown<br />

warts (cephalodia). Podetia sporadically with<br />

granules, squamules or covered with projecting<br />

squamules. Ap. brown to dark brown, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

lacking. Sp. four septate 3- to multicellular. On<br />

rock and soil . Stereocaulon<br />

5 Thallus orange, yellow to green-yellow, pale<br />

greenish, or gray-greenish. 6<br />

36


5* Thallus not with yellow or pale greenish tint . 19<br />

6 Thallus yellow to orange, K+ deep red . 7<br />

6* Thallus not K+ deep red, not orange. 8<br />

7 Thallus with ciliate apothecia or lobes. Found in<br />

Central Europe..<br />

Teloschistes chrysophthalmus<br />

7* Thallus not with ciliate/lobed apothecia<br />

Xanthoria<br />

8 Thallus ± erect (to inclined) on soil (or over moss<br />

covered rock) 9<br />

8* Thallus not on soil. . 12<br />

9 Part <strong>of</strong> the thallus tubular-cylindrical, with sharply<br />

bordered hollow zone, usually branched, sharp<br />

pointed or ± blunt, occasionally with small<br />

projecting squamules or covered with decumbent<br />

squamules, bright yellow-green, yellow-gray, pale<br />

yellowish to pale gray-greenish . Cladonia<br />

9* Thallus not tubular, not with sharply bordered<br />

hollow zone, however medulla occasionally with<br />

truly porous structure, not covered with squamules<br />

or small lobules . 10<br />

10 Thallus <strong>of</strong> ± terete segments, usually richly bushy<br />

branched, yellow-green to yellowish, the tips<br />

usually blue-blackish. Pseudocyphellae<br />

numerous, fusiform. Cross section <strong>of</strong> the interior<br />

with ± loose medulla. Cortex almost granular.<br />

Generally in alpine wind protected niches<br />

Alectoria ochroleuca<br />

10* Thallus <strong>of</strong> flattened to channeled enrolled,<br />

wrinkled to smooth sections, sparsely branched,<br />

± erect 11<br />

11 Medulla yellow, thallus yellow, <strong>of</strong> incurved,<br />

pitted, wrinkled segments<br />

.Vulpicida tubulosus<br />

11* Medulla not yellow, thallus greenish white to<br />

greenish-yellow, <strong>of</strong> flattened to wrinkled enrolled<br />

segment. Cetraria cucullata/nivalis<br />

12 Thallus branch about as broad as thick,<br />

cylindrical to slightly flattened, more or less<br />

angular, equally rounded and colored. Thallus<br />

beard-like pendent to bushy ascending or erect,<br />

moderately to richly branching. . 13<br />

12* Thallus branch substantially broader than thick,<br />

clearly flattened, equally rounded and colored or<br />

with the underside otherwise colored, weakly to<br />

richly branching . 17<br />

13 Interior <strong>of</strong> the thallus branch with a tough whitish<br />

(rarely rose colored) central strand, which on<br />

stretching the strand becomes visible as a threadlike<br />

thallus segment between the ring-like broken<br />

cortex ( ). Thallus usually very richly<br />

branching, usually with numerous short, ± right<br />

angle projecting side branches, <strong>of</strong>ten with warts,<br />

isidia, soralia, bright greenish-yellow to gray<br />

greenish. Ap. large, thin, shield form, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

ciliate, usually pale. Sp. single-celled. . Usnea<br />

13* Thallus branch without clearly differentiated,<br />

tough central strand. Ap. (very) rare 14<br />

14 Thallus intensively yellow to green-yellow,<br />

shrubby erect, richly branching, segments very<br />

narrow, all sides equally colored and structured,<br />

angular-wrinkled, <strong>of</strong>ten ± flattened, sometimes<br />

with cylindrical isidia, -15 cm long, bushy to<br />

pendent. Ap. very rare, disks brown. Alpine,<br />

near alpine, Elbe sandstone mountains,<br />

Franconian forest, commonly on conifer bark and<br />

wood Letharia vulpina (l.) Hue<br />

14* Thallus bright yellowish, bright yellowish-green,<br />

without typical isidia 15<br />

15 Thallus conspicuously angled to pitted overall,<br />

with pointed ends and pointed short branches,<br />

usually beard-like pendent, very limp, with loose<br />

white medulla and usually cross cracked cortex,<br />

moderately branched<br />

. Evernia divaricata<br />

15* Thallus not conspicuously angular to pitted<br />

overall, cortex not latterly cracked. 16<br />

16 Commonly without soralia. Thallus long,<br />

pendent, thread-like to beard-like. Cortex <strong>of</strong><br />

lengthwise lying hyphae (cross section)<br />

Alectoria sarmentosa<br />

16* As a rule with soralia. Thallus pendent or erect<br />

or bushy. Cortex <strong>of</strong> hyphae at right angles to the<br />

upper surface, rarely <strong>of</strong> longitudinal hyphae (then<br />

with minute capitate soralia at the ends <strong>of</strong> the<br />

bent back branches: R. thrausta)<br />

Ramalina<br />

17 Thallus intensively yellow to yellow-green from<br />

all sides, angled, flattened, usually with isidia<br />

Letharia vulpina<br />

17* Thallus not intensively yellow to yellow-green,<br />

without isidia 18<br />

18 Thallus upper side yellow-greenish, pale<br />

greenish, pale gray-green, with a cortex,<br />

underside predominantly whitish and somewhat<br />

chanelled, without cortex, ± shrubby erect, rel.<br />

weak and flaccid. With granular-mealy soralia<br />

on the upper side and the margins, almost never<br />

with ap. (disks usually pale yellowish, pale<br />

greenish <strong>of</strong> beige) . Evernia prunastri<br />

18* Thallus constructed and colored ± the same on all<br />

sides, usually bright gray-greenish, pale greenish,<br />

yellow-greenish, relatively stout and<br />

cartilaginous. With or without soralia, with or<br />

without ap. (disks usually light yellowish, pale<br />

greenish, beige) . Ramalina<br />

19 Thallus part tubular-cylindric, with strongly<br />

defined hollow space, branched or unbranched,<br />

pointed or ± blunt ended 20<br />

19* Thallus part not tubular, without a sharply<br />

defined hollow space, yet the medulla sometimes<br />

truly loosely structured 21<br />

20 Thallus white, unbranched or with 1-2 short<br />

branches, pointed, decumbent to erect, from time<br />

to time turgid, smooth, without squamules or<br />

small lamellae. K+ yellow. Sterile. In alpine<br />

sites . Thamnolia<br />

20* Not both worm-like and white. Thallus richly<br />

branched to simple, pointed or blunt or definite<br />

37


cup ends, with or without squamules or<br />

projecting lamellae Cladonia<br />

21 Thallus on lime-rich rocks, usually brown to<br />

black, also whitish pruinose, with bluegreen<br />

algae. . . GS Polychidium<br />

(If gray to (gray)brown, underside whitish to<br />

slightly brownish, with flattened, -0.3 mm wide<br />

marginal granular segments, with isolated<br />

rhizines, with green algae<br />

↑. Phaeophyscia nigricans)<br />

21* Not on limestone 22<br />

22 Thallus white, gray, olive, occasionally lightly<br />

browned 23<br />

22* Thallus brown, dark brown, black, gray-black 30<br />

23 Thallus segment clearly wider than thick, band<br />

like flattened to channeled, ± branched . 24<br />

23* Thallus segment/branch ± cylindrical to weakly<br />

flattened, scarcely wider than thick 27<br />

24 Thallus ± erect on peat, 2-6 cm, segments clearly<br />

channeled, flattened toward the ends, on one side<br />

bright brown to olive, on the other side usually<br />

lighter, brownish-white, olive-white, with<br />

numerous occurring whitish pseudo-cyphellae,<br />

the margins covered with small teeth, reddish at<br />

the base . Cetraria islandica<br />

24* Thallus whitish to gray, if gray-brown, then<br />

finely velvety (hand lens), base not reddish. . 25<br />

25 Thallus segment with isolated stiff whitish to<br />

dark cilia or bristles on the lobe ends<br />

occasionally marginal, usually with terminal lip<br />

or helmet-form soralia or with ap. Often loosely<br />

attached, not spreading, not pendent<br />

GS Physcia<br />

25* Thallus segment without such cilia, narrowly to<br />

broadly band like, ± forked, somewhat enrolled<br />

at the sides, therefor the underside slightly<br />

channeled. Ap. very rare 26<br />

26 Thallus ± thickly covered with cylindrical isidia,<br />

gray, underside <strong>of</strong> the younger parts whitish to<br />

rose, the older parts dull blue-blackish to black,<br />

forked branching, very variable, up to over 10 cm<br />

long . Lobes 1-5 mm wide .<br />

Pseudevernia furfuracea<br />

26* Thallus without cylindrical isidia, with soralia at<br />

the margins and/or on the surface, gray, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

with slightly unevenness, undersides whitish,<br />

usually to 5 cm long. Lobes 1-3 mm wide<br />

Evernia prunastri var. herinii<br />

(if the undersides black or brown, segments<br />

strongly protruding, but foliose: GS Cetraria)<br />

27 Thallus thread-like, ± richly branching, pendent<br />

or decumbent, <strong>of</strong>ten ± beard-like, whitish, beige,<br />

gray, gray-brown, or olive. Threads commonly<br />

0.3-1 mm thick, not clearly angular. Bryoria<br />

27* Thallus segment not thin and thread-like, if<br />

beard-like, then segment angular and with<br />

pointed shore branches 28<br />

28 Thallus loosely pendent, loosely branched,<br />

angular long pitted, with cross-cracked cortex,<br />

whitish, like Evernia divaricata in habit, on tree<br />

bark . Evernia illyrica<br />

28* Thallus ascending to erect or bushy erect, <strong>of</strong><br />

simple peg-form to richly branched segments, on<br />

peat, rock, or bark . 29<br />

29 Thallus segments in places with large granules or<br />

with squamules or covered with small folia.<br />

Thallus <strong>of</strong> erect to ascending, simple to mostly<br />

branched, cylindrical to slightly flattened pegs or<br />

“stemlets” (“Pseudopodetia”), whitish to gray.<br />

The stemlets at times felty layer. Ap. brown,<br />

dark brown, <strong>of</strong>ten lacking. Sp. 3- to cross septate<br />

multicellular. On silicate rock and peat<br />

Stereocaulon<br />

29* Thallus segment with a smooth, cartilaginous,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten slightly shiny upper surface, with cortex,<br />

not squamulose or granular. Thallus tufted erect<br />

to ascending, <strong>of</strong>ten coraloid, <strong>of</strong> cylindrical to<br />

flattened, moderately to strongly branching<br />

stems, light gray to light brownish, tips sometimes<br />

whitish. Ap. very rare, in spherical<br />

swellings, with dusty spore masses (Mazaedium).<br />

Spores on celled, spherical, dark. On silicate<br />

rock and bark . Sphaerophorus<br />

30 Thallus <strong>of</strong> very thin black to brown-black <strong>of</strong> a ±<br />

thick felt film growing over -20 µm thick thread,<br />

which in each case consists <strong>of</strong> a central<br />

Trentepohlia thread and a sheath <strong>of</strong> hyphae<br />

(microscope). On very shady vertical surfaces<br />

and overhangs <strong>of</strong> silicate rock<br />

GS Cystocoleus<br />

30* Thallus not with Trentepohlia. If thallus threads<br />

similarly thin, then with bluegreen algae . 31<br />

31 With bluegreen algae. Thallus small shrubby<br />

(1.5 cm high) or decumbent threads. Thallus<br />

segment usually only -0.2 mm thick, usually on<br />

occasionally moistened sites on rock or rock<br />

dwelling mosses, rarely on soil.<br />

GS Polychidium<br />

31* With true green algae. The thicker thallus<br />

branches at times (0.3-)4 mm thick. <strong>Lichens</strong> on<br />

bark, wood, rock, pear or mosses . 32<br />

32 On peat, raw humus, or soil mosses. Thallus<br />

decumbent to bushy erect, commonly 1.5-6 cm<br />

high 33<br />

32* On tree bark, wood, or rock . 34<br />

33 Thallus/medulla K+ yellow, C/KC+ red, P+<br />

yellow. Thallus <strong>of</strong> ± cylindrical, only basally<br />

somewhat flattened, thick branches, very richly<br />

branching, dark gray-brown to gray-black, the<br />

base light gray-brown to rose-brown, with small<br />

whitish pseudocyphellae, -5 cm high.<br />

Alectorialic acid, or Barbatolic acid. Only in<br />

alpine sites, Alps Alectoria nigricans<br />

33* Thallus/medulla R- or medulla P+ orange, K-, C-.<br />

Thallus <strong>of</strong> weakly to clearly flattened or<br />

channeled rarely irregularly cylindrical, 1-10 mm<br />

wide segments, weakly to richly branched, bright<br />

brown to black-brown, usually with pseudo-<br />

38


cyphellae. Lichesteric acid, Protolichesteric acid,<br />

± Fumarprotocetraric acid Cetraria<br />

34 Thallus thread-like, richly branched, decumbent<br />

to beard-like pendent, segment cylindrical to<br />

(above all somewhat flattened at the branches),<br />

usually 0.3-1 mm thick GS Bryoria<br />

34* Thallus not thread-like 35<br />

35 Thallus <strong>of</strong> cylindrical to weakly flattened<br />

segments with smooth cortex, ± richly branched,<br />

thick cushion or coral-like bushes, gray-brown to<br />

light brown . . Spherophorus (29)<br />

35* Thallus <strong>of</strong> flattened to leafy or channeled<br />

segments 36<br />

36 Thallus closely attached to silicate rock, -2 cm<br />

high, consisting <strong>of</strong> small tufts <strong>of</strong> flattened,<br />

brown-black to almost black, -1 mm wide,<br />

sparsely branched segments, almost always with<br />

terminal black ap. Cornicularia normoerica<br />

36* Thallus on bark and wood (if on rock, then<br />

loosely attached), segments flat to channeled or<br />

irregular, usually upper- and ± lighter underside<br />

distinguishable . Cetraria<br />

Genus Key II: Foliose <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

1 Thallus yellow, orange, red, gray-yellow or<br />

yellow-greenish 2<br />

1* Thallus not so colored, without yellow tint 16<br />

2 Thallus yellowish to orange-red, K+ deep red.<br />

Ap. if occurring, yellow to orange (brown) . 3<br />

2* Thallus yellowish-green, yellowish-gray, pale<br />

yellow to deep yellow, K- or K+ yellow . 6<br />

3 On lime-rich soil, or limestone mosses. Sp. 1celled<br />

or with a thin cross wall . Fulgensia<br />

3* On bark, word or rock. Sp. 2-celled, almost<br />

always with thick cross walls, which are<br />

penetrated by a perceptible thin canal, at least in<br />

the young ones. . 4<br />

4 Thallus underside even with the substrate, closely<br />

attached, without rhizines and other attachment<br />

organs Caloplaca<br />

4* Thallus underside attached to the substrate at a<br />

single place, by a differentiated underside, foliose<br />

lobed to small shrubby. Sp. mostly 10-17 x 6-10<br />

µm . 5<br />

5 Dying out in Central Europe. Lobes strongly<br />

ciliate at the margin, ± band-like. Thallus small<br />

tufted (to almost foliose), only attached at a<br />

single site, scarcely over 2.5 cm wide, yelloworange,<br />

at times even gray. Ap. orange, margin<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten ciliate. Teloschistes chrysophthalmus<br />

5* In some cases abundant species. Lobes not<br />

ciliate. Usually with ap. or soralia. Underside<br />

pale . Xanthoria<br />

6 Thallus very small and delicate, usually only 0.3-<br />

1.5 cm wide (but <strong>of</strong>ten coalescing into a<br />

composite thallus), strongly divided, light yellow.<br />

Lobes very narrow, 0.1-0.4 mm, only clearly<br />

visible with a hand lens, sorediate at the margins,<br />

underside whitish, with rhizines. Almost always<br />

sterile (ap. yellow, lecanorine, sp. 8-10 x 4-6 µm)<br />

Candelaria concolor<br />

6* Thallus with clearly wider lobes (if narrow, then<br />

the underside black, upper side not pure yellow) 7<br />

7 Thallus strongly yellow, also the medulla yellow,<br />

± ascending to almost erect. Rhizines very sparse<br />

GS Cetraria: Vulpicida<br />

7* Thallus yellow-green, pale (yellow) greenish,<br />

gray yellowish, or pale yellow. Medulla not<br />

yellow 8<br />

8 Moist thallus lead-gray, dark gray or dull bluegreenish,<br />

dry upper side yellowish-gray to pale<br />

(ocher) yellowish or pale green yellowish, surface<br />

rough with blue-gray fleck soralia. Lobes at most<br />

1 cm wide, broadly rounded, underside beige to<br />

light brown, occasionally thickly short hairy.<br />

With bluegreen algae. Very rare .<br />

Lobaria scrobiculata<br />

8* Moist thallus not lead-gray to dull blue greenish,<br />

underside not short hairy velvety, but <strong>of</strong>ten with<br />

rhizines. With green algae . .9<br />

9 “Navel-like” attached only at a single site. robust<br />

lichens on silicate rock in the high mountains<br />

(only rarely descending to lower places), usually<br />

light yellowish-green, undersides balk, brownish<br />

or blackish at the margins. Ap. rose, orange to<br />

discolored greenish or brownish<br />

Lecanora PT1 (Rhizoplaca)<br />

9* Thallus not attached at a single site. . 10<br />

10 Underside bald or with very sparse rhizines,<br />

whitish to brownish (if the underside black,<br />

brown at the margins: see Parmelia 11<br />

10* Underside commonly with numerous, only at the<br />

margin <strong>of</strong>ten sparse rhizines or occasionally<br />

thickly hairy, light colored or black to brown. . 15<br />

11 On bark and mossy bark on very humid, cool<br />

places in the mountains. Lobes with border<br />

soralia, undersides pale to light brown, upper<br />

sides yellow- to gray-greenish Cetraria<br />

11* On rock, peat, or lime loving mosses 12<br />

12 On rock . 13<br />

12* On peat or mosses . 14<br />

13 Thallus crustose-squamulose, ± rosette, lobed at<br />

the margin, commonly with ± brown ap. with<br />

thalloid margins. Upper side light yellowishgreen,<br />

whitish-green, or yellowish, underside<br />

whitish to slightly brownish, without rhizines.<br />

On limestone . Lecanora PT 1<br />

13* Thallus lobed, deeply divided, rosette, with large<br />

projecting hemispherical to almost spherical light<br />

soralia, without ap. Lobes strongly convex to<br />

almost becoming round stems, ± tuberculate,<br />

greenish-yellow, gray-yellow, pale gray-greenish,<br />

underside slightly brownish, with isolated<br />

rhizines. On silicate rock in cool places<br />

Parmelia incurva<br />

14 Thallus <strong>of</strong> irregular ordered, multiply divided,<br />

ascending to enrolled, -4 cm long and -1 cm wide<br />

lobes, undersides pale yellow, upper side<br />

39


yellowish-green to olive green, P+ red. Ap.<br />

lacking. On soil in dry warm sites (if undersides<br />

white, small foliose (Cladonia) .<br />

Cladonia foliacea s.l.<br />

14* Thallus ± rosette, lobed at least at the margin,<br />

closely appressed or ascending at the margins,<br />

upper side pale yellowish-green, whitish green,<br />

or yellowish, undersides ± whitish, P-, medulla<br />

P- or P+ yellow. Commonly with ± brown ap.<br />

with thalloid margin . Lecanora PT 1<br />

15 Thallus usually -2, rarely 3 cm wide, rosette,<br />

closely attached, interior with <strong>of</strong>ten coalescing<br />

fleck soralia, underside black. Lobes narrow,<br />

flat, delicate, K+ weakly yellowish. Medulla R-.<br />

Above all on acid bark or wood, very rarely on<br />

rock. Parmeliopsis ambigua<br />

15* Thallus with other characteristics (if habitat<br />

similar to the previous species, then the medulla<br />

and soralia K+ orange, P+ orange), underside<br />

pale or brown to black . Parmelia<br />

16 Moist thallus gelatinous swelling, dry very<br />

inflexible, gray, or brown to black. With<br />

bluegreen algae. Algae not arranged in a layer<br />

Key III<br />

16* Moist thallus not gelatinous . 17<br />

17 <strong>Lichens</strong> attached to limestone, mortar, or<br />

concrete . 18<br />

17* <strong>Lichens</strong> on other substrates 19<br />

18 Thallus without rhizines, in the main attached to<br />

the rock only by a ± central post (navel), otherwise<br />

± free, usually little organized and ± one<br />

lobed or rarely many lobed, without soralia or<br />

isidia . Dermatocarpon miniatum<br />

18* Thallus attached at numerous sites by rhizines,<br />

divided deeply into many or few narrow lobes,<br />

usually with soralia or isidia GS Physcia<br />

19 Thallus in the main only attached by a ± centrally<br />

located post (navel) on (silicate) rock, otherwise<br />

± free, usually little organized and ± single lobed<br />

or rarely many lobed (umbilicate lichens) . 20<br />

19* Thallus not attached by a ± central navel, on<br />

rock, bark, mosses or peat . 21<br />

20 Thallus upper side with punctiform small, sunken<br />

black perithecia, gray-white to brownish,<br />

underside ± brownish to rose, smooth to slightly<br />

wrinkled, without rhizines. Sp. colorless, single<br />

celled Dermatocarpon<br />

20* Thallus sterile or with black shield form ap.,<br />

whitish-gray, brown, or black-brown, underside<br />

pale brown to black, with or without rhizines,<br />

smooth, warty or channeled. Sp. one-celled to<br />

muriform, colorless or brown. GS Umbilicaria<br />

21 Thallus lobes welded into one almost schield-like<br />

thallus, closely attached, gray-blue, <strong>of</strong>ten with<br />

filamentous prothallus, with bluegreen algae.<br />

Extremely rare, on high oceanic habitats . Degelia<br />

21* Thallus otherwise . 22<br />

22 Thallus lobes arched at the ends into flat to<br />

saddle form, undersides free ap., generally at<br />

least 2 mm wide, undersides with veins or hairy<br />

or bald. With bluegreen algae, rarely with green<br />

algae, then the thallus in the moist state deep<br />

green . 23<br />

22* Thallus lobes without such terminal ap. . 24<br />

23 Ap. on the upper side <strong>of</strong> the usually ascending<br />

lobes, flat or saddle form. Underside with coarse,<br />

branched and reticulate veins as well as with<br />

tufted rhizines or scattered long single rhizines,<br />

rarely uniformly felty, without cortex. Sp.<br />

narrow spindle like to needle form, four to many<br />

celled cross septate, brown, at least 30µm long .<br />

Peltigera<br />

23* Ap. on the underside <strong>of</strong> the lobes, but <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

opening later, not saddle form, red-brown.<br />

Underside not with such veins, but sometimes<br />

wrinkled, bald or velvety hairy, beige, pale<br />

brown, rarely to black-brown, with cortex. Sp. 4celled,<br />

fusiform, pale brown, up to 27 µm long<br />

Nephroma<br />

24 Underside <strong>of</strong> the thallus orange-red. Alpine soil<br />

lichen . Solorina crocea<br />

24* Underside <strong>of</strong> the thallus not orange-red . 25<br />

25 Ap. sunken in definite rough depressions <strong>of</strong> the<br />

thallus, without thalloid margin. Thallus gray,<br />

green when moist, at times developed as only a<br />

ring around the ap., with green algae, in addition<br />

with bluegreen algae in parts <strong>of</strong> the thallus. Sp.<br />

brown to red-brown, 2-celled by a septum.<br />

Solorina<br />

25* Ap. not in excavated depressions . 26<br />

26 Lichen lobes over 5 mm wide. Relatively large<br />

lichens 27<br />

26* <strong>Lichens</strong> with narrower lobes 37<br />

27 Underside <strong>of</strong> the thallus with stout, branched and<br />

reticulate, raised veins as well as isolated to<br />

usually bushy rhizines, without cortex, therefore<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten ± felty rough and dull. Thallus broad<br />

lobed, ap., if occurring, at the ends <strong>of</strong> the lopes,<br />

flat to saddle-form. Lobes broad. Sp. 4-8celled,<br />

colorless to brown. Usually on soil and mosses,<br />

rarely directly on bark . Peltigera<br />

27* Underside <strong>of</strong> the thallus without raised vein net,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten however rugose, at times with arched<br />

structures, which are divided by engraved<br />

depressions . 28<br />

28 Thallus underside bald, without rhizines<br />

(examine carefully!), without hairs, smooth to<br />

engraved or felty 29<br />

28* Thallus underside with distinct rhizines or<br />

densely hairy 31<br />

29 Thallus upper side divided by wide meshed<br />

reticulate ridges with ± oval to elongate<br />

depressions lying between them, light brown,<br />

olive-brown, or greenish-olive, greenish when<br />

moist, underside usually beige to pale brownish,<br />

the upper side pits corresponds to the underside<br />

by ± wrinkling “pits” leading to arches .<br />

Lobaria (pulm./lin.)<br />

29* Thallus upper side smooth to slightly wrinkled<br />

30<br />

40


30 Thallus underside consistently felty, black-brown<br />

to black, coarse, without cortex, ascending at the<br />

tips, upper side gray to brownish or dirty<br />

greenish-brown, without soralia, soil dwelling<br />

Peltigera<br />

30* Thallus underside not felty, whitish, beige<br />

brownish or black-brown, smooth to wrinkled,<br />

with cortex, upper side gray, brown, or redbrown,<br />

with or without soralia . Nephroma<br />

31 Underside <strong>of</strong> the thallus at least partially thickly<br />

hairy (hand lens!), pale to brown. Rare lichens in<br />

very humid or nitrogen-rich sites 32<br />

31* Underside not densely short-hairy, but <strong>of</strong>ten with<br />

rhizines 34<br />

32 Thallus underside with numerous pits, sharply<br />

outlined as though punched out, densely hairy,<br />

beige to moderately brown. Upper side graybrown<br />

to brown. Almost never with ap.<br />

Sticta<br />

32* Thallus underside without sharply bordered pits<br />

33<br />

33 Thallus with green algae, slightly altered to<br />

grass-green by soaking, never clearly blue-green<br />

to gray-black, dry white-gray or yellow-brown to<br />

brown, smooth to wrinkled or with large oval,<br />

very flat pits and raised ridges. Ap., if occurring,<br />

laminal or almost marginal, brown or red-brown,<br />

with definite thalloid margin. Sp. 2- to<br />

multicellular, fusiform to needle form, colorless<br />

to brown. Often additionally with bluegreen<br />

algae Lobaria<br />

33* Thallus only with bluegreen algae (Nostoc),<br />

soaked blue-gray to black-gray, dry pale brown,<br />

dark brown or gray-brown (to almost gray),<br />

smooth or slightly wrinkled Nephroma<br />

34 Thallus olive to brown, without gray areas 35<br />

34* Thallus colored otherwise, usually gray-white to<br />

gray, but sometimes gray at the margin, even<br />

dusty green (GS Parmelia) 36<br />

35 Thallus with ascending lobes, the wavy margins<br />

with border soralia, olive to brown, underside<br />

pale brownish, ± shiny, with sparse rhizines.<br />

Thallus/medulla R- Cetraria chlorophylla<br />

35* Thallus with isidia or warts or entirely without<br />

isidia, underside pale to black. Rhizines sparse<br />

to numerous. Medulla C+ red or C-<br />

GS Parmelia<br />

36 Thallus with scattered fine white dots, gray, very<br />

slightly bluish-gray, broad lobed, with rounded<br />

ascending margins with border soralia, never<br />

with fleck soralia . Cetrelia<br />

36* Thallus with other characteristics, if with white<br />

dots, then with fleck soralia . GS Parmelia<br />

37 On limestone, line rich soil, lime loving mosses.<br />

With green algae (if only with bluegreen algae, ↑<br />

Key III) 38<br />

37* On other substrates 39<br />

38 Thallus clearly lobed at the margin (placoid), but<br />

lichen truly crustose, without an underside<br />

structure. ↑ Key VII (Lecanora/Solenopsora)<br />

38* Thallus foliose, with an underside structure,<br />

deeply dissected, with narrow lobes, underside<br />

with rhizines, or <strong>of</strong> tiny divided lobules, gray to<br />

brown, also pruinose, not becoming green when<br />

moist . GS Physia<br />

39 Thallus with bluegreen algae, without green<br />

algae. Unusual species <strong>of</strong> nitrogen rich sites<br />

(today almost only still in the mountains).<br />

Thallus brown to gray-brown, moistened<br />

becoming blue-gray to dark gray (bluer when<br />

moist), ± decumbent, with granular-sorediate<br />

margins or with reddish apothecia. Not with<br />

typical or with very few rhizines 40<br />

39* Thallus with green algae, moisture not clearly<br />

discoloring or more greenish 41<br />

40 Thallus underside paraplectenchymous (cellular)<br />

cortex, beige, pale to dark brownish, without<br />

rhizines, but occasionally with finely short hairy,<br />

upper side brown, brown-gray, when moist dark<br />

gray, with ascending margins (ap. on lobe ends)<br />

Nephroma<br />

40* Thallus underside without cortex (attached with<br />

medulla hyphae), closely appressed or somewhat<br />

ascending, producing small (in the range -3 cm<br />

large) rosettes or irregularly small squamules or<br />

narrow lobes, bluish-gray, gray or ± brown, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

with gray to blackish to blue-green prothallus.<br />

Lobes flat to concave. Ap., when occurring,<br />

rose-brown to blackish, biatorine to lecanorine,<br />

-2mm. GS Pannaria<br />

41 Thallus very dainty, loosely attached, almost<br />

small fruticose, with very fine 0.05-0.3 mm wide<br />

brown-gray to brown (greenish when moist)<br />

lobes, K-. Lobes at the isidiate at the margins<br />

(disintegrating into soredia), underside pale. On<br />

eutrophic rock, rarer on dust impregnated bark<br />

Phaeophyscia nigricans<br />

41* Thallus more robust, with other characteristics 42<br />

42 Thallus underside completely without definite<br />

rhizines . 43<br />

42* Thallus underside with (at times sparse) rhizines<br />

. 47<br />

43 Thallus upper side with cylindrical to coraloid<br />

isidia. Lobes gray, ± forked, underside somewhat<br />

concave, at the young parts white to rose,<br />

the older gray to blue-black, commonly attached<br />

to the substrate . Pseudevernia furfuracea<br />

43* Thallus without isidia 44<br />

44 Thallus <strong>of</strong> pale gray to brownish-gray band form<br />

segments, are covered with stiff cilia on the ends<br />

(margins), underside whitish and sometimes<br />

wrinkled, <strong>of</strong>ten with ap., disks brown-black,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten pruinose. Sp. 2-celled, brown<br />

GS Physcia<br />

44* Thallus margins/ends without cilia . 45<br />

45 Thallus K-, very closely (almost crustose)<br />

appressed to the substrate, scarcely to loosened,<br />

rosetted, -2 cm, underside pale to dark, with<br />

sparse attachment points, upper side brownish-<br />

41


gray to brownish. Rare, on base rich substrates .<br />

. GS Physcia: Hyperphyscia<br />

45* Thallus K+ yellow, not closely appressed, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

over 2 cm, underside (with exception <strong>of</strong> the lobe<br />

ends) black, upper side white-gray or light<br />

bluish-gray, rarely slightly brownish. Ap. usually<br />

lacking, brown, lecanorine. Sp. 1-celled,<br />

colorless 46<br />

46 Lobes hollow, narrow to wide, <strong>of</strong>ten with soralia,<br />

gray or bluish-gray, occasionally also brownish<br />

Hypogymnia<br />

46* Thallus lobes not hollow, narrow, high convex,<br />

closely crowded, sometimes ro<strong>of</strong> tile like,<br />

without soralia, usually light gray (<strong>of</strong>ten<br />

brownish overlaid). Underside black. On silicate<br />

rock in the mountains<br />

GS Hypogymnia: Brodoa<br />

(If alternative 46 not correct, see also GS<br />

Parmelia: a few species have at times very<br />

sparse rhizines)<br />

47 Ap. occurring. Key according to sp. characters .<br />

48<br />

47* Ap. lacking or occurring. Key without sp.<br />

characters 50<br />

48 Sp. brown to gray-green, 2-celled, ellipsoid, with<br />

usually partially thickened walls. Ap. usually<br />

blackish, sometimes pruinose GS Physcia<br />

48* Sp. otherwise, colorless (if colored, 4-celled, see<br />

bluegreen algae lichens) 49<br />

49 Sp. 2-celled, ellipsoid to fusiform. Ap. ± brown,<br />

protruding. Thallus small- and narrow lobed,<br />

brown, when moist light brown to deep green<br />

(with bluegreen algae) Massalongia<br />

49* Sp. 1-celled Key further at 51<br />

50 Rhizines viewed at right angles, bottlebrush-like,<br />

black (Fig. P. 729, there are always more threads<br />

attached to the rhizines than are shown, not only<br />

on young rhizines), underside black, only the<br />

margin sometimes pale. Thallus usually<br />

brownish, but <strong>of</strong>ten pruinose. (Sp. brown, 2celled)<br />

GS Physcia: Physconia<br />

50* Rhizines mostly simple or further divided, never<br />

bottlebrush-like 51<br />

51 Thallus shiny brown to shiny black-brown, not<br />

pruinose (only pruinose abnormally). (Sp. 1celled)<br />

52<br />

51* Thallus not shiny brown/black-brown . 54<br />

52 Thallus lobes long streaked and sometimes<br />

wrinkled, with ± peg-like to spherical warts with<br />

pycnidia at the margins, underside with sparse<br />

rhizines. On silicate rock in the higher mountain<br />

sites Cetraria<br />

52* Thallus lobes not wrinkled, without such warts<br />

on the margins 53<br />

53 Thallus undersid with sparse rhizines, pale<br />

brownish to almost whitish, almost pillow-form<br />

and thickly covered with ap. or with less dense<br />

granular-sorediate lobes projecting from the<br />

margins. Medulla and thallus R-. On bark and<br />

wood Cetraria (sep./chloroph.)<br />

53* Thallus otherwise, underside with sparse to<br />

numerous rhizines, light to black, not pillowform.<br />

Thallus/medulla R- or R+. On bark, wood,<br />

or rock GS Parmelia<br />

54 Medulla <strong>of</strong> the thallus (if there are soralia) C+<br />

orange to red . GS Parmelia<br />

54* Medulla <strong>of</strong> the thallus not C+ orange to red. 55<br />

55 Thallus brown, sometimes also (partially)<br />

pruinose 56<br />

55* Thallus usually whitish, gray, gray-green or<br />

green, without definite brown tint, only<br />

occasionally somewhat browned at the margins<br />

62<br />

56 Upper side usually flecked to completely<br />

pruinose (at least on the lobe ends). Underside<br />

whitish (only slightly brownish toward the<br />

center). Lobes sorediate to isidiate on the<br />

margins, later also over the surface, cortex and<br />

medulla R-. Ap. rare (sp. 2-celled, brown).<br />

Thallus robust Physconia grisea<br />

56* Upper side not pruninose 57<br />

57 With laminal isidia and warts 58<br />

57* Without or only with laminal isidia 59<br />

58 Lobes over 0.5 mm wide. Isidia and warts only<br />

laminal Parmelia<br />

58* Lobes 0.3-0.5 mm wide, usually radiate-rosette<br />

arranged, brown-gray to black-brown. Isidia<br />

marginal and laminal, very dense in the center <strong>of</strong><br />

the thallus. Ch-. On limestone and dust<br />

impregnated rock ↑Phaeophyscia sciastra<br />

59 Lobes (sometimes isidiate becoming) bordered by<br />

marginal soralia, ascending, loosely arranged, flat<br />

to concave, <strong>of</strong>ten curved at the margin, 2-10 mm<br />

wide, olive, olive-brown to brown, underside<br />

pale brown, wrinkled, ± shiny, with sparse<br />

rhizines. Thallus/medulla R-. Ap. very rare<br />

Cetraria chlorophylla<br />

59* Lobes without marginal soralia. Soralia, if<br />

occurring, laminal . 60<br />

60 Without soralia, <strong>of</strong>ten with ap . Parmelia<br />

(If at the seacoast, thallus compressed, ± rosetted,<br />

lobes elongated, brown, not pruinose, olive-green<br />

when moist, ap. black-brown, with crenate<br />

margins, sp. 2-celled, brown:<br />

Anaptychia runcinata<br />

(With.) Laundon)<br />

60* With soralia 61<br />

61 Thallus brown-gray to brown, medulla KC-.<br />

Rhizines entirely black or with whitish tips,<br />

dense, sometimes projecting beyond the thallus<br />

margin. Lobes usually elongate, -1 mm wide,<br />

rosetted to irregular, decumbent, dull with<br />

whitish to <strong>of</strong>ten greenish- to dark gray circular<br />

lichens, flat to convex soralia, underside black,<br />

lighter only at the margin. Thallus K-, rare forms<br />

with yellowish medulla and here K+ violet.<br />

Phaeophyscia orbicularis<br />

61* Thallus olive brown, or dark brown to blackbrown,<br />

underside black to black-brown, also<br />

brown at the margin. Medulla KC+ red or KC-.<br />

42


Rhizines black to brown-black, scattered. Lobes<br />

-1.5 mm wide, decumbent, sometimes somewhat<br />

shiny at the ends. Soralia at first brown-gray or<br />

gray to blackish (sometimes also isidiate), later<br />

(when shaded) whitish . Parmelia<br />

62 Thallus with laminal isidia 63<br />

62* Thallus without laminal isidia . 65<br />

63 Underside black, at the margin ± brown . Parmelia<br />

(if the lobes under 0.6 mm wide, isidia also<br />

marginal, see Phaeophyscia sciastra)<br />

63* Underside whitish to pale brownish, thallus<br />

usually to 3 cm wide, rosette, decumbent, lamina<br />

thickly covered with isidia . 64<br />

64 Thallus white to gray-white, P- or slightly<br />

yellowish, isidia <strong>of</strong>ten becoming soredia, the<br />

lamina then ± completely sorediate. Lobes up to<br />

0.8 mm. Extremely rare western and southern<br />

distributed species on base rich substrates<br />

Physcia clementei<br />

64* Thallus gray-white to occasionally partially<br />

slightly browned, P+ intensive yellow to orange,<br />

isidia <strong>of</strong>ten broken, then the upper surface<br />

appearing sorediate. Lobes 1-2.5 mm. On acid<br />

bark . Imshaugia aleurites<br />

65 Thallus upper side with streak-form to reticulate<br />

bound pseudocyphellae, thereby provided with a<br />

collection <strong>of</strong> weak ridges. With soralia or isidiate<br />

soralia . Parmelia<br />

65* Thallus without such pseudocyphellae and<br />

collection <strong>of</strong> ridges 66<br />

66 Thallus upper side whitish, white-gray or pale<br />

brownish. Ap., if occurring, brown-black to<br />

black. Pruinose or not (sp. 2-celled, brown) Physcia<br />

66* Thallus underside dark brown to black, only at<br />

the margin <strong>of</strong>ten lighter . 67<br />

67 Thallus K-, lobes usually narrow, not over 2 mm<br />

wide, swollen ± greenish. Ap. brown-black to<br />

black. (Sp. 2-celled, brown). On base rich<br />

substrates (if the thallus rosetted, with laminal<br />

fleck soralia, K+ weakly yellow, on acid bark and<br />

wood, see Parmeliopsis hyperopta)<br />

GS Physcia (Phaeophyscia)<br />

67* Thallus K+ yellow, narrow to broad lobes. Ap.<br />

brown 68<br />

68 Thallus closely appressed, with narrow, radially<br />

arranged lobes, -2.5(3)cm, with laminal<br />

disintegrating fleck soralia, white-gray. On bark<br />

in high montaine-subalpine sites<br />

Parmeliopsis hyperopta<br />

68* Thallus otherwise, narrow to broad lobed<br />

GS Parmelia<br />

Genus Key III: Bluegreen Algae <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

1 Thallus small shrubby erect to thread-like<br />

decumbent, ± branched, with ± rounded stems<br />

(cylindrical) segments, brown to usually (brown-,<br />

green-)black, rarely pruinose, commonly on rock<br />

and mosses over rock. Sp. usually 1-2 celled,<br />

rarely muriform GS Polychidium<br />

1* Thallus not small shrubby to thread-like<br />

decumbent, not with ± cylindric segments (but<br />

sometimes crustose areolate with cylindric<br />

outgrowths) 2<br />

2 Thallus foliose, with definite lobes (at least at the<br />

thallus margin), broad lobed to small lobed<br />

dissected . 3<br />

2* Thallus truly crustose or squamulose 20<br />

3 Moist thallus ± gelatinous swollen, very pliable,<br />

when dry relatively rigid, black, gray or brown,<br />

sometimes whitish pruinose, underside usually<br />

blackish, greenish, (blue-) gray, rarely yellow,<br />

without typical attachment organs, only<br />

exceptionally attached by thick white hairs (Lept.<br />

saturninum). Lobes with or without cortex. Ap.<br />

clearly with a margin. Sp. almost always<br />

colorless 4<br />

3* Moist thallus not ± gelatinous swollen, when dry<br />

usually brown to gray, underside whitish, beige,<br />

pale brown to moderately brown, ± bald or<br />

densely short hairy or with reticulate veins and<br />

attachment organs. Lobes usually with a<br />

(paraplectenchymatous) cortex on both sides, at<br />

the least clearly cellular above. Algae in closely<br />

compressed groups (Nostoc and other<br />

filamentous species) . 7<br />

4 Thallus without pearl necklace-like algae<br />

(Nostoc). Ap. lecanorine, disk at first or<br />

permanently point form and perithecia-like. Rare<br />

species. . GS Phyliscum<br />

4* Thallus with loosely dispersed, pearl necklacelike<br />

Nostoc algae. Ap;. with thalloid or proper<br />

margin, disk generally brown to brown-red, wide<br />

open . 5<br />

5 Thallus with a cellular (paraplectenchymatous)<br />

cortex or almost transparent cells (surely easily<br />

recognized in crushed preparations). Sp. mostly<br />

weakly muriform, rarely multicellular crossseptate<br />

Leptogium<br />

5* Thallus without cortex (yet ap. <strong>of</strong>ten with<br />

paraplectenchymatous cortex) 6<br />

6 Sp. 1-celled. Thallus crustose to foliose to<br />

almost dwarf fruticose. Ap. disk clearly<br />

(“pitcher-like”) deep. Rare lichens .<br />

Lempholemma<br />

6* Sp. multicellular cross-septate to weakly<br />

muriform, rarely 2-celled. Thallus usually foliose<br />

lobed, <strong>of</strong>ten sterile. Ap. not clearly deepened. At<br />

times a relatively frequent species . Collema<br />

7 Underside <strong>of</strong> the thallus orange-red. Alpine<br />

Solorina crocea<br />

7* Underside <strong>of</strong> the thallus not orange-red . 8<br />

8 Ap. clearly sunken into the thallus, which<br />

however occasionally develops only as a ring<br />

around the ap., gray, green when moist, with<br />

green algae, additionally with blue-green algae in<br />

parts <strong>of</strong> the thallus. Sp. brown to red-brown, 2celled,<br />

constricted at the septum Solorina<br />

8* Ap. not in cavities 9<br />

43


9 Ap. at the ends <strong>of</strong> the lobes, not sitting up, but<br />

“lengthening” the lobes, undersides free . 10<br />

9* Ap. not at the lobe ends or ap. lacking . 11<br />

10 Ap. on the upper side <strong>of</strong> usually ascending lobes,<br />

flat or saddle-form. Underside with coarse,<br />

branching and reticulate veins as well as with<br />

clustered rhizines or scattered long single<br />

rhizines, rarely uniformly felty .<br />

Peltigera (II/23)<br />

10* Ap. on the underside <strong>of</strong> the lobes, but <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

bending back toward to top, not saddle-form.<br />

Underside without such veins, bald or velvety,<br />

with cortex . Nephroma (II/23)<br />

11 Underside <strong>of</strong> the usually large, broad lobed<br />

thallus with coarse, branched and reticulate veins<br />

as well as with clustered rhizines, without cortex,<br />

rarely only uniformly felty. Thallus relatively<br />

coarse . Peltigera<br />

11* Underside without such veins . 12<br />

12 Thallus underside at least in places densely<br />

(standing) short hairy (hand lens), (underside)<br />

beige, brownish, gray-brown, or brown, rarely<br />

black-brown. Relatively large lobed, rare lichens<br />

in very humid habitats, lobes easily detached, not<br />

growing attached to the surface. 13<br />

12* Underside bald and ± smooth or at best uniformly<br />

felty-rough or extensively attached by the surface<br />

. 15<br />

13 Underside with numerous regularly rounded,<br />

sharply bordered, as though punched out pits,<br />

(almost) penetrating the dense short hairs. Upper<br />

side dark brown to brown-gray or gray, with<br />

isidia or soralia . Sticta<br />

13* Underside without such pits . 14<br />

14 Thallus yellowish-gray, blue-gray when moist,<br />

with flat depressions (pits), with at first rounded<br />

blue-gray soralia, undersides light brown, only<br />

occasionally densely short hairy. Lobes very<br />

broad, rounded Lobaria scrobiculata<br />

14* Thallus light to dark brown, brown-gray (to<br />

almost gray), when moist usually dark gray to<br />

blackish . Nephroma<br />

15 Thallus brown, usually dusty dark green when<br />

moist. Underside (except the margins) largely<br />

black-brown to black, felty, without cortex.<br />

Thallus coarse and rigid, with broad lobes<br />

ascending at the margins. Ap. rare, on the upper<br />

side <strong>of</strong> the lobe ends. Medulla white. In thin turf<br />

and sparse brushy sites . Peltigera<br />

15* With other characteristics. If thallus undersides<br />

black-brown to black, then lobes with a lower<br />

cortex, not coarse and not on such habitats 16<br />

16 With apothecia . 17<br />

16* Without apothecia . 18<br />

17 Thallus small lobed and dissected, brown,<br />

underside light, only with isolated dark rhizines<br />

at the base <strong>of</strong> the lobes. Lobes ± isidiate or<br />

nodular at the margin, 1-2 mm wide. Ap. brown,<br />

-2 mm, narrowly protruding, with proper margin.<br />

Sp. 2(3)-celled, 11-23(32) x 4.5-7(8.5) µm<br />

Massalongia carnosa<br />

17* Thallus commonly rosetted, barely lobed to<br />

deeply divided, bluish-gray, rarely somewhat<br />

brown tinged, sometimes pruinose, undersides ±<br />

whitish or (blue) gray, decumbent, attached by<br />

the medulla hyphae, <strong>of</strong>ten with a dark prothallus.<br />

Ap. reddish to red-brown, with a proper or<br />

thalloid margin. Sp. 1-celled, 7-10 µm wide<br />

GS Pannaria<br />

18 Thallus blue-gray, ± rosetted, -3 cm, at the<br />

margins provided ± densely with granular to<br />

squamulose (to coraloid) isidia, marginal region<br />

pruinose. <strong>Lichens</strong> <strong>of</strong> strongly oceanic regions<br />

Pannaria conoplea<br />

18* Thallus not blue-gray, not pruinose 19<br />

19 Lobes ± isidiate or nodular at the margins, 1-2<br />

mm wide. Thallus small lobed and dissected,<br />

brown, underside light, with isolated dark<br />

rhizines only at the base <strong>of</strong> the lobes. Over<br />

silicate, more rarely on soil mosses<br />

Massalongia carnosa<br />

19* Lobes as a rule wider, smooth at the margins or<br />

crenate or with small lobe, with or without<br />

soralia. Thallus brown, red-brown, rarely gray,<br />

underside beige to brown-black, without rhizines.<br />

On bark, mosses or silicate rock<br />

Nephroma<br />

20 Thallus with scattered, necklace-form Nostocalgae<br />

. 5<br />

20* Thallus not with scattered, necklace-form Nostocalgae<br />

(if with Nostoc, then in dense coils) 21<br />

21 Thallus on bark and bark mosses, small<br />

squamulose to somewhat lobed, <strong>of</strong>ten upon a<br />

blue-gray to blackish prothallus. GS Pannaria<br />

21* Thallus not upon bark and bark mosses . 22<br />

22 On peat or soil mosses, and plant remains . 23<br />

22* On rock . 28<br />

23 Thallus purely crustose, thin, coherent, light gray,<br />

slimy-gelatinous when moist, yet with green<br />

algae. With perithecia, sp. muriform. In high<br />

mountains on acid soils<br />

Protothelenella sphinctr.<br />

23* Thallus granular to squamulose. Fruiting bodies<br />

are ap., sp. 1-celled, very rarely 2-celled 24<br />

24 Thallus granular to finely coraloid . 25<br />

24* Thallus small squamulose to nearly lobed . 27<br />

25 Ap. convex, without margin, red-brown. Thallus<br />

finely granular to finely coraloid, olive to gray<br />

brown. .. GS Pannaria: Moelleropsis<br />

25* Ap. flat (to concave) or clearly margined, with<br />

granular thalloid margin or sunken into the<br />

thallus. Thallus granular . 26<br />

26 Thallus blackish (green). Ap. sunken, red-brown,<br />

flat to concave, -2 mm. Sp. 15-27 x 6.5-10 µm<br />

Heppia<br />

26* Thallus light to dark blue-gray. Ap. sessile to<br />

sunken, red-brown to brown, flat to convex, -1<br />

mm. Sp. 11-15(20) x 6-8 µm .<br />

GS Pannaria: Moelleropsis<br />

44


27 On dry calcareous soils (dry grass, stony soils).<br />

Algae: Scytonema, in rounded groups (algae cells<br />

not regularly spherical). Thallus yellow-olive to<br />

brown, <strong>of</strong> scattered to crowded, 1-3 mm wide<br />

squamules (or granular, then blackish). Ap.<br />

sunken, red-brown, -2mm, single or a few,<br />

without proper margin. Sp. Without slim<br />

envelope, 15-27 x 6.5 -10 µm . Heppia<br />

27* Not on dry calcareous soils. Algae: Nostoc in<br />

thick coils (algal cells regularly globose, -8µm).<br />

Thallus gray, blue-gray, or brown, granular to<br />

small squamulose, granules <strong>of</strong> the squamules<br />

densely crowded. Ap. usually densely crowded,<br />

with crenate or granular thalloid margin, usually<br />

red-brown to dark brown. Sp. with perispore 25-<br />

30 x 9-12 µm GS Pannaria<br />

28 Thallus squamulose, with sorediate, ± enrolled<br />

margins, 5-15 mm, dusty gray, olive-gray,<br />

undersides light, attached by a navel. Soralia ±<br />

gray, even lacking on many squamules, then the<br />

margin <strong>of</strong>ten somewhat down curved. Algae:<br />

Scytonema in spherical groups Peltula euploca<br />

28* Without soralia 29<br />

29 Thallus <strong>of</strong> a single to a few groups <strong>of</strong> navel<br />

attached squamules, crenate to lobed, blackish.<br />

Ap. for the most part at first with only a<br />

punctiform narrow opening (perithecium like),<br />

lecanorine. Sp. 1-celled. Algae cells single or in<br />

colonies, never combined into threads (squashed)<br />

GS Phylliscum<br />

29* Thallus not <strong>of</strong> navel-like attached squamules . 30<br />

30 With ap. 31<br />

30* Sterile lichens 34<br />

31 Fruiting bodies whitish, splitting star-form,<br />

uncovering a ± rose to orange colored disk.<br />

Thallus in the interior <strong>of</strong> calcareous rock. Sp. 4celled,<br />

fusiform, with a perispore<br />

Petractis clausa<br />

31* Fruiting body not whitish and splitting star like.<br />

Thallus not endolithic 32<br />

32 Sp. fusiform to ellipsoidal, 2-4(8) celled, crossseptate.<br />

Ap. black, with black proper margin,<br />

with a spreading, never punctiform narrow disk.<br />

On calcareous rock Placynthium<br />

32* Sp. 1-celled. Ap. usually not pure black, with<br />

proper or thalloid margin . 33<br />

33 Thallus <strong>of</strong> crowded, small (1.5 x 0.8 mm),<br />

crenate, gray, or brown-gray squamules with<br />

Nostoc algae, on silicate rock. Ap. -1 mm, with<br />

flat to convex disk. . . GS Pannaria<br />

33* Thallus not <strong>of</strong> crowded gray to brown-gray<br />

squamules, usually blackish, even red or green<br />

tinged blackish, occasionally bluish pruinose.<br />

Ap. at first <strong>of</strong>ten only opening punctiform. Not<br />

with Nostoc-algae. Algae 1-celled (single on in<br />

colonies with a surrounding gelatin envelope) or<br />

with short algal chains, then however never like a<br />

pearl necklace with globose cells<br />

GS Porocyphus<br />

34 Thallus with radially elongated marginal lobes<br />

(effigurate) or with green to blue-blackish<br />

(blackened) prothallus. With Scytonema-like<br />

algae. On calcareous rock or wet silicate rock<br />

. Placynthium<br />

34* Without green-blue-black or blackened<br />

prothallus, not effigurate. Thallus crustose,<br />

granular to areolate 35<br />

35 With Scytonema-like algae. Thallus not pruinose<br />

or bluish-white pruinose. Upper surface smooth<br />

or with cylindric to coraloid outgrowths. Usually<br />

on calcareous rock .<br />

Placynthium<br />

35* With short algal chains or single-celled algae<br />

(single or in colonies with enclosing gelatin<br />

envelope). Usually not pruinose. Difficult to<br />

determine without ap . GS Porocyphus<br />

Genus Key IV: Coniocarpic Crustose <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

(dusty or cup fruited crustose lichens)<br />

Hint: The mazaedium develops upon the upper side<br />

<strong>of</strong> the capitulum..<br />

1 Ap. sessile or very short stalked, at times even ±<br />

sunken, ± black, sometimes pruinose 2<br />

1* Ap. definitely stalked 5<br />

2 On silicate rock. Ap. blackish. Sp. brown, 1-2<br />

celled GS Cyphelium<br />

2* On bark or wood . 3<br />

3 Sp. 9-15 x 3-4 µm, narrowly ellipsoidal to<br />

cylindric, light colored (pale greenish to pale<br />

brownish), 1 celled or with 1-3 indefinite septa.<br />

Thallus indefinite.<br />

Microcalicium disseminatum<br />

3* Sp. broader, globose, angular to ellipsoidal, dark<br />

brown, 1-2 celled 4<br />

4 Sp. 1 celled, globose (angular) to ellipsoidal, 1<br />

row in a very long persistent ascus. On<br />

Pertusaria species or without thallus on conifers<br />

and wood . Sphinctrina<br />

4* Sp. 2 celled, ellipsoidal. Ascus soon<br />

disintegrating Cyphelium<br />

5 On silicate rock (also moss covered rock) or soil<br />

6<br />

5* As a rule on bark and wood as well as bark and<br />

wood dwelling lichens or on Cladonia squamules<br />

. 10<br />

6 Stalk whitish (to slightly rose), the base even<br />

greenish, usually over 0.6 mm thick, coarse. Ap.<br />

capitate usually 0.8-2(3) mm wide, shield shaped<br />

to globose, brown or rose, smooth, without<br />

mazaedium. Thallus warty to very small<br />

squamulose or purely crustose, never completely<br />

mealy, K+ yellow, P+ yellow to orange. Sp. 1-2<br />

celled, colorless GS Baeomyces<br />

6* Stalk black or yellow-green pruinose, seldom<br />

light, <strong>of</strong>ten very slender, up to 0.2(0.3) mm thick.<br />

Capitulum commonly clearly narrower, brown to<br />

black, sometimes pruinose. Thallus commonly<br />

45


mealy, intensely citron yellow to yellow-green,<br />

rarely whitish. Sp. colored to colorless 7<br />

7 Ap. stalk and underside and the margin <strong>of</strong> the<br />

capitulum yellow-green pruinose (at first also the<br />

mazaedium), upper side (<strong>of</strong> the mazaedium) light<br />

brown. Sp. globose, light, 1 celled. Thallus<br />

yellow to yellow-green<br />

Chaenotheca furfuracea<br />

7* Sp. blackish, upper side <strong>of</strong> the capitulum (green)<br />

black, black or dark brown, not yellow-green<br />

pruinose. Sp. not globose, colored. Sessile or on<br />

the algae layer <strong>of</strong> a whitish or yellow-green to<br />

yellow, finely sorediate thallus . 8<br />

8 Sp. 12-16 x 4-6 µm, dark brown, 2 celled. Ap.<br />

short stalked, capitulum -0.5(0.7) mm wide.<br />

Thallus light yellow to greenish, parasitic on a<br />

whitish to beige crust . Calicium corynellum<br />

8* Sp. 5-8(10) µm long, 1 or 2 celled. Capitulum -<br />

0.3 mm wide. . . 9<br />

9 Ap. 0.6-2(2.5) mm high, long stalked, blackish,<br />

upper side <strong>of</strong> the capitulum with (green) black to<br />

dark brown mazaedium. Stalk black. Sp. light,<br />

5-8 x 2-2.5(3) µm, narrowly ellipsoidal to<br />

cylindric, 1 celled, 2 celled when mature, spirally<br />

ribbed. On (green) yellow Psilolechia lucida<br />

and leprose crusts<br />

. Microcalicium arenarium<br />

9* Ap. -0.5 mm high, capitulum black, without<br />

mazaedium, stalk light to black. Sp. 6-10 x 3-4<br />

µm, 1 celled. On whitish to beige crusts<br />

Chaenothecopsis exerta<br />

10 On twigs and branches <strong>of</strong> alder and poplar. Ap.<br />

black, capitula usually globose to ± top shaped,<br />

without mazaedium. Sp. 1-4 celled, brown<br />

GS Stenocybe<br />

10* Not on alder or popular branches 11<br />

11 Sp. 1 celled . 12<br />

11* Sp. septate . 13<br />

12 Ap. even the upper side <strong>of</strong> the capitula (almost)<br />

black, without mazaedium, undersides and<br />

margins not pruinose. Sp. narrowly ellipsoidal to<br />

ellipsoidal, up to 10 x 3.5 µm large, brown, to<br />

light brown. Usually without thallus or on a<br />

foreign thallus . GS Chaenothecopsis<br />

12* Ap. upper side with brown or lighter mazaedium,<br />

not uncommonly the underside and<br />

margins whitish or yellowish pruinose. Sp.<br />

globose, more rarely ellipsoidal to cylindric,<br />

colorless to brown. Thallus definite, more rarely<br />

± lacking GS Chaenotheca<br />

13 Capitula with brown mazaedium, underside and<br />

at the margin yellow (green) pruinose. Sp. light<br />

brown, with 1-3 indefinite septa, when mature<br />

almost cylindric . Chaenotheca laevigata<br />

13* Capitula without brown mazaedium, either shiny<br />

black without mazaedium, or with black, rarely<br />

yellowish pruinose mazaedium, underside and at<br />

the margin black or brown, whitish or yellowish<br />

pruinose. 14<br />

14 Capitula with bulging black (rarely slightly<br />

pruinose) mazaedium, black or brown on the<br />

underside and at the margin, whitish or yellowish<br />

pruinose, usually top-shaped to cup-shaped in<br />

outline. Sp. (dark) brown, 2 celled, at best 3.5<br />

µm wide. Ascus usually relatively rapidly<br />

disintegratin Calicium<br />

14* Capitula without bulging mazaedium, shiny<br />

blackish. Sp. brown, or light brown. Ascus<br />

persistent 15<br />

15 Sp. 4 celled, 20-32 x 7-10 µm. Capitula globose<br />

to 4 angled in outline. On old pines<br />

Stenocybe<br />

15* Sp. 2 celled . 16<br />

16 Sp. 10-13 x 4-6 µm, 2 celled. On poplar<br />

. Phaeocalicium populneum<br />

16* Sp. up to 10 x 3 µm. Generally not on poplar<br />

Chaenothecopsis<br />

Genus Key V: <strong>Lichens</strong> with Perithecia<br />

(pyrenocarpic lichens)<br />

1 Fruiting body yellow to greenish yellow 2<br />

1* Fruiting body not yellow to greenish yellow . 3<br />

2 Fruiting body shining yellow to greenish yellow.<br />

Sp. very many per ascus, 1 celled, small<br />

Thelocarpon<br />

2* Fruiting body yellowish (rose) to rose brown.<br />

Sp. to 8, many celled, needle-like, very long .<br />

Belonia<br />

3 Thallus definitely foliose, for the most part, the<br />

underside free from the substrate, single unit<br />

rounded and attached at one place navel-like, or<br />

multiple and closely crowded, attacked at several<br />

places. One thallus usually about 0.8-4 cm wide.<br />

Sp. 1 celled, colorless . Dermatocarpon<br />

3* Thallus crustose or squamulose, squamules -1 cm<br />

in size 4<br />

4 Thallus squamulose or indefinitely lobed at the<br />

margin, on soil, mosses, or rock. Per. Black.<br />

Paraph. In ripe per. indefinite or lacking . 5<br />

4* Thallus entirely crustose, coherent to areolate (to<br />

clod-like) or granular or indefinite 8<br />

5 Sp. muriform-multicellular, colorless to brown,<br />

usually 2. With or without hymenial algae 6<br />

5* Sp. 1-celled to cross-septate multicellular,<br />

colorless. Without hymenial algae . 7<br />

6 Thallus in fresh condition pale greenish to<br />

greenish -brown (in the herbarium yellow to<br />

gray-brown), moist shining green, very small<br />

squamulose, squamules 0.3-1 mm, usually close<br />

together and ± erect. Fruiting bodies conical to<br />

barrel shaped, with warty upper surface, sessile to<br />

moderately sunken, <strong>of</strong>ten between the squamules,<br />

-0.4 mm. Without hymenial algae. Sp. colorless<br />

to slightly brownish, 60-120(150) x 20-50 µm<br />

. Agonimia tristicula<br />

6* Thallus brown, gray-brown, or olive-brown,<br />

squamulose. Squamules 0.5-2.5(4) mm.<br />

46


Hymenium contains small globose to elongate,<br />

greenish algal cells. Sp. up to about 75 µm long<br />

Endocarpon<br />

7 Sp. 2(4) celled GS Placidiopsis<br />

7* Sp. 1-celled Catapyrenium<br />

8 Sp. muriform. Per. blackish 9<br />

8* Sp. 1-celled to cross septate multicellular. Per.<br />

blackish or stained 11<br />

9 With small globose or cylindric algae in the<br />

hymenium Staurothele<br />

9* Without hymenial algae . 10<br />

10 Fruiting body strongly protruding to sessile,<br />

conical to barrel shaped, with warty upper<br />

surface, black. Thallus conspicuously granular to<br />

very finely squamulose, pale green to brownish<br />

green, clearly green when moist. Sp. 60-20 x 20-<br />

50 µm, 1-2. Paraph. Lacking. On bark, or<br />

mosses Agonimia tristicula (6)<br />

10* Fruiting body otherwise shaped, hemispherical<br />

projecting to sunken, not warty 11<br />

11 On bark. Sp. colorless to slightly yellowish. 12<br />

11* On rock, or soil (even bark dwelling) mosses. 14<br />

12 Fruiting body containing several perithecia like<br />

chambers, which open by pores or cracks. With<br />

true green algae or not lichenized Mycoporum<br />

12* Fruiting body is a normal perithecium with a<br />

punctiform opening and one hymenium. Paraph.<br />

Reticulate and bound 13<br />

13 With Trentepohlia algae or not lichenized. Sp.<br />

with perispore, -27 x 17 µm (if without perispore<br />

or without algae: not treated fungus, above all<br />

Mycoglaena species) . Julella<br />

13* With globose green algae. Sp. without perispore,<br />

single row in the ascus, 25-42 x 11-17 µm. Per.<br />

without involucre . Thelenella modesta<br />

14 Paraph. Swelling and soon deliquescing, in<br />

mature per. lacking. On calcareous and silicate<br />

rock, rare on soil, or mosses. With globose algae.<br />

Sp. colorless to brownish . Polyblastia<br />

14* Paraph. Definite . 15<br />

15 Sp. light to slightly brownish, clearly muriform,<br />

at most 18 x 10 µm. With green algae with a<br />

thick gelatin envelope. On mosses, soil, soil and<br />

silicate rock GS Prototelenella<br />

15* Sp. brown, or red brown, with 1-2(4) longitudinal<br />

septa, up to 18(21) x 9(11) µm large. On<br />

silicate rock. Without algae or algae loosely<br />

associated . Lichenothelia<br />

16 Sp. 1 celled, generally colorless. Thallus with<br />

globose green algae . 17<br />

16* Sp. 2 celled to cross-septate multicellular 24<br />

17 On bark . 18<br />

17* On soil or rock . 19<br />

18 Sp. ellipsoidal, thick walled, very large. Fruiting<br />

body completely sunken in gray to gray-greenish<br />

thallus warts Pertusaria<br />

18* Sp. needle-like to narrowly fusiform, slightly<br />

curved, -3.5 µm wide. Per. blackish to pure<br />

black . GS Leptorhaphis: Cresporhaphis<br />

19 Sp. over 140 µm. Fruiting body sunken in over<br />

wide bulbous thallus warts Pertusaria<br />

19* Sp. up to 40 µm. Per. blackish to pure black. . 20<br />

20 On soil or mosses . 21<br />

20* Commonly on rock. Typically paraph. (between<br />

the asci) lacking or indefinite . 23<br />

21 Paraph. Definite, unbranched. Dry thallus very<br />

indistinct, slimy when moist. Sp. 15-30 x 5-12<br />

µm. On bare soil Thrombium epigaeum<br />

21* Paraph. Lacking in ripe Per. Thallus clearly<br />

developed . 22<br />

22 Thallus areolate or squamulose, gray to brown<br />

Catapyrenium<br />

22* Thallus <strong>of</strong> minute gray-green globules or 15-40<br />

µm in diameter. Sp. 19-29 x 5-8 µm. .<br />

Verrucaria (bryoctona)<br />

23 Sp. very slender, with globose thickened ends, ±<br />

sinuous, 30-40 x 3-3.5 µm ( ) (if filamentous ↑<br />

S. beckausiana). Per. with projecting mouth,<br />

with a dark outer receptacle, -0.7 mm. Asci soon<br />

deliquescing. Thallus indefinite or endolithic<br />

Sarcopyrenia gibba<br />

23* Sp. ellipsoidal to globose . Verrucaria<br />

24 Per. 2-12(50) in irregular to rounded, black<br />

fruiting bodies, divided by limiting walls. Algae<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten only loosely associated (or lacking). On<br />

bark 25<br />

24* Per. not numerous in united chambered fruiting<br />

bodies, commonly single, in aspect mostly<br />

round, rarely elliptical . 26<br />

25 Sp. with 3-5 cross-septa, soon also with<br />

longitudinal septa, ± colorless, 12-18 x 4.5-8 µm.<br />

Per. 2-6. Paraph. Commonly soon indefinite.<br />

Associated with green algae<br />

Mycoporum quercus<br />

25* Sp. with 1-3 cross-septa, without longitudinal<br />

septa, colorless to brown, 18-27 µm long,<br />

somewhat globose to slipper-shaped (one cell<br />

larger). Per. with fine pore-like mouth, 2-20(50).<br />

Paraph. Branched. A nonlichenized fungus<br />

Tomasila<br />

26 Ripe spores strongly colored, usually brown.<br />

With Trentepohlia or without algae 27<br />

26* Sp. colorless or lightly colored . 31<br />

27 Sp. cells with lens-shaped interior space, in<br />

aspect therefore elliptical to rhomboidal, walls<br />

unequally thickened (see fig. S 31). Paraph.<br />

Simple, free, permanent. Sp. (2-)4(6) celled.<br />

With Trentepohlia. Per. dark brown to black,<br />

laterally <strong>of</strong>ten covered by thallus tissue. On bark<br />

Pyrenula<br />

27* Sp. cells not so. Walls uniformly thin . 28<br />

28 On bark . 29<br />

28* On rock. Paraph. Branched and reticulate.<br />

Without algae or algae only loosely associated.<br />

Per. black 30<br />

29 Sp. 4-6(8) celled, with dark septa, end cells<br />

lighter. Thallus whitish, with Trentepohlia. Per.<br />

-0.35 mm, dark brown to black-brown. Paraph.<br />

47


Simple to sparsely branched. Sp. (13)18-26 x<br />

6.5-10(12) µm Eopyrenula leucoplaca<br />

29* Sp. 2 celled, <strong>of</strong>ten one cell somewhat larger.<br />

Thallus commonly indefinite, without algae or<br />

algae only loosely associated. Per. black.<br />

Paraph. Branched and reticulate<br />

.Mycomicrothelia<br />

30 On silicate rock. Thallus black, finely cracked to<br />

finely areolate. Per. black, flattened<br />

hemispherical protruding, flattened above. Sp.<br />

(2-)4 celled or rarely also with 1-2(4)<br />

longitudinal walls, ± smooth, with perispore, 13-<br />

21 x 6-11 µm Lichenothelia (scopularia)<br />

30* On calcareous rock. Sp. 25-36 x 12-18 µm,<br />

warty, 2 celled, ± egg-shaped. Per. sunken, when<br />

sessile, strongly flattened above. Fungus <strong>of</strong><br />

pyrenocarpic lichens with whitish to gray-reddish<br />

or endolithic thallus Polycoccum marmoratum<br />

(Krempelh.) Hawksw.<br />

31 Sp. with about 20 septa, acicular, at best 50 µm<br />

long. Per. pale yellowish to pale rose or<br />

brownish (very light when moist). Paraph.<br />

Unbranched, permanent. Thallus with<br />

Trentepohlia. In higher sites. Belonia<br />

31* Sp. with much fewer septa, if acicular, then per.<br />

black . 32<br />

32 Per. red-brown to yellow-brown or rose. 33<br />

32* Per. black, at times pruinose and ± gray 35<br />

33 Thallus with coccoid green algae, light greenish,<br />

or light yellowish, or elongated, cylindric to<br />

branched, minute granules, also sometimes<br />

sorediate. Per. light brown to orange-brown, -0.4<br />

mm, with cellular, 30-80 µm thick light exc.,<br />

without paraph. Sp. 4-5(6) celled, 13-21 x 4.5-6<br />

µm. Almost only on elder, maple, or elm<br />

.Macentina stigonemoides<br />

33* Thallus with Trentepohlia, not consisting <strong>of</strong><br />

cylindric to branched light green granules.<br />

Paraph. permanent 34<br />

34 Sp. to 8 per ascus, 4-8 celled, fusiform. Porina<br />

34* Sp. to much more than 8 in (at most 150 µm)<br />

long asci, 4 celled, 12-18 x 5-6 µm. Per. -0.6<br />

mm, pale reddish to brown. Paraph. Simple.<br />

Thallus gray-rose to (in the herbarium) graygreenish<br />

or lighter. Thelopsis (rubella)<br />

35 On rock, soil, or mosses 36<br />

35* On bark . 40<br />

36 Sp. fusiform to narrowly fusiform (to almost<br />

acicular), at best 4 celled. Paraph. Permanent 37<br />

36* Sp. ellipsoidal, 2-4 celled, if fusiform, then 2<br />

celled. Paraph. Permanent or lacking in ripe per<br />

38<br />

37 Per. on white rock-dwelling thallus with green<br />

algae and dispersed soralia (Porpidia<br />

glaucophaea), black, -0.6 mm. Sp. 25-38 x 3-5<br />

µm, mostly 4-5 celled. Paraph. branched.<br />

Parasymbiont. Rare: southern Black Forest and<br />

Vosges Mountains. Sagediopsis barbara<br />

(Th.Fr.) R. Sant. &Triebel (=gongylia<br />

nadvornikii Servit)<br />

37* Thallus without soralia, with Trentepohlia. On<br />

rock, or mosses. Sp. fusiform, 4-8 celled.<br />

Paraph. branched or unbranched . GS Porina<br />

38 With globose green algae in the thallus. Hym. I+<br />

orange to red. Paraph. lacking (but periphyses<br />

occurring in the ostiole region). Per. with or<br />

without involucre. Sp. 2 to rarely 4 celled,<br />

septum usually in the middle. Thelidium<br />

(Verrucaria bryoctona and Pyrenocollema spp.<br />

also commonly have 2 celled sp.)<br />

38* With Trentepohlia or blue-green algae.<br />

Paraph. occurring. Sp. 2 celled 39<br />

39 Sp. with very thick dividing wall, 1 ranked in the<br />

ascus ( s.139), with (<strong>of</strong>ten finely warty)<br />

perispore, with rounded ends, with 2 equal cells.<br />

Per. 0.5-1(1.5) mm. Ascus cylindrical. Paraph.<br />

sparsely branched or bundled. Thallus with<br />

Trentepohlia, <strong>of</strong>ten in the substrate<br />

GS Arthopyrenia: Acrocordia<br />

39* Sp. with the thicker walls and not 1 ranked, with<br />

or without a very thin smooth perispore, usually<br />

2 unequal cells, in species <strong>of</strong> this hemisphere -24<br />

x 7 µm, sometimes even larger. Per. only -0.3<br />

mm, always without an involucre. Hym. I-. Asci<br />

ventricose to almost cylindrical. Paraph. richly<br />

branched and reticulate. With blue-green algae<br />

or Trentepohlia in the thallus (cells yellowish,<br />

orange or blue-green, in P. saxicola yellowish to<br />

orange) GS Arthopyrenia: Pyrenocollema<br />

40 Sp. at times curved or ± spiraled, narrowly<br />

fusiform, acicular, worm-lake, or thread-like, -4<br />

µm wide, 2 to 4 celled. Paraph. branched and<br />

reticulate bound, ± permanent. Per. black, -0.4<br />

mm. Without algae or the algae only loosely<br />

associated. Leptorhaphis<br />

40* Sp. straight, fusiform to ellipsoidal 41<br />

41 Sp. 2 celled, ± ellipsoidal . GS Arthopyrenia<br />

41* Sp. with at least 4 cells . 42<br />

42 Asci clearly thickened above. Paraph. ±<br />

branched, permanent or soon swelling and<br />

scarcely recognizable. Sp. ellipsoidal to<br />

fusiform. Thallus scarcely recognizable or<br />

definite. Without algae or with Trentepohlia .<br />

GS Arthopyrenia<br />

42* Asci thin walled, even the apex scarcely thicker.<br />

Paraph. approaching unbranched, permanent.<br />

Per. 0.2-1 mm. Sp. fusiform, 4-8 celled. Thallus,<br />

as a rule, clearly developed, with Trentepohlia .<br />

. GS Porina<br />

Genus Key VI: Streak and Fleck Fruiting <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

1 Sp. 1 celled, colorless. Thallus with pure green<br />

algae 2<br />

1* Sp. 2 to multicellular, colorless or colored.<br />

Thallus usually with Trentepohlia algae, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

golden brown to orange yellow at the crevices. . 4<br />

2 On rock. Thallus K+ red. Ap. streaked, with<br />

crack-formed disks. Receptacle black brown<br />

Lithographa tesserata<br />

48


2* On wood, rarer on bark . 3<br />

3 Ap. black, angular to rounded, with broadened<br />

disks. Exc. And Hyp. (“receptacle”) brownblack,<br />

carbonaceous. Sp. 5-8 x 3-4 µm .<br />

Ptychographa flexella<br />

3* Ap. brown to black. Exc. Brownish, hyp. ±<br />

colorless. Sp. larger Xylographa<br />

4 Sp. muriform, i. e. with longitudinal and cross<br />

walls. On bark . 5<br />

4* Sp. 2 celled to cross septate multicellular 6<br />

5 Exc. Strongly reduced. Sp. I-, up to 36 x 12 µm.<br />

Ap. without margin . Xylographa<br />

5* Exc., as a rule, definite, black. Sp. I+ violet, as a<br />

rule, larger. Ap. indefinite to definite with<br />

margin. NW Germany . Graphina Müll.Arg.<br />

6 Sp. 2 celled . 7<br />

6* Sp. with more than 2 cells 9<br />

7 In alpine places on calcareous areas. Ap. angular<br />

to elongate, simple, rarely forked, with crevice<br />

like disks. Exc. And hyp. Dark red-brown. Sp.<br />

15-23 x 7-12 µm, constricted, for a long time<br />

colorless, then the inner layer gray-green to<br />

violet-black, with perispore. Asci with K/I+ blue<br />

tholus. With coccoid green algae<br />

.Poeltinula cerebrina (DC.) Haf.<br />

(Encephalographa c.(DC.) Massal.)<br />

7* With other characteristics. If on calcareous rock,<br />

then ap. with sp. otherwise and not with crevice<br />

form disks . 8<br />

8 Exc. Usually clearly developed, dark brown to<br />

black. Ap. black, bordered to very indefinitely<br />

bordered. Paraph. filamentous, simple to<br />

sparsely branched and bound. Sp. colorless for a<br />

long time, brown when mature. With<br />

Trentepohlia or algae loosely associated .<br />

Melaspilea<br />

8* Exc. Reduced, not blackish. Ap. brown to black,<br />

without margin. Paraph. sparsely to richly<br />

reticulate branched. Sp. colorless, to brownish<br />

when over aged. With Trentepohlia, coccoid<br />

green algae, or without algae Arthonia<br />

9 Sp. fan rounded to oval in aspect. Sp. fusiform,<br />

(4)6-16 celled, colorless to brown. Ap. ± long<br />

streaked, simple or branched, with carbonaceous<br />

receptacle. Paraph. simple. With Trentepohlia<br />

GS Graphis<br />

9* Sp. fan ± rectangular to quadrate<br />

10 Thallus with fleck soralia, brown, with black<br />

10<br />

prothallus. Ap. rounded, with punctiform disks<br />

. Enterographa zonata<br />

10* With other characteristics . 11<br />

11 Exc. Black to brown-black, clearly developed, as<br />

a rule, also extending under the hyp. (producing a<br />

U-form receptacle in section). Ap. usually<br />

streaked, <strong>of</strong>ten branched, rarely rounded, black,<br />

with crevice form to broadened disks and<br />

elevated margin. Sp. 4 to multicellular<br />

Opegrapha<br />

11* Exc. ± reduced, not carbonaceous. Proper<br />

margin lacking or weakly elevated . 12<br />

12 Sp. with a maximum <strong>of</strong> 4 cells . 13<br />

12* Sp. at least partially 5-9 celled 14<br />

13 Sp. 24-36 x 2-3.5 µm. Ap. black, 0.3-1.5 x 0.1-<br />

0.2 mm, simple to branched, (almost) sunken,<br />

with whitish thalloid margin. Hyp. strongly<br />

developed, dark red-brown. Thallus whitish<br />

.Schismatomma graphidioides<br />

13* Sp. shorter. Arthonia (14)<br />

14 Ap. (almost) completely sunken, black to brownblack,<br />

not pruinose, short streak-form to almost<br />

rounded. Sp. 6- to 9 celled, (20)24-30(40) x 4-<br />

5(6) µm Enterographa (Hutch.)<br />

14* Ap. usually not completely sunken, brown to<br />

black, red, or red-brown, occasionally pruinose,<br />

usually rounded to fleck-form or short lobed,<br />

rarely streak-form to branched. Sp. 4-6(7) celled,<br />

usually shorter . Arthonia<br />

Genus key VII: Other Crustose <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

(above all Disk Fruiting Crustose <strong>Lichens</strong>)<br />

1 Thallus margins with elongated, radially arranged<br />

areoles, appearing lobed, or thallus squamulose<br />

. 2<br />

1* Thallus truly crustose to the margin, not<br />

appearing lobed or squamulose 49<br />

2 Thallus true yellow, citron yellow, orange, light<br />

red, or rust red . 3<br />

2* Thallus not true yellow, orange, or red . 9<br />

3 Thallus K+ deep red. Ap. yellow to orange-red .<br />

4<br />

3* Thallus K- . 5<br />

4 Sp. usually with thick (rarely thin), at least when<br />

young with a thin opening penetrating the center<br />

<strong>of</strong> the dividing wall, 2-(rarely 4-) celled. With<br />

ap., soralia or isidia, commonly on rock<br />

Caloplaca<br />

4* Sp. without or with thinner, cross wall, 1-2<br />

celled, without soralia, and without isidia. On<br />

soil, or mosses. Fulgensia<br />

5 On soil or mosses, squamulose or appearing<br />

lobed . 6<br />

5* On rock, usually rosetted and effigurate . 7<br />

6 Squamules light red, whitish margins, on<br />

calcareous soils. Ap. black. Sp. 1 celled,<br />

colorless .. Psora decipiens<br />

6* Thallus citron yellow, somewhat lobed at the<br />

margin, on acid soils in alpine regions. Ap.<br />

black. Sp. 2 celled, brown<br />

Catolechia wahlenbergii<br />

7 On calcareous, <strong>of</strong>ten dusty or manured rock.<br />

Thallus light yellow, granular-warty to sorediate<br />

in the ± gray-yellow center. Ap. rare, yellow. .<br />

Candelariella medians<br />

7* On silicate rock, yellow or rust-red. Almost<br />

always with ap., without soralia or isidia. Ap.<br />

yellow or red, dark brown, or blackish. Sp. to<br />

very many per ascus, small. . 8<br />

49


8 Ap. yellow, disk form. Thallus yellow<br />

Pleopsidium<br />

8* Ap. blackish to rust colored. Thallus red, or<br />

yellow Acarospora (sinop., smaragd.)<br />

9 Thallus sorediate 10<br />

9* Thallus not sorediate. . 20<br />

10 Thallus ± rounded rosettes, appearing lobed<br />

(placoid) at the margin 11<br />

10* Thallus squamulose, not rounded rosettes . 16<br />

11 Thallus C+ red, with fleck soralia, with or<br />

without brown cephalodia . 12<br />

11* Thallus C-, always without cephalodia 13<br />

12 Thallus <strong>of</strong> rounded rosettes, whitish, cream, or<br />

light beige, with definite close together marginal<br />

lobes, with bordered, <strong>of</strong>ten appearing ring-like<br />

arranged fleck soralia, without cephalodia or with<br />

warty cephalodia protruding in the center, -2 cm<br />

wide. Ap. very rare, brown, lecanorine. Sp. 1<br />

celled Placopsis gelida<br />

12* Only the young thallus rounded, marginally only<br />

very weakly effigurate (without clearly bordered<br />

marginal lobes), slightly rose tinted, with<br />

irregularly ordered irregularly border soralia,<br />

always without cephalodia<br />

Trapelia placoidioides<br />

13 Thallus K+ yellow, with definite, close marginal<br />

lobes and ± coalescing fleck soralia, gray-white<br />

to slightly blue tinted light gray. On calcareous<br />

rock, very rarely on bark. Diploicia canescens<br />

13* Thallus K- . 14<br />

14 Thallus with underside with patterned cortex,<br />

also a foliose lichen, yet very closely attached to<br />

the substrate and scarcely able to be loosened,<br />

very thin and delicate, gray-green, gray, or gray-<br />

-brown, with fleck soralia toward the center, with<br />

narrow, smooth, definite lobules at the margin,<br />

scarcely over 1.5 cm broad, underside light to<br />

dark. On bark, rarer on rock<br />

Hyperphyscia adblutinata<br />

14* Thallus without patterned underside, entirely<br />

crustose, not as easily loosened, underside<br />

without cortex. On rock 15<br />

15 Thallus brown, but <strong>of</strong>ten whitish pruinose, small,<br />

usually scarcely over 5 mm wide, but <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

growing together in large numbers, sorediate in<br />

the center. On warm silicate rock overhangs<br />

Lecanora (PT 1) dimissa<br />

15* Thallus gray-white, mostly over 5 mm, only<br />

weakly lobed at the margin, becoming granular<br />

sorediate in the center. Predominately on walls<br />

Caloplaca teicholyta<br />

16 Squamules C+ red, mostly arranged like shingles<br />

and with up-turned sorediate margins, light<br />

brown, yellow- to gray-brown, or brown- to<br />

gray-olive, 0.8-2.5 mm, mostly at the base <strong>of</strong><br />

trees, rare on silicate rock. Ap. rare, black, and<br />

pruinose . Hypocenomyce scalaris<br />

16* Squamules C- . 17<br />

17 Squamules erect and ± shingle-like arranged,<br />

sorediate at the margin (lip soralia), close<br />

together, greenish-brown to brown, underside<br />

pale brownish, without cortex. Apothecia<br />

convex, without margin, brown, very rare.<br />

Occurring on charred wood in higher regions<br />

Hypocenomyce<br />

17* With other characteristics; squamules generally<br />

without brown tint, if ± shingle like in<br />

arrangement, then the underside whitish to<br />

yellowish 18<br />

18 Very rare species with brown to gray margined<br />

ap. and light gray-greenish to olive gray<br />

squamules with lobed, sorediate eroding margins.<br />

Soralia lip-form to almost capitate. On peat<br />

Trapeliopsis percrenata<br />

18* Ap. lacking 19<br />

19 Squamules rounded, conchoidal to reniform, flat<br />

to concave, with a definite elevated margin, light<br />

gray, even with a light blue tint on the <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

concentric undulating surface, 1-2 mm wide,<br />

erupting, scattered to crowded soredia, above all<br />

at the margin, R-. On (mossy) bark, rarer on<br />

mossy rock. . . Normandina pulchella<br />

19* Squamules rounded to irregularly entire margined<br />

or crenate, gray-green to greenish white, not<br />

appearing margined, with cortex, erupting<br />

sorediate the margin or on the underside, not<br />

undulating on the surface, generally crowded,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten erect, P+ red to P-, K+ yellow to K-, on<br />

bark, wood, or soil Cladonia-thallus squamules<br />

20 Thallus on bark or wood 21<br />

20* Not on bark or wood 22<br />

21 Squamules flat closely attached, brown, olivebrown,<br />

olive-gray, gray-brown, or gray-green, R-,<br />

decumbent to somewhat erect, without a clearly<br />

differentiated underside. Ap. black, lecideine<br />

.Hypocenomyce<br />

21* Squamules only attached at the base, greenishwhite,<br />

gray greenish, yellow greenish, or light<br />

gray, erect, crowded, P+ red, yellow or P-,<br />

underside clearly differentiated, whitish to<br />

yellowish to orange at the base. Always without<br />

ap . Thallus squamules <strong>of</strong> Cladonia<br />

22 On soil, mosses, or lichens 23<br />

22* Directly on rock 38<br />

23 <strong>Lichens</strong> ± asteroid, only about 1 mm wide,<br />

consisting <strong>of</strong> a deeply depressed black-brown ap.,<br />

which is surrounded by ± triangular “lobules.”<br />

Sp. many per ascus, 2 celled, 11-17 x 3-4 µm.<br />

On loess Solorinella astericus<br />

23* <strong>Lichens</strong> otherwise . 24<br />

24 Thallus with very small blackish punctate<br />

squamules (sunken per.). Squamules light to<br />

dark brown, gray-brown, olive, or whitish,<br />

usually on calcareous soil over mosses Key V<br />

24* Thallus without per . 25<br />

25 Ap. black, but sometimes whitish pruinose,<br />

without thalloid margin, with/without proper<br />

margin 26<br />

25* Ap. not black or a;. lacking . 28<br />

26 Sp. brown, 2-celled GS Buellia<br />

50


26* Sp. colorless 27<br />

27 Sp. 2- to multicellular cross-septate, ± fusiform .<br />

Toninia<br />

27* Sp. 1-celled. . GS Lecidea<br />

28 With apothecia 29<br />

28* Without ap. (an assortment <strong>of</strong> frequently sterile<br />

species) 32<br />

29 Ap. clearly stalked, brown, or rose-brown .<br />

Baeomyces<br />

29* Ap. not stalked 30<br />

30 Ap. without thalloid margin, biatorine<br />

GS Lecidea PT1<br />

30* Ap. with thalloid margin 31<br />

31 On acid soils in higher sites. Ap. brown-red,<br />

concave, then flat with a thick conspicuously<br />

granular margin, 1-6 mm. Sp. 1(2) celled, 16-32<br />

x 5-8 µm. Thallus ochre, gold- to greenishbrown,<br />

small squamulose. Squamules -1.5 mm,<br />

crenate, coalescing into one crust<br />

Psoroma hypnorum<br />

31* On calcareous soils. Ap. usually brownish<br />

occasionally pruinose. Sp. 1-celled. Thallus<br />

usually pale greenish or ± thickly white pruinose,<br />

squamulose to rosetted .<br />

GS Lecanora PT1: Squamarina<br />

32 Thallus clearly rosetted, lobed at the margin, the<br />

interior <strong>of</strong> ± continuous, coalescing squamules<br />

33<br />

32* Thallus squamulose throughout to small lobules,<br />

not rosetted and lobed . 35<br />

33 On lime-poor, acid soils, greenish-gray,<br />

sometimes brownish tinted . .<br />

Baeomyces placophyllus<br />

33* On lime-rich soil or lime-mosses 34<br />

34 Thallus P+ red, without ap. Squamules brown to<br />

pale greenish, not pruinose<br />

Cladonia pyxidata (pocillum)<br />

34* Thallus P- or medulla P+ yellow, usually with ±<br />

brown lecanorine ap. Squamules greenish-white<br />

or light yellowish-green, even slightly brown<br />

tinted green, usually ± thickly white pruinose<br />

Lecanora PT 1<br />

35 Squamules strongly convex, turgid to almost<br />

bladder-like Toninia<br />

35* Squamules flat to concave . 36<br />

36 Squamules, at lease when young, concave, leekgreen,<br />

white around the margin and inflated, -<br />

3(4) mm wide, usually numerous, on turf, peat,<br />

moist moss thatch, on acid subsoil, sometimes in<br />

association with small fungus caps with lamellae<br />

. Omphalina hudsoniana<br />

36* Squamules otherwise . 37<br />

37 Squamules firmly attached at the base, ± erect,<br />

pale greenish, green yellowish, or gray green,<br />

entire margin, crenate, or incised, crowded, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

P+ red or yellow, with differentiated, usually<br />

whitish underside .. . Cladonia<br />

37* Squamules either ± decumbent or P- or other<br />

color; see for example Lecidea PT 1, Toninia, or<br />

Catapyrenium.<br />

38 Ap. orange-brown to rust colored, K+ deep red,<br />

convex biatorine. Thallus squamulose, bright<br />

greenish-gray to bright olive, on limestone<br />

Psora testacea<br />

38* Ap. not K+ deep red 39<br />

39 Sp. small (up to about 6µm), spherical to<br />

elongate, 1-celled, to very numerous per ascus 40<br />

39* Sp. commonly 8 per ascus, larger . 41<br />

40 Thallus areolate (areoles -0.6 mm), with radiating<br />

enlarged marginal areoles, bronze colored to<br />

almost black or bright gray to yellowish-ray, C+<br />

red, with black prothallus. Ap. black, sunken,<br />

even or uneven, warty-scared to furrowed,<br />

lecideine. Sp. spherical. Moist high alpine on<br />

silicate rock, or alpine Sporastatia<br />

40* Thallus squamulose, squamules over 0.6 mm,<br />

usually ± brown, or red-brown, with usually<br />

sunken to deep seated, red-brown, or brown to<br />

dark brown (rarely brown black) ap. Sp.<br />

ellipsoidal to elongate Acarospora<br />

41 Thallus with a definite yellow tint, yellowishgray,<br />

green-yellowish, or yellowish white . 42<br />

41* Thallus without yellowish tint . 43<br />

42 Ap. black, ± sunken and with thalloid margin.<br />

Sp. ± brown, 2-celled. Thallus somewhat lobed<br />

at the margin, sharply defined areolate in the<br />

interior. In higher places on silicate<br />

Dimelaena oreina<br />

42* Ap. usually brown to red-brown, sometimes<br />

pruinose, with thalloid margin. Spores colorless,<br />

1-celled . GS Lecanora PT 1<br />

43 Ap. without thalloid margin. Thallus squamulose<br />

. 44<br />

43* Ap. with thalloid margin, or without definite<br />

margin and sunken into the thallus. Thallus<br />

usually rosetted and effigurate (placoid), interior<br />

areolate to squamulose 48<br />

44 Sp. brown, 2-celled. Ap. black, lecideine.<br />

Thallus grayish to dark brown . Buellia badia<br />

44* Sp. colorless 45<br />

45 Sp. 2- to cross-septate multicellular. Ap. black or<br />

sometimes thickly white pruinose, lecideine .<br />

Toninia<br />

45* Sp. 1-celled . 46<br />

46 On silicate rock. Ap. black or brighter, lecideine<br />

or biatorine . GS Lecidea<br />

46* On calcareous rock. Ap. black, rarely slightly<br />

pruinose 47<br />

47 Squamules whitish, moderately convex to almost<br />

flat. Sp. 10-18 x 3-5 µm. Toninia tumidula<br />

47* Squamules ± brown, usually ± flat to uneven.<br />

Ap. 12-16 x 5-7 µm (if squamules bloated convex<br />

and sp. 10-20 x 3.5-6.5 µm, see Toninia tristis)<br />

. Lecidea lurida<br />

48 Sp. 2-celled, 10-18 x 3-4 µm. Thallus white, K-,<br />

marginal lobes -2.5 mm wide, flat, close to one<br />

another. Ap. black (rarely brown), sunken to<br />

depressed, -1.5 mm. . Solenopsora candicans<br />

51


48* Sp. 1-celled. Thallus brownish-gray to dark gray,<br />

or greenish(-white) or almost white (± strongly<br />

pruinose), <strong>of</strong>ten over 2.5 cm wide, rosetted or<br />

squamulose GS Lecanora PT 1<br />

49 Thallus yellow, orange, or orange-red, K+<br />

immediately deep red. Sp. 2- rarely 4-celled,<br />

commonly with conspicuously thicker dividing<br />

wall . Caloplaca<br />

49* With other characteristics; if thallus yellow to<br />

orange-red, then not K+ deep red 50<br />

50 Sp. one-celled 108<br />

50* Sp. multicellular 51<br />

51 Sp. muriform, i.e. with cross- and longitudinal<br />

walls 52<br />

51* Sp. not muriform 60<br />

52 Ap. sorus-like, covered with whitish granules,<br />

gray to whitish, sunken in the white-gray thallus.<br />

Thallus K- red, on bark. Sp. ellipsoidal, to 1-2 .<br />

Phlyctis (agelaea)<br />

52* Ap. not sorus-like, not covered with whitish<br />

granules 53<br />

53 Ap. rose, brown, yellowish, or orange. Thallus<br />

with Trentepohlia or true green algae .<br />

GS Gyalecta<br />

53* Ap. blackish, but also gray pruinose 54<br />

54 Sp. soon clearly brown to green colored. . 55<br />

54* Sp. remaining colorless or (over mature) slightly<br />

colored . 57<br />

55 Ap. disk with sometimes at first a conspicuously<br />

deep disk, with a proper margin with at first a<br />

narrow opening toward the inside <strong>of</strong> the bulging<br />

thalloid margin, sometimes pruinose. Hyp./Exc.<br />

Dark. Paraph. simple. Sp. muriform, to 4-8.<br />

Thallus <strong>of</strong>ten very thick, gray to ocher, the native<br />

species C+ red. On rock, soil, mosses, and<br />

lichens Diploschistes<br />

55* The ap. disk not clearly depressed, without<br />

thalloid margin or with an indefinite whitish<br />

thalloid margin. Thallus almost always C- . 56<br />

56 Sp. at least when young with a perispore, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

over 28 µm long. Cell lumen not rounded.<br />

Paraph. richly branched and reticulate bound,<br />

glued together. Hyp. dark. Ap. black, without<br />

thalloid margin. Thallus usually clearly<br />

developed, <strong>of</strong>ten areolate. On rock Rhizocarpon<br />

56* Sp. without perispore, usually -28 µm long,<br />

weakly muriform (with only 1-2 longitudinal<br />

walls), usually with rounded cell lumen. Paraph.<br />

simple or with isolated forks. On various<br />

substrates. Buellia<br />

57 Ap. deeply sunken in -2.5 mm wide,<br />

hemispherical thallus warts, 1.5(2) mm, at first<br />

punctiform, then wider opening, then with an<br />

inner wavy margin. Disk blackish, gray pruinose.<br />

Sp. 40-140 x 11-25 µm, with lens form to<br />

spherical cell lumen. Thallus light gray or<br />

yellowish gray, with Trentepohlia, commonly on<br />

bark. R- . Thelotrema lepadinum<br />

57* Ap. not deeply sunken in hemispherical thallus<br />

warts, without thalloid margin. Sp. without lens<br />

form lumina 58<br />

58 Paraph. branched and reticulate bound, strongly<br />

cemented. Young spores with perispore. Ap.<br />

black, sometimes pruinose Rhizocarpon<br />

58* Paraph. simple, branched here and there. Rare<br />

species . 59<br />

59 Sp. 48-120 x 20-46 µm, 1 per ascus, usually<br />

weakly muriform multicellular. Hyp. brown, exc.<br />

Brown-black. Ap. with proper margin, -1 mm.<br />

Thallus warty to almost squamulose, olive,<br />

brownish, or dark gray-brown. With coccoid<br />

green algae. On mosses, plant detritus, or bark .<br />

Lopadium disciforme<br />

59* Sp. smaller, usually 4-8 per ascus, mostly weakly<br />

muriform. Hyp./exc. (interior) very light. Ap.<br />

concave to flat. Thallus with Trentepohlia or<br />

true green algae. On bark or rock GS Gyalecta<br />

60 Sp. definitely colored, greenish, olive, or dark<br />

brown . 61<br />

60* Sp. colorless (sometimes the older ones slightly<br />

colored) 65<br />

61 Thallus with Trentepohlia algae, when scraped or<br />

scratched <strong>of</strong>ten orange to golden brown. Sp.<br />

commonly at first slowly brownish 62<br />

61* Thallus with true green (coccoid) algae. Ap.<br />

rounded to irregular 63<br />

62 Ap. without margin, brown to black, likewise<br />

pruinose. Exc. Reduced, very narrow. Paraph.<br />

reticulate bound. Sp. 2-munticellular, at first<br />

slowly brown Arthonia<br />

62* Ap. margined to indefinitely margined, black,<br />

nonpruinose. Exc. Usually clearly developed,<br />

dark. Paraph. simple to sparsely branched. Sp.<br />

2-celled. Melaspilea<br />

63 Paraph. richly branched and reticulate bound,<br />

cemented. Sp. at least when young with<br />

perispore, <strong>of</strong>ten over 28 µm long, 2-celled, rarely<br />

3-5 celled. Hyp. dark. Thallus usually clearly<br />

developed, <strong>of</strong>ten areolate. On rock Rhizocarpon<br />

63* Paraph. simple to forked. Sp. without perispore.<br />

Hyp. colorless to dark brown. On rock and bark<br />

. 64<br />

64 Ap. with thalloid margin (in doubtful cases:<br />

always with algae in the margin). Sp. <strong>of</strong>ten with<br />

unequally thickened wall, 2-celled, in a single<br />

moss dwelling species 4-celled. Hyp. colorless to<br />

slightly brownish Rinodina<br />

64* Ap. without thalloid margin (margin without<br />

algae) or ap. sunken in the thallus. Sp. wall not<br />

unequally thickened. Hyp. usually dark. . Buellia<br />

65 Sp. 2-celled, with conspicuously thickened<br />

septum, that at least in the young ones is<br />

penetrated by a visible canal (polar diblastic).<br />

Ap. yellow, orange, red, or red brown, K+ deep<br />

red, or black, sometimes pruinose. Hym. Above<br />

generally K+ red to red-violet. Caloplaca<br />

65* Sp. otherwise. Septum generally thin . 66<br />

52


66 Thallus with Trentepohlia algae, when scratched<br />

or scraped <strong>of</strong>ten orange to gold brown (in<br />

problem cases check alternatives!) . 67<br />

66* Thallus not with Trentepohlia, commonly with<br />

true green algae 80<br />

67 Sp. 2-celled . 68<br />

67* Sp. with more than 2 cells . 71<br />

68 Paraph. reticulate bound. Exc. Reduced, very<br />

thin to lacking. Ap. without margin. Hym. I+<br />

(yellow)orange, dirty gray-blue or blue. Asci<br />

thickened above Arthonia<br />

68* Paraph. simple to sparsely forked. Exc. Clearly<br />

developed. Ap. with or without margin. Hym. I-<br />

or I+ blue . 69<br />

69 Ap. whitish to orange, with concave to flat disks.<br />

Hyp. (Exc. ±) colorless. Spores fusiform to<br />

ellipsoidal. Thallus thin, light gray to green,<br />

film-like to scruffy, on bark and mosses<br />

Dimerella<br />

69* Ap. dark. Hyp and exc. dark or light 70<br />

70 Sp. at first colorless then brown, cells sometimes<br />

unequal in size. Ap. rounded to streaked, black.<br />

Thallus indefinite. Asci I- Melaspilea<br />

70* Sp. remaining colorless, cells equal in size. Ap.<br />

rounded, black or dark red-brown. Asci I+ blue<br />

at least above. GS Catillaria<br />

71 Ap. Not black . 72<br />

71* Ap. black, however sometimes pruinose. . 74<br />

72 Sp. to 16 or more per ascus, long fusiform to<br />

almost thread-like, -5 µm wide. Ap. brown-red<br />

to orange-brown, -0.6 mm, with concave disk.<br />

Asci not thickened at the apex. Epihym. Brown.<br />

Hyp. colorless. On bark. Pachyphiale<br />

72* Sp. 8 per ascus 73<br />

73 Ap. bordered, with clearly developed exc., disk<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten concave or deeply sunken. Asci usually<br />

very lax, cylindric-clavate. Sp. long fusiform to<br />

ellipsoidal. Ap. yellowish, rose, red, or (dark)<br />

brown. On bark, soil, rock, or plant residue<br />

GS Gyalecta<br />

73* Ap. without margin, exc. reduced. Asci broad,<br />

wall strongly thickened above . Arthonia<br />

74 Sp. needle-form, 50-80 x 1.5-2.5 µm,<br />

multicellular, disintegrating in short segments.<br />

Ap. black. Thallus whitish, almost exclusively<br />

on oak bark GS Lecanactis: Bactrospora<br />

74* Sp. shorter, not disintegrating into small pieces,<br />

usually fusiform . 75<br />

75 Paraph. simple or with scattered branches, in<br />

other parts occasionally bound. Sp. 4-celled,<br />

with perispore, 12-28 x 6-9 µm. Asci thin<br />

walled, with thick tholus, not fissitunicate, wall<br />

I+ blue. Exc./hyp. dark brown. Ap. black (redbrown<br />

when fresh), <strong>of</strong>ten with split margin. On<br />

calcareous rock . Sagiolechia<br />

75* Paraph. branched and reticulate bound. Asci<br />

thick walled, fissitunicate . 76<br />

76 With strongly developed dark receptacle/exc.,<br />

without thalloid margin. 77<br />

76* Receptacle/exc. reduced, with or without thalloid<br />

margin . 79<br />

77 Ap. almost perithecia-like, with narrow<br />

punctiform disks. Dark exc. only developed in<br />

places, hyp. light. Thallus (dark) brown, with<br />

lighter soralia, commonly with a dark prothallus.<br />

. Enterographa zonata<br />

77* Ap. with wide open disks. Dark exc. even the<br />

underside developed, producing a cup-like<br />

receptacle . 78<br />

78 Ap. <strong>of</strong>ten not uniformly rounded, disks<br />

sometimes with an umbo or groves. Receptacle<br />

black, underside <strong>of</strong>ten strongly developed. On<br />

rock . Opegrapha<br />

78* Ap. usually uniformly rounded, <strong>of</strong>ten pruinose,<br />

with smooth disk, usually with proper margin.<br />

Receptacle black-brown. On rock and bark .<br />

Lecanactis<br />

79 Ap. with a finally inconspicuous, black, rarely<br />

pruinose thalloid margin differentiated from the<br />

thallus. The fresh thallus slightly reddish, the old<br />

(in the herbarium) whitish to cream colored. Sp.<br />

4-celled, fusiform, 25-42 x 2.5-4 µm. Hyp. dark.<br />

On bark . Schismatomma abietinum<br />

79* Ap. without thalloid margin, uniformly to<br />

irregularly rounded or short lobed, without<br />

margin, brown to black, sometimes thickly white<br />

pruinose. Sp. -25 µm long . Arthonia<br />

80 Ap. margin separated from an at first narrow<br />

central star-like ap. opening in 4-8 triangular<br />

lobes. Disk concave, rose, rose-brown, or<br />

yellowish. Ap. extensively up to half sunken in<br />

calcareous rock. Sp. 4-celled. Thallus indefinite.<br />

With Scytonema algae Petractis clausa<br />

80* Ap. margin not set <strong>of</strong>f star-like from the center.<br />

Not with Scytonema algae, but with green algae<br />

81<br />

81 Ap. disk yellow, orange, or brown-orange, K+<br />

immediately deep red. Sp. 2-celled. . Caloplaca<br />

81* If ap. disk yellow to orange colored, then not<br />

immediately K+ deep red . 82<br />

82 Ap. margin with algae (in section), externally<br />

almost always colored as the thallus 83<br />

82* Ap. margin without algae, generally colored like<br />

the disk, or without a margin . 86<br />

83 Ap. disk yellow, dirty yellow, or orange, K- to<br />

gradually slightly reddish. Sp. 2-celled. Thallus<br />

yellow or gray . Candelariella<br />

83* Ap. disk not yellow to orange . 84<br />

84 Sp. sometimes 30 µm long, fusiform to needlelike,<br />

with (1)3-7 cross-septa. Ap. red, K+ dark<br />

red or blue, or rarely the ap. brown, nonpruinose,<br />

concave to moderately convex. Hyp. ±<br />

colorless . GS Haematomma<br />

84* Sp. shorter, 2-4 celled. Ap. not red 85<br />

85 On decayed wood, peat, raw humus, or mosses,<br />

very rare on acid silicate rock. Ap. rose or rose<br />

beige, at first with whitish margin, 1-3 mm<br />

Icmadophila (91)<br />

53


85* On bark, calcareous rock, manured or mineral<br />

rich silicate rock. Ap. brown, red-brown, or rosebrown<br />

to blackish, sometimes white pruinose, -<br />

1(1.2) mm. Thalloid margin <strong>of</strong>ten soon shrinking<br />

back (if thallus somewhat squamulose, white, see<br />

Solenopsora). Lecania<br />

86 Thallus <strong>of</strong> convex, rarely flattened squamules.<br />

Ap. black, sometimes pruinose. Sp. fusiform to<br />

needle-like, 2-8 celled. On soil, mosses, or<br />

calcareous rarely silicate rock Toninia<br />

86* Thallus not <strong>of</strong> distinct squamules, commonly<br />

coherent crustose to areolate 87<br />

87 <strong>Lichens</strong> on thin branches and needles <strong>of</strong> conifers<br />

88<br />

87* On other habitats . 91<br />

88 Ap. light, whitish, beige, or yellow, bordered.<br />

Exc. paraplectenchymatous, <strong>of</strong> spherical to<br />

ellipsoidal cells (when exc. not paraplectenchymatous,<br />

see Bacidia) . Fellhanera<br />

88* Ap. dark red-brown to black 89<br />

89 Ap. bordered. Species dying out 90<br />

89* Ap. soon magrinless . 107<br />

90 Ap. black, -0.6 mm, margin gray-whitish, hairyfelty<br />

under the lens, made up <strong>of</strong> loose hyphae<br />

coming up from the thallus. Hyp. dark redbrown.<br />

Hym. I+ blue. Sp. 10-17 x 3-5µm, (2-)4<br />

celled. Thallus gray, very thin. .<br />

Byssoloma subdiscordans<br />

90* Ap. dark red-brown to black, -0.3 mm, margin<br />

not hairy-felty. Hyp/exc. colorless at the base.<br />

Hym. I- to yellowish. Ascoplasma I+ red. Sp. to<br />

4, rarely 8, 12-19 x 4.5-7 µm, divided by up to 5<br />

cross walls. Thallus gray, very thin<br />

Gyalideopsis piceicola<br />

91 Ap. rose, rose-beige, or orange-rose, sometimes<br />

slightly whitish pruinose, K+ orange (like the<br />

thallus), at first with a whitish margin, later<br />

convex marginless, sessile or short stalked, 1-3<br />

mm. Thallus pale green, gray-greenish to<br />

whitish, ± granular, on decaying wood, peat, raw<br />

humus, soil, or acidophylic mosses. Sp. 2-4<br />

celled, 13-24 x 4-6 µm. Hyp. colorless<br />

Icmadophila ericetorum<br />

91* Ap. other colors; if rose, then on other substrates,<br />

not K+ orange, usually smaller 92<br />

92 Sp. 2-celled, never needle-form to threadlike. 93<br />

92* Sp. multicellular; if sp. needle-like to threadlike,<br />

then septa at times indefinite. 99<br />

93 Ap. concave, small, -0.4mm, yellowish to rosebrown.<br />

Asci thickened above, I+ red-brown.<br />

Paraph. commonly simple, receptacle and hyp.<br />

light. Hym. I-/I+ yellow (at best the tips <strong>of</strong> the<br />

asci blue) . Absconditella<br />

(If ap. dark brown, with triangular appendages,<br />

sp. many per ascus: ↑ Solorinella asteriscus,23)<br />

93* Ap. commonly flat to convex 94<br />

94 Sp. over 19 x 7 µm in size, the young ones with a<br />

perispore. Ap. black, rarely brown-black, at least<br />

at first with a margin. Hyp. black to brown. Exc.<br />

usually clearly developed. On rock Rhizocarpon<br />

94* Sp. up to 19 x 7 µm. Ap. light to black. Hyp.<br />

light to dark. On various substrates 95<br />

95 Paraph. simple to forked. Ap. at least when<br />

young commonly with margin, light to black.<br />

Exc. clearly developed. Spores without<br />

perispore, ellipsoidal to bacillar. Algae not<br />

micareoid. Hym. I+ blue GS Catillaria<br />

95* Paraph. branched and bound. Ap. bordered or<br />

unbordered. Exc. definite to lacking. . 96<br />

96 At least the young spores with a perispore, ±<br />

ellipsoidal. Ap. at least at first bordered, black,<br />

rarely brown-black. Exc. at times clearly<br />

developed. Hyp. black to brown. Hym. high.<br />

On rock Rhizocarpon<br />

96* Sp. with perispore, ellipsoidal to fusiform or<br />

elongate. Ap. unbordered, rarely with a light<br />

border. Exc. lacking to weakly developed, then<br />

<strong>of</strong> branched paraph.-like hyphae 97<br />

97 Without hyp. and exc. Hym. without hymenial<br />

gelatin. Paraph. almost lacking or ± numerous,<br />

branched, netted and closely entwining the asci.<br />

Young ap. <strong>of</strong>ten hairy (Binocular). Sp. smooth<br />

or warty. Short-lived species on mosses, soil,<br />

and plant residue Vezdaea<br />

97* With other characteristics. Hym. with hymenial<br />

gelatin. Paraph. numerous, not entwining the<br />

asci. Ap. not hairy 98<br />

98 Hym. I+ blue. Ap. unbordered or weakly<br />

bordered, light or dark (to black). Sp. partitioned<br />

± equal in size. Exc. (almost) lacking, rarely<br />

developed, <strong>of</strong> paraphyses like hyphae. Algae<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten micareoid . GS Micarea<br />

98* Hym. I+ yellow-brown, orange or I-. Ap.<br />

unbordered, black. Sp. with two ± unequal<br />

partitions. Exc. ± lacking. Algae not micareoid<br />

. . Arthonia<br />

99 Sp. very long, thread-like, 140-180 x 6-8 µm,<br />

with 30-40 cross septa. Nearly extinct lichens<br />

with deep “urn-form” sunken, black, whitish<br />

pruinose disks, at first punctiform, then opening<br />

wider, -1 mm. Receptacle carbonaceous. .<br />

Conotrema urceolatum<br />

99* Sp. shorter . 100<br />

100 Fresh thallus gelatinous, membrane-like when<br />

dry, with Gloeocystis algae in colonies and thick<br />

colorless gelatinous envelope, on mosses and<br />

algae. Ap. at first sunken and enclosed (Hym.<br />

overlaying the exc.), then pore-like, later<br />

opening wide, with a deeply concave, yellowish<br />

to rose disk. Sp. 20-30 x 1.5-2 µm, 4-5 celled .<br />

. GS Gyalecta: Bryophagus<br />

100* Thallus not gelatinous, not with Gloeocystis<br />

algae with thick gelatin envelopes. Ap. not<br />

closed at first, dicks not deeply concave 101<br />

101 Hym. I+ yellow, orange to wine-red. Very rare<br />

species 102<br />

101* Hym. commonly I+ blue, rarely I- 103<br />

102 Ap. without margin, blue-gray pruinose, exc.<br />

reduced . Arthonia caesia<br />

54


102* Ap. with margin, nonpruinose, concave to flat.<br />

Exc. developed GS Gyalecta: Gyalidea<br />

103 Hyp. and exc. lacking. Hym. without hymenial<br />

gelatin, I- (asci I+ blue at the tips). Ap.<br />

appearing hairy in the vigorously growing<br />

young. Paraph. sometimes strongly entwining<br />

the asci. Inconspicuous short-lived species .<br />

Vezdaea<br />

103* Hyp. clearly developed. Hym. gelatin<br />

occurring. Ap. not hairy. Paraph. not<br />

entwining the asci. 104<br />

104 Sp. ellipsoidal to elongate ellipsoidal, the young<br />

ones with perispore. Ap. black (brown-black).<br />

Hyp. dark. Exc. clearly developed early. Hym.<br />

I+ blue. On rock (when on old trees, sp. very<br />

large, 50-120 x 20-35 µm, with thin septa, 8-<br />

10(12) celled, hym. I- (excepting the asci), ap.<br />

brown, -2.5 mm, thallus mealy, ± greenish ↑<br />

Megalospora pachycarpa) Rhizocarpon<br />

104* Sp. elongate bacillar, (ellipsoidal-) fusiform,<br />

needle-like, straight or curved, generally<br />

without perispore . 105<br />

105 Exc. (at least when young) strongly developed.<br />

Ap. bordered at least when young. Paraph.<br />

simple to isolated branched or only branched<br />

above 106<br />

105* Exc. reduced to (weakly) developed, or paraph.like<br />

hyphae. Ap. without margin or indefinitely<br />

margined when young. Paraph. richly branched<br />

and bound . 107<br />

106 Thallus and ap. K+ orange. Ap. 1-3 mm, rose,<br />

rose-beige, or orange-rose, sometimes slightly<br />

whitish pruinose, early with a whitish margin,<br />

later convex marginless, sessile or very short<br />

stalked. Thallus blue-green, gray-greenish to<br />

whitish, ± granular. Acidophytic lichens on<br />

decayed wood, peat, raw humus, soil or<br />

acidophilic mosses. Sp. 2-4 celled, 13 - 24 x 4-<br />

6 µm. Hyp. colorless .<br />

Icmadophila ericetorum<br />

106* Thallus K-; ap. not K+ orange. If ap. rose to<br />

orange, then lichens on base-rich bark or on<br />

twigs-stems (huckleberry, or Scotch heather).<br />

Exc. strongly developed, <strong>of</strong> actinomorphic<br />

hyphae or structural cells (paraplectenchymatous).<br />

Ap. almost white, beige, yellowish,<br />

rose, brown, red-brown, or dark brown to black,<br />

commonly margined at first.. GS Bacicia<br />

107 Sp. S-form to spirally curved, if ± straight, then<br />

thallus green, granular and ap. dark red-brown<br />

to black, ± shiny. Exc. definite at least at first.<br />

Algae not micareoid Scoliciosporum<br />

107* Sp. straight to slightly curved. Exc. lacking to ±<br />

developed. Algae micareoid (4-7 µm thick) .<br />

Micarea<br />

108 Sp. to very many (usually over 50) per ascus,<br />

small . 109<br />

108* Sp. 1-16 (rarely -32) per ascus, usually 8 113<br />

109 Ap. or thallus warts with ap. with punctiform<br />

openings, spherical to egg-shaped, perithecia-<br />

like, small, light yellow, or greenish yellow.<br />

Thallus very indefinite . Thelocarpon<br />

109* Ap. with wide open disks, rarely punctiform<br />

openings, then the thallus however definite and<br />

not yellow 110<br />

110 On rock . 111<br />

110* On bark, wood, soil, plant remains, or resin 112<br />

111 Ap. disk usually brown, dark brown, or redbrown,<br />

± sunken to hollowed out, with (<strong>of</strong>ten<br />

indefinite bordered) thalloid margin or sunken<br />

in the thallus. Thallus definite, squamulose to<br />

areolate, usually ± brown. Paraph. predominately<br />

simple. Exc. <strong>of</strong>ten weakly developed<br />

Acarospora<br />

111* Ap. black to dark red-brown, sometimes whitish<br />

pruinose, channeled or smooth, with black<br />

proper margin, without thalloid margin. Thallus<br />

indefinite to definite, not squamulose (if<br />

squamulose, then treat it as a parasitic foreign<br />

thallus). Paraph. simple or richly branched.<br />

Exc. thin to thick, outside dark GS Sarcogyne<br />

112 Ap. with definite thalloid margin, blackish, ±<br />

flat, -1.2 mm. Thallus light gray to gray-brown,<br />

± granular-warty. Hyp. light, epihym. Dark<br />

brown. Sp. 5-6.5 x 2.5-3.5 µm. On bark. . .<br />

Maronea constans<br />

112* Ap. without thalloid margin, with or without<br />

proper margin, whitish, rose-yellow, ochre,<br />

brown, or red-brown to blackish, usually soon<br />

convex. Hyp. light to brownish. GS Biatorella<br />

113 Ap. yellow to orange-red, orange-brown, rust<br />

colored, or red, K+ immediately deep red, from<br />

the first convex marginless and biatorine. Hyp.<br />

light to brown Protoblastenia<br />

113* With other characteristics. If thallus or<br />

apothecia yellow to red, then not K+ deep red .<br />

114<br />

114 Sp. very large, usually over 30 µm long, broadly<br />

ellipsoidal to spherical. Ap. usually large (over<br />

0.5 mm) . 115<br />

114* Sp. up to 30 µm long, if longer, then narrow .<br />

18<br />

115 Ap. black, convex, marginless, lecideine, 1-2<br />

mm. Hym. blue-green to blue-black above.<br />

Medulla sometimes red. Sp. to 1-2(3)<br />

. Mycoblastus<br />

115* Ap. otherwise, with thalloid margin or sunken<br />

in thallus warts. Hyp. not blue-green to blueblack<br />

above, usually very high, paraph. richly<br />

branching and bound 116<br />

116 Ap. with broader, usually rose-brownish,<br />

sometimes whitish pruinose disk and thick<br />

thalloid margin, sessile, usually ± flat. Sp. ±<br />

thick walled . Ochrolechia<br />

116* Ap. otherwise 117<br />

117 Sp. ± thick walled, usually oval is aspect, 1-8<br />

per ascus. Ap. usually with perithecia-like<br />

punctiform opening disk, (<strong>of</strong>ten several) sunken<br />

in a thallus wart, rarely with wide opening disk<br />

and not in thallus warts (then usually blackish),<br />

55


<strong>of</strong>ten with contents and corresponding reactions<br />

.. Pertusaria<br />

117* Sp. ± thick walled (wall 1-2.5 µm), (4-)8, 30-60<br />

x 20-40 µm, almost spherical to broadly<br />

ellipsoidal. Ap. sunken deep in -1.5 mm wide<br />

thallus warts, disk blackish, at first punctiform,<br />

then wider (0.5 mm) opening, thallus margin<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten also somewhat blackish on the inner side.<br />

Thallus on mosses, plant remains, rarely on<br />

bark, uneven, whitish, or gray-white. Ch- .<br />

Megaspora verrucosa<br />

118 Ap. spherical to almost shield shaped, on light<br />

stout stalks, brown or rose, reminiscent <strong>of</strong> small<br />

fungus fruiting bodies. Thallus crustose to<br />

squamulose GS Baeomyces<br />

118* Ap. not stalked . 119<br />

119 Ap. yellow, citron-yellow, rarely olive-yellow,<br />

usually the thallus also yellow. Hyp. colorless,<br />

hym with a yellow granular covering layer. 120<br />

119* Ap. not pure yellow, citron- or olive-yellow 122<br />

120 Sp. 4-7 x 1-2 µm, up to 8. Thallus finely mealydusty,<br />

citron- to green-yellow. Ap. convex,<br />

marginless, biatorine. Paraph. ± simple, thin.<br />

Commonly on vertical and overhanging surfaces<br />

<strong>of</strong> silicate rock Psilolechia lucida<br />

120* Sp. larger . 121<br />

121 Sp. 8 or 12-32, usually cylindrical with rounded<br />

ends or one straight wall, the other convex,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten with 2 oil droplets. Ap. flat to convex,<br />

usually bordered, lecanorine, rarely biatorine,<br />

yellow, olive-yellow, or orange-yellow. Thallus<br />

finely granular to areolate, rarely finely<br />

sorediate, then on bark. Tholus amyloid only in<br />

the lower half, with thick axial mass. With<br />

pulvinic acid derivatives Candelariella<br />

121* Sp. 8, ellipsoidal. Ap. lecanorine, pale yellow,<br />

pale greenish-yellow, or brown-yellow. Thallus<br />

fissured-areolateor sorediate. Entire tholus (with<br />

the exception <strong>of</strong> the thick axial mass) amyloid.<br />

Without Pulvinic acid derivatives, e.g. with<br />

Zeorine, Usnic-, Rhizocarpic-, Rangiformicacids,<br />

or Epinorine, compare with a few species<br />

<strong>of</strong> the genus Lecanora<br />

122 Thallus with Trentepohlia-algae, in the case <strong>of</strong><br />

abrasions or cracks <strong>of</strong>ten ± yellow-orange to<br />

golden brown (in case <strong>of</strong> doubt, check both<br />

alternatives!). Paraph. simple to above all<br />

branched above and reticulate bound, hyp.<br />

(almost) colorless. Ap. biatorine to aspicilioid,<br />

disks concave, light to blackish. Calcareous-<br />

/silicate rock Ionaspis<br />

122* Thallus not with Trentepohlia, commonly with<br />

true green algae . 123<br />

123 Ap. with thalloid margin 124<br />

123* Ap. without thalloid margin, biatorine or<br />

lecideine 127<br />

124 Ap. with conspicuous granular-squamulose<br />

thalloid margin, brown-red, 1-6 mm. Thallus<br />

ochre, green-gray, gold- to olive-brown, green<br />

when fresh, large granular to small squamulose,<br />

in high places on acid soils and plant residue.<br />

Sp. with warty-ribbed upper surface (epispore),<br />

22-34 x 9-12 µm, with a short appendage on<br />

one end (or both ends).<br />

. .Psoroma hypnorum (31)<br />

124* With other characteristics 125<br />

125 Epihym. K+ violet. Hym. over 150 µm high,<br />

with strongly branching and strongly reticulate<br />

bound paraph. Sp. thick walled (the wall over<br />

1.5 µm thick). Ap. disk black to dark brown,<br />

very rarely dark red. Thallus usually whitish to<br />

gray. Very rare species on plant residue, mosses<br />

in alpine regions or on basic silicate rock<br />

Pertusaria<br />

125* Epihym. Not K+ violet. Paraph. commonly not<br />

strongly reticulate, hym. low to over 150 µm<br />

high. Sp. relatively thin walled. 126<br />

126 Ap. disk commonly concave, ap. extensively<br />

sunken into the thallus, rarely compressed<br />

sessile. Hym. above <strong>of</strong>ten verdigris or<br />

brownish(olive). Commonly on rock. Medullar<br />

hyphae <strong>of</strong>ten thin walled GS Aspicilia<br />

126* Ap. disk flat to convex. Ap. sessile, rarely<br />

sunken. Medullar hyphae thick walled<br />

GS Lecanora<br />

127 Hyp. and exc. lacking. Hym. gelatin lacking,<br />

hym. I-, only the asci I+ blue above. Paraph.<br />

branching, very sparsely or the asci enclosed<br />

tightly. Very short-lived species with granular<br />

greenish thallus . Vezdaea<br />

127* Hyp. well developed. Hym. gelatin occurring.<br />

Hym. as a rule I+ blue 128<br />

128 Ap. convex-marginless from the first (rarely<br />

with insignificant receding margin). Exc. in<br />

developing ap. lacking or strongly reduced, <strong>of</strong><br />

few paraphyses-like hyphae, rarely ± well<br />

developed. Paraph. branching, reticulate bound.<br />

Thallus usually thin, K-. Algae small, 4-7 µm,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten paired (micareoid), or large 7-20 µm. Ap.<br />

Variously colored. Often on overhanging rock,<br />

small stones, wood, old bark, or mosses Micarea<br />

128* Not with these characteristics. Exc. generally<br />

clearly developed. Ap. with or without margin,<br />

flat to convex. Algae not micareoid .<br />

GS Lecidea<br />

Key VIII: Sterile Crustose <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

Note: Normally fruiting, only young sterile<br />

species are disregarded<br />

Overview <strong>of</strong> the partial key<br />

1 Thallus with radially elongated marginal areoles<br />

(placoid) to a clearly lobed margin or thallus<br />

squamules . Key VII<br />

1* Thallus true crustose, not placoid, not lobed, and<br />

not squamulose . 2<br />

56


2 Thallus with conspicuous pycnidia and similar<br />

conidia producing structures Key a<br />

2* Thallus not with conspicuous pycnidia .. 3<br />

3 On rock . VIIIb<br />

3* Not on rock . 4<br />

4 On bark, or bark dwelling moss VIIIc<br />

4* On soil VIIId<br />

Key VIIIa: Sterile crustose lichens with<br />

conspicuous pycnidia and similar conidia<br />

producing organs<br />

1 Pycnidia or pycnidia bearers black 2<br />

1* Pycnidia(bearers) not black 9<br />

2 With cylindric, at least in part branching, 50-400<br />

µm thick pycnidia bearing structures. Pycn. Wall<br />

(squash preparation) K-. Pycnosp. 3.5-5 x 1-1.5<br />

µm, <strong>of</strong>ten with 2 oil droplets. Thallus scruffy to<br />

finely granular, pale greenish to dark green. On<br />

mosses, bark, or silicate rock. .<br />

Micarea botryoides<br />

2* Pycnidia(bearers) unbranched. On bark or wood<br />

. 3<br />

3 Pycnidia(bearers) cylindric to conic pointed . 4<br />

3* Pycnidia short, warty projecting to sunken. . 5<br />

4 Pycnidia conic, pointed, up to 150 µm high,<br />

squash preparation K-. Pycnosp. 3.5-4.5 x 1.8-2<br />

µm, united in ± cylindric gelatin packets and<br />

occurring free. Thallus whitish to indefinite, with<br />

Trentepohlia algae. On base-rich bark<br />

Anisomeridium nyssaegenum<br />

4* Pycnidia otherwise, not conic, 70_320 µm high.<br />

Squash preparation K+ violet. With true green,<br />

4-7 µm thick algae. On wood. (See also M.<br />

denigrata) . Micarea misella<br />

5 Pycnidia 0.2-0.6 mm wide, squash preparation<br />

K+ purple. Pycnosp. 3.5-4 x 1.5-2 µm. Thallus<br />

warty areolate yellowish to gray (in the<br />

herbarium <strong>of</strong>ten ochre), with coccoid green algae<br />

(if pycn. 0.1-0.2 mm wide: see C. griffithii<br />

.Cliostomum corrugatum<br />

5* Pycnidia generally smaller. Pycnosp. Longer.<br />

With Trentepohlia . 6<br />

6 Thallus not white, <strong>of</strong>ten brown, or rose-brown<br />

. Opegrapha<br />

6* Thallus white 7<br />

7 Pycnidia delicate white bordered, flat to convex, -<br />

0.3 mm. Pycnosp. 4-6 x 1.2 µm. Thallus P-<br />

. Arthonia byssacea<br />

7* Pycnidia not white bordered 8<br />

8 Thallus KC+ red, P-. Pycnosp. 10-16 x 0.5-0.7<br />

µm. Arthoniaic acid Arthonia pruinata<br />

8* Thallus KC-, P+ orange. Pycnosp. 4.5-6 x 0.7-1.<br />

Psoromic acid Arthonia cinereopruinosa<br />

9 Pycnidia brown, rose-brown, or gray-brown, very<br />

fine dense hairs (strong lens), 0.1-1.0 mm high,<br />

cylindric. Squash preparation K+ violet to<br />

violet-brown . Micarea hedlundii<br />

9* Pycnidia nor so colored, not hairy, hemispherical<br />

to short cylindric 10<br />

10 Thallus with Trentepohlia algae (if scraped <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

± orange to golden yellow), gray-white to gray.<br />

Pycnidia hemispheric to short peg-form 11<br />

10* Thallus with true green algae, when scraped not ±<br />

orange to golden yellow 12<br />

11 Heads <strong>of</strong> the pycnidia C+ red. Pycnosp.<br />

12-17(20) x 2-3.5 µm. Above all on fir, spruce<br />

as well as (above all in the north central Europe)<br />

on oak, rare on silicate rock<br />

Lecanactis abietina<br />

11* Heads <strong>of</strong> the pycnidia C-. Pycnosp. 4-7 x 1-1.5<br />

µm. Above all on ash, oak or hornbeam in mild<br />

sites. Opegrapha vermicellifera<br />

12 On thin conifer branches and needles and on thin<br />

stems <strong>of</strong> Scotch heather bushes. Thallus<br />

greenish to gray, with ± protruding whitish, 0.08-<br />

0.20 mm wide pycnidia. Pycnosp. (3.2)3.7-4.6 x<br />

1.4-1.7 µm Fellhanera subtilis<br />

12* On other habitats 13<br />

13 On calcareous rock See Bacidia arnoldiana-<br />

Group (17*)<br />

13* On bark, wood or silicate rock . 14<br />

14 On silicate rock, thallus gray, white-gray, or gray<br />

rose . Key VIIIb/15<br />

14* On bark or wood 15<br />

15 Pycnosp. 6.5-9.5 x 2.3-3 µm. Thallus smooth to<br />

scruffy granular, with up to 0.3 mm wide whitish,<br />

cream- to ochre-colored pycnidia, R- .<br />

Micarea adnata<br />

15* Pycnosp. Over 20 µm long . 16<br />

16 Thallus with clearly projecting, 0.1-0.2 mm wide,<br />

-0.2(0.3) mm high brownish, with age <strong>of</strong>ten wide<br />

open pycnidia, R-. Pycnosp. 1- up to 4 celled,<br />

20-43 x (0.5)0.8-1(1.2) µm, more narrow at one<br />

end (when pycnosp. 6-8 x 1.8-2.6 µm, elongate,<br />

constricted in the middle, with 2 droplets, thallus<br />

flowing-smooth, see Dimerella pineti) .<br />

Fellhanera vezdae<br />

16* With ± sunken, whitish to greenish (rarely red<br />

tinted whitish) pycnidia . 17<br />

17 Thallus gray-green to gray, scruffy to cracked<br />

areolate, in case <strong>of</strong> good development, C+ red.<br />

Pycn. with wide open, sunken mouth (almost<br />

bowl-shaped), whitish to pale greenish. Pycnosp.<br />

Multicellular (septation <strong>of</strong>ten indefinite), wavy or<br />

strongly curved to S-form Micarea/II<br />

17* Thallus green, green-gray, even brownish (above<br />

all in the herbarium), finely granular (granules<br />

usually about 20-50 µm), R-. Pycn.<br />

hemispherical, however with age even bowlshaped,<br />

0.1-0.2 mm wide, white, rose-white,<br />

rarely even brownish. Pycnosp. Filamentous,<br />

curved, 20-50 x 1-1.5 µm .<br />

Bacidina arnoldiana (-Group)<br />

Key VIIIb: Sterile Crustose <strong>Lichens</strong> on<br />

Rock<br />

57


1 Thallus citron yellow, yellow, or orange . 2<br />

1* Thallus not definitely yellow or orange . 8<br />

2 Thallus K+ promptly deep red . Caloplaca<br />

2* Thallus K- (or very weakly reddish) 3<br />

3 Thallus completely mealy disintegrating<br />

(“leprose”). GS Lepraria<br />

(When over mosses and lichens see also<br />

Arthrorhaphis<br />

3* Thallus only partially sorediate or entirely<br />

without soralia 4<br />

4 Thallus C+ yellow to orange, KC+ orange, UV+<br />

orange, with soralia . 5<br />

4* Thallus C-, with or without soralia . 6<br />

5 Thallus usually thin, fissured to granular, gray,<br />

greenish-gray to light yellowish, with small,<br />

usually somewhat lighter, <strong>of</strong>ten coalescing<br />

soralia. P+ yellow, K+ yellow. Soredia 20-40<br />

µm. Atranorin, Arthothelin, and Thuringion .<br />

Lecidella scabra<br />

5* Thallus strongly developed, fissured to warty,<br />

light yellow to gray- or greenish-yellow, with<br />

irregular, sometimes coalescing, lighter soralia.<br />

P+ orange-red, K+ (weakly) yellowish. Soredia<br />

over 35-90 µm. Thiophanic acid, and Stictic acid<br />

. Pertusaria flavicans<br />

6 Without soralia. Thallus yellow, deeply fissured,<br />

thick, consisting <strong>of</strong> closely compressed cylindric<br />

to coraloid structures, therefore with a very<br />

uneven upper surface. On bird rocks<br />

Candelariella coralliza<br />

6* With soralia . 7<br />

7 Medulla I+ blue. Thallus yellow, <strong>of</strong> highly<br />

convex areoles, which are erupting sorediate.<br />

Rhizocarpon ridescens<br />

7* Medulla I- GS Lecanora<br />

8 thallus with isidia or entirely consisting <strong>of</strong> very<br />

fine isidia-like elongate granules 9<br />

8* Thallus with soralia or entirely sorediate<br />

disintegrating . 16<br />

9 Thallus on calcareous rock, with blue-green<br />

algae, gray-brown to black-brown, areolate to<br />

appearing squamulose, thickly covered with<br />

isidia-like, ± cylindric to coraloid structures,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten with a blue-green prothallus at the margin<br />

Placynthium nigrum<br />

9* Not on calcareous rock, with true green algae .10<br />

10 Thallus K+ (yellow, then) blue-red 11<br />

10* Thallus K- or K+ yellow 12<br />

11 Thallus gray to dark green-gray. Isidia in<br />

irregular thick groups, partially erupting sorediate<br />

Aspicilia simoensis<br />

11* Thallus gray-white. Isidia mostly single, -0.2<br />

mm thick, usually somewhat thickened or<br />

browned above, not sorediate .<br />

Pertusaria pseudocorallina<br />

12 Thallus gray-brown to brown or dark brown,<br />

medulla C+ red (at least in squash preparations)<br />

13<br />

12* Thallus whitish to gray or gray-rose, possibly<br />

isidiate with brown points, C- . 14<br />

13 Thallus covered with very fine coraloid to isidiate<br />

granules, black-brown to brown, in the shade<br />

light greenish-brown, C+ red (usually only seen<br />

on abraded thalli or microscopically in squash<br />

preparations), granules 25-150 x 25-50 µm. On<br />

acid substrates Saccomorpha icmalea<br />

13* Thallus areolate to fissured areolate, gray-brown<br />

to brown, areoles with single isidia-like,<br />

occasionally erupting sorediate papillae or thallus<br />

<strong>of</strong> areoles with granular, almost isidiate upper<br />

surface. Above all on steep- and vertical surfaces<br />

Rimularia<br />

14 Thallus whitish, K+ yellow, thickly covered with<br />

cylindric, simple to branching isidia .<br />

Pertusaria corallina<br />

14* Thallus K- . 15<br />

15 Thallus gray, or gray-rose, with scattered, 0.3-0.5<br />

mm thick light gray to light rose colored,<br />

unbranched papillae, which bear pycnidia at the<br />

tips. Pycnosp. 4.5-5 x 1-1.5 µm. Medulla I-<br />

(Gyrophoric acid) Koerberiella wimmeriana<br />

15* Thallus with white-gray to gray, with moderately<br />

to very thick standing, -0.5 mm thick<br />

unbranched, rarely branched isidia or similar<br />

color, with or without pycn. Pycnosp. 7-10(12) x<br />

0.7-1.2 µm. Medulla I+ rose(brown). Fatty acids<br />

Pertusaria isidioides<br />

16 With Trentepohlia algae. In the case <strong>of</strong> cracks or<br />

abrasions the thallus <strong>of</strong>ten leaves gold-yellow to<br />

orange colored traces . 17<br />

16* Not with Trentepohlia, with true green algae. . 22<br />

17 On limestone or calcareous rocks . 18<br />

17* On silicate rock. Thallus gray-brown, brown,<br />

brown-red, brick-red or gray, violet-gray . 19<br />

18 Thallus whitish to weakly brown tinted, coherent<br />

to fissured, irregularly erupting sorediate, C+ red,<br />

K-, P-. With Erythrin, ± Lecanoric acid.<br />

Dirina stenhammari<br />

18* Fresh thallus rose, in the herbarium gray to<br />

yellowish, thin, C-: scarcely definable as crustose<br />

lichens<br />

19 Thallus usually thick cushion-like (up to 5 mm<br />

thick), mushroom-smooth, gray, violet-gray,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten slightly rose tinted, <strong>of</strong>ten with wrinkled<br />

upper surface. Lepraric acid, Roccellic acid<br />

. Lecanactis latebrarum<br />

19* Not thick cushion-like and mushroom-like. With<br />

other lichen substances 20<br />

20 Thallus brown, or dark brown, with bordered<br />

rounded, -0.5 mm gray-whitish fleck soralia,<br />

commonly with a black prothallus line. R-, UV-.<br />

With Confluentic acid Enterographa zonata<br />

20* Thallus without small rounded soralia.<br />

Medulla/soralia UV+ blue-white to light yellow.<br />

Without Confluentic acid . . 21<br />

21 Fresh thallus red-brown to almost brick-red, in<br />

the herbarium usually yellow-brown to brown,<br />

upper surface scruffy to mealy, sorediate in<br />

58


places, very thin, KC+/C+ (transient) red-orange<br />

or rarely KC-/C-; sorediate places orange to<br />

reddish, in the herbarium gray-white to<br />

yellowish, UV+ light yellow to white.<br />

Gyrophoric acid or Schizopeltic acid or both<br />

Opegrapha gyrocarpa<br />

21* Thallus cocoa-brown, brown, dark brown, with<br />

smooth, almost velvety upper surface, in the<br />

interior sorediate, ochre-yellowish, rarely<br />

brownish, in the herbarium usually yellowbrown,<br />

or yellowish, usually thick, KC-/C-,<br />

sorediate places/medulla UV+ blue-white.<br />

Schizopeltic acid Lecanactis umbrina<br />

22 Thallus upper surface entirely leprose, i.e. mealy<br />

or covered with fine granules, whitish, light gray,<br />

pale greenish, slightly yellow tinted, or bluishwhite<br />

. GS Lepraria<br />

22* Thallus upper surface not entirely leprose. .. . 23<br />

23 Thallus K+ red 24<br />

23* Thallus K+ yellow to K- 25<br />

24 Thallus whitish to light gray, with irregular<br />

whitish soralia, thin Phlyctis argena<br />

24* Thallus gray, olive-gray, or olive, fissured to<br />

areolate, with bordered soralia .<br />

↑ Aspicilia and Pertusaria excludens<br />

25 Soralia convex, very large, white, KC+ violet.<br />

Thallus gray Pertusaria amara<br />

25* Soralia KC- or KC+ yellow, orange to red . 26<br />

26 Thallus or soralia C+ red or C+ (at least KC+)<br />

(yellow)orange . . 27<br />

26* Thallus or soralia C- to C+ yellowish 36<br />

27 Thallus C+ yellow-orange to orange 28<br />

27* Thallus or soralia C+ red . . 30<br />

28 Thallus P+ orange-red, K+ (weak) yellowish,<br />

strongly developed, usually extensive, fissured to<br />

warty, gray- or greenish-yellow, or greenish gray,<br />

with irregular, partially coalescing, lighter<br />

soralia. Soredia over 35-90 µm. Thiophanic<br />

acid, Stictic acid Pertusaria flavicans<br />

28* Thallus P+ yellow(ish), K+ yellow 29<br />

29 Thallus whitish to gray-white, usually rosetted to<br />

rounded, areolate, C+ yellow-orange, UV+<br />

yellow. Areoles convex, sometimes with<br />

enlarged marginal areoles, <strong>of</strong>ten on a whitish<br />

prothallus. Soralia rounded, whitish(gray).<br />

Sordidon, Rocellic acid, Atranorin<br />

. Lecanora lojkaeana<br />

29* Thallus gray, greenish-gray, thin, without<br />

enlarged marginal areoles, C+ orange, UV+<br />

orange. Soralia pale yellowish to almost whitish.<br />

Atranorin, Arthothelin, Thuringion .<br />

Lecidella scabra<br />

30 Thallus gray-rose to light (gray)brown, <strong>of</strong> convex<br />

areoles, with dark red-brown, warty cephalodia<br />

between them. Soralia whitish to brownish. In<br />

montaine to alpine places .<br />

Amygdalaria panaeola<br />

30* Thallus without cephalodia . 31<br />

31 Soralia P+ yellow, C+ (fleeting) red, K+ yellow.<br />

Thallus gray-brownish to brown, <strong>of</strong> rounded,<br />

scattered to coalescing areoles, on a black<br />

prothallus. Alectorialic acid .<br />

Fuscidea praeruptorum<br />

31* Soralia P- to P+ indefinite yellowish. Gyrophoric<br />

or lecanoric acid 32<br />

32 Thallus with whitish, defined soralia on<br />

isidia-like, peg-form to hemispherical<br />

outgrowths, soralia likewise standing on<br />

outgrowths, -0.5 mm. Thallus areolate, areoles<br />

convex, rarely flat, coalescing or ± separated,<br />

upon a black prothallus, (cocoa)brown, rosebrown,<br />

gray-brown, or yellow-brown, C+ red<br />

(Gyrophoric-acid). Isidia-like outgrowths 0.15-<br />

0.25 mm wide, -0.5 mm high<br />

Rimularia gibbosa<br />

32* Thallus without isidia-like outgrowths . 33<br />

33 Thallus warty-areolate, areoles on a black<br />

prothallus, with green-whitish (to<br />

yellow-whitish), -0.5 mm wide fleck soralia, gray<br />

to greenish-gray, K+ yellow, soralia C+ red.<br />

Atranorin, Gyrophoric acid. Rinodina aspersa<br />

33* Thallus without black prothallus 34<br />

34 Thallus greenish-gray to gray, warty to coarse<br />

granular, with at first delimited, later coalescing,<br />

dirty gray-green to dusty blue-green soralia.<br />

Gyrophoric acid GS Trapelia<br />

34* Soralia whitish to pale green-whitish or beige. 35<br />

35 Thallus thin to moderately thick, whitish to beige,<br />

even sometimes with slightly rose tinted, usually<br />

relatively small, fissured to fissured areolate, is<br />

places erupting sorediate, K-, P-. Above all on<br />

rock, or shaded rocks. Gyrophoric acid<br />

GS Trapelia<br />

35* Thallus usually moderately to very thick, whitish<br />

to light gray, unevenly fissured to fissured<br />

(fissured areolate), extensive. Prothallus<br />

sometimes occurring, whitish. Soralia flat or<br />

convex. Lecanoric or Gyrophoric acid .<br />

GS Pertusaria<br />

36 Thallus at least in places rust colored ochre to<br />

red-brown or almost red. GS Lecidea<br />

36* Thallus not rust colored 37<br />

37 Soralia blackish to dark gray 38<br />

37* Soralia lighter . 39<br />

38 In the mountains on light and wind exposed<br />

places. Thallus fissured areolate to (warty)<br />

areolate, soralia blackish. Medulla I-, P-/P+<br />

yellow. Miriquidic acid, ± Psoromic acid .<br />

Miriquidica nigroleprosa<br />

38* On more sheltered, <strong>of</strong>ten shaded places also on<br />

lower sites. Thallus fissured, soralia gray.<br />

Medulla K+ blue. Medulla/soralia P-.<br />

Confluentic acid. (If Stictic acid, P+ yellow,<br />

medulla I-: P. soredizodes) . .<br />

Porpidia tuberculosa<br />

39 Thallus or soralia P+ red to orange. Thallus<br />

coherent, white to light gray. . . 40<br />

39* Thallus and soralia P- to P+ yellowish 41<br />

40 Soralia small, -0.5 mm rounded. Thallus <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

very small, very thin. Stictic acid<br />

59


see Porpidia soredizodes<br />

40* Soralia mostly larger, rounded to irregular, even<br />

coalescing. Thallus commonly extensive<br />

Pertusaria<br />

41 Thallus K+ yellow with Atranorin<br />

GS Lecanora/PT2<br />

41* Thallus K- (possibly soralia K+ yellow) 42<br />

42 Medulla I+ blue GS Lecidea/PT5<br />

42* Medulla I- 43<br />

43 Thallus pale greenish, gray-greenish, slightly<br />

yellowish-green even almost gray, KC+<br />

yellow/KC-, <strong>of</strong> flat to convex areoles or fissured<br />

areolate, with defined soralia or in the center<br />

soon disintegrating into flat soredia. Usnic acid,<br />

Zeorine . Lecanora<br />

43* Thallus white to gray, KC- 44<br />

44 Thallus extensive, coherent, ± fissured, with large<br />

round soralia, <strong>of</strong>ten with clearly defined zones,<br />

gray to greenish prothallus .<br />

Pertusaria albescens<br />

44* Thallus without definite prothallus or with black<br />

prothallus GS Lecidea/PT 5<br />

Key VIIIc: Sterile Crustose <strong>Lichens</strong> on<br />

Bark<br />

1 Thallus sorediate . 2<br />

1* Thallus not sorediate 63<br />

2 Thallus C+/KC+ (yellow)orange or red . 3<br />

2* Thallus C- to C+ yellow, not KC+ orange or red<br />

(but in the case <strong>of</strong> Pertusaria amara KC+ violet,<br />

in Lepraria eburnea very fleeting reddish) 17<br />

3 Thallus usually yellowish, green-yellowish, grayyellowish,<br />

yellowish-green, or ochre, C+ yelloworange<br />

to orange .4<br />

3* Thallus C+ rose to red (orange-red) . 7<br />

4 Thallus finely isidiate, the isidia sometimes<br />

becoming partially sorediate .<br />

Pertusaria flavida<br />

4* Thallus not isidiate . 5<br />

5 Thallus with defined soralia, gray-white to pale<br />

yellowish, gray-yellowish to slightly greenish.<br />

Soralia pale yellowish. Arthothelin, Granulosin<br />

Thiophanic acid, Capistraton GS Lecidella<br />

5* Upper surface <strong>of</strong> the thallus generally soon<br />

entirely sorediate . 6<br />

6 Thallus/soredia ochre, pale yellow to pale<br />

yellow-greenish, even pale brownish-green,<br />

sometimes with blackish prothallus, K-, C+<br />

orange, UV+ (brown)orange, without<br />

crystallizing needles. Soredia -50 µm.<br />

Isoarthothelin, Thiophanic acid .<br />

Pyrrhospora quernea<br />

6* Thallus/soredia pale yellow-greenish, pale<br />

greenish, rarely partially also pale ochre-yellow,<br />

sometimes with whitish, rarely bluish prothallus,<br />

K+ yellowish, C+ yellow-orange, UV-/UV±<br />

violet, in the herbarium <strong>of</strong>ten covered with the<br />

finest crystallizing needles. Soredia -50 µm.<br />

Usnic acid, Thiophanic acid, Zeorine, ±<br />

Arthothelin. . Lecanora expallens<br />

7 Thallus partially orange, there K+ red, otherwise<br />

pale greenish, light gray, greenish-gray, K-,<br />

extensive, coarsely granular, with greenish-white,<br />

even partially orange colored, at first convex,<br />

then fleck like to coalescing soralia, P-. Soredia<br />

fine, -25 µm. Gyrophoric acid, anthra-quinone<br />

Trapeliopsis pseudogranulosa<br />

7* Thallus not flecked orange. K-/K+ slightly<br />

yellowish 8<br />

8 Thallus permanently finely isidiate in the center,<br />

light gray, light greenish-gray to whitish. Isidia<br />

delicate, soon disintegrating into whitish to<br />

greenish-gray soredia, spherical to mostly<br />

cylindric (to coraloid ), -1(0.2)mm thick.<br />

Without well defined soralia, <strong>of</strong>ten with whitish<br />

prothallus. UV+ blue-white. Gyrophoric acid .<br />

Ochrolechia subviridis<br />

8* Thallus without isidia, clearly sorediate . 9<br />

9 Thallus P+ yellow(orange), C+ (<strong>of</strong>ten fleeting)<br />

red, with alectorialic acid . 10<br />

9* Thallus P-, without Alectorialic acid, with<br />

Gyrophoric or Lecanoric acid . 12<br />

10 Thallus <strong>of</strong> mostly scattered, ascending, convex,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten indefinite squamules with lip soralia,<br />

whitish Hypocenomyce leucococca<br />

10* Thallus not <strong>of</strong> ascending squamules 11<br />

11 Thallus areolate to indefinite (in the substrate),<br />

yellowish-gray to slightly ochre or light gray,<br />

with diffuse yellowish, pale yellowish-green,<br />

yellowish-brown (in the herbarium <strong>of</strong>ten rose<br />

colored) soralia, K+ yellow. Soredia 20-50 µm<br />

Hypocenomyce sorophora<br />

11* Thallus granular, thin to thick, irregularly finely<br />

mealy sorediate disintegrating, dark graygreenish<br />

to dark brown-gray, thin to thick, K-.<br />

Soredia 12-22 µm thick Buellia pulverea<br />

12 Thallus with lichexanthon, gyrophoric acid, thin,<br />

smooth, whitish. Soralia UV+ orange, flat to<br />

slightly concave, rounded, whitish, cream colored<br />

to slightly greenish, 0.3-0.7 mm wide, soredia -70<br />

µm . Ochrolechia arborea<br />

12* Thallus without Lichexanthon, UV-/± white.<br />

Soralia ± flat to convex 13<br />

13 With Lecanoric acid., C+ (carmine)red reaction<br />

above all in the medulla/in the soralia. Thallus<br />

with whitish, shiny, <strong>of</strong>ten zoned prothallus,<br />

smooth to unevenly warty, toward the margin<br />

mostly with fissures, fissured to the thallus<br />

center, silver-gray, gray-white, or gray. Soralia<br />

whitish, convex (to hemispherical), -1.3(1.8) mm<br />

wide, also coalescing. Very <strong>of</strong>ten in association<br />

with Pertusaria coccoides or flavida .<br />

Pertusaria hemisphaerica<br />

13* With Gyrophoric acid, C+ (rose- to orange)red<br />

reaction in the soralia/ in or upon the bark.<br />

Thallus without, rarely with whitish prothallus.<br />

Soralia flat to convex . 14<br />

60


14 Soralia dusty gray-green to dark green or bluishgreen,<br />

at first separate, -0.4 mm, later sometimes<br />

coalescing, mealy to finely granular. Thallus<br />

greenish-gray to gray-green, rarely whitish to<br />

light gray, coherent granular (0.08-0.25 mm), at<br />

the margin the granules <strong>of</strong>ten enlarged and<br />

flattened, -0.4 mm. Usually on wood, rarely on<br />

bark. * Trapeliopsis flexuosa<br />

14* Soralia lighter, whitish, greenish-white, light<br />

gray, somewhat yellowish, yellowish-green, or<br />

light green . 15<br />

15 Thallus uneven-warty to knobby, very thick, also<br />

± wrinkled and thin, with or without a whitish<br />

prothallus, with flat to convex soralia. Soralia<br />

slightly yellowish, beige, greenish-white, or graygreenish,<br />

-2 mm, sometimes coalescing. Soredia<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten very large, reaching over 80 µm. *, ± fatty<br />

acids . Ochrolechia androgyna<br />

15* Thallus granular to areolate, rarely<br />

undifferentiated thin crust, without prothallus.<br />

Areoles up to about 0.4(0.5) mm, almost<br />

spherical to almost flat. Soralia smaller, but also<br />

coalescing, soredia up to 80 µm 16<br />

16 Thallus not commonly on mosses, but on bark<br />

and wood, whitish, beige, slightly rust tinted,<br />

gray, greenish-gray, or greenish. Soralia whitish,<br />

beige, cream color, greenish, or pale brownish.<br />

* GS Trapelia<br />

16* Thallus commonly on mossy bark, not on wood,<br />

pale greenish-gray, thin, soon coherent thickly<br />

sorediate in the center. Soralia yellowish,<br />

yellowish-green, or yellowish-gray. Soredia up<br />

to 40 µm. * .Biatora chrysantha<br />

17 Thallus or soralia intensive citron-yellow, yellow,<br />

or orange-yellow 18<br />

17* Thallus/soralia not intensive citron-yellow to<br />

orange-yellow . 21<br />

18 Thallus and/or soralia K+ deep red Caloplaca<br />

18* Thallus and/or soralia not K+ deep red 19<br />

19 Thallus <strong>of</strong> -1 mm large, crenate, yellow-green,<br />

greenish-gray, or yellow-gray to yellowish<br />

squamules, which erupt sorediate, or <strong>of</strong> separate,<br />

± convex “soredia heaps.” Soredia citron-yellow<br />

to yellow. With pulvinic acid, calycin. As a rule<br />

on free standing trees with nitrate-rich bark .<br />

Candelariella<br />

19* Thallus not <strong>of</strong> sorediate erupting squamules or<br />

separated soredia heaps 20<br />

20 Thallus <strong>of</strong> <strong>of</strong>ten very equally branching,<br />

separated to clasping one another, 0.7-0.15 mm<br />

thick, light yellow to slightly orange-yellow<br />

granules with a cortex, not sorediate. As a rule<br />

on free-standing trees with ± nitrogen-rich bark.<br />

Pulvinic acid, calycin, ± pulvinic acid-dilactone.<br />

. Candelariella xanthostigma<br />

20* Thallus coherent, ± regularly mealy-leprose.<br />

Rhizocarpic acid or calycin (Chrysothrix cand.,<br />

Psilolechia lucida, Chaenotheca fufr.). Often in<br />

bark crevasses or rain-sheltered surfaces<br />

GS Lepraria<br />

21 Thallus with completely sorediate upper surface .<br />

22<br />

21* Thallus upper surface with delimited, regular or<br />

irregular sorediate regions, not entirely sorediate<br />

24<br />

22 Thallus with whitish, fibrous prothallus, pale<br />

greenish, yellowish-green or cream colored to<br />

(gray)whitish. At times with red pycn. K+<br />

(weak) yellow, P- to P+ yellowish, C-.<br />

Atranorin, Zeorin, Porphyrilic acid, ± Usnic acid.<br />

. Haematomma ochroleucum<br />

22* Thallus without fibrous prothallus . 23<br />

23 Very rare lichens <strong>of</strong> very oceanic regions on old<br />

trees in natural forests. Thallus yellow-greenish<br />

to pale greenish, thickly powdery, C-, KC+<br />

yellow, K+ yellow, P- to P+ weakly yellow,<br />

soredia in places erupting from still visible bluegray<br />

to yellow-gray granules. Usnic acid,<br />

Zeorine Megalospora pachycarpa<br />

23* Widespread lichens with permanently uniformly<br />

sorediate (powdery to mealy) thallus; if yellowgreenish<br />

to pale greenish, then not with these<br />

reactions. Usnic acid lacking GS Lepraria<br />

24 Thallus with Trentepohlia algae, in the case <strong>of</strong><br />

abrasion the thallus <strong>of</strong>ten with orange-yellow to<br />

golden-yellow/gold-brown trace, R- 25<br />

24* Thallus with true green algae, scratch marks ±<br />

(<strong>of</strong>ten indefinitely) greenish 26<br />

25 Thallus dirty lilac- to rose-gray, light brownishgray,<br />

± fissured, with irregularly delimited<br />

soralia. UV-. Fatty acids. On fissured bark <strong>of</strong><br />

old trees on scarcely rain exposed flanks. .<br />

Schismatomma decolorans<br />

25* Thallus dark brown, or brown, with small<br />

rounded soralia and black prothallus.<br />

Confluentic acid. On smooth bark trees on very<br />

shady sites. Enterographa zonata<br />

26 Thallus K+ red-violet or K+ yellow, then red (in<br />

very shady growing conditions reactions delayed)<br />

. 27<br />

26* Thallus K- or K+ yellow to orange or brownish 31<br />

27 Thallus gray, in places ochre to rust-colored and<br />

only here reacting K+ red-violet, coarse granular<br />

to warty, partially sorediate, above all on<br />

conifers, word, or oaks<br />

Chaenotheca ferruginea<br />

27* Thallus not partially ochre to rust-colored. K+<br />

red or violet reactions occurring overall . 28<br />

28 Thallus whitish, (light)gray, light gray-greenish,<br />

K+ yellow, then red (delayed reaction if grown in<br />

very shady sites), P+ yellow, then yellow-orange<br />

or orange (red). Norstictic acid 29<br />

28* Thallus gray, lead-gray, blue-gray, blue-black,<br />

above all marginally with K+ (brown-)violet<br />

pigment, P-. On nitrogen-rich or base-rich bark<br />

30<br />

29 Thallus finely isidiate, in observing <strong>of</strong> the upper<br />

surface and the apparent stunted development <strong>of</strong><br />

the granular-sorediate isidia, but even (after the<br />

61


falling <strong>of</strong>f <strong>of</strong> the isidia) some parts are eroded<br />

“sorediate” . Pertusaria coccodes<br />

29* Thallus without isidia, whit-gray to gray,<br />

coherent, unorganized to fissured, in places<br />

irregularly whitish erupting sorediate and <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

large areas sorediate, at the margin <strong>of</strong>ten whitish<br />

. Phlyctis argena<br />

30 Thallus areolate to fissured areolate, areoles at<br />

the thallus margin <strong>of</strong>ten yet separated and<br />

rounded to irregular, ± crenate, <strong>of</strong>ten somewhat<br />

lighter and here having warty to granular-isidiate<br />

or sorediate or blastidiate, even with an entirely<br />

granular-sorediate upper surface, sometimes up to<br />

1.2 mm. Soredia/granules/blastidia <strong>of</strong>ten large<br />

and up to over 100 µm Caloplaca chlorina<br />

30* Thallus fissured-areolate to fissured-clumped,<br />

with granular-warty to scurfy upper surface,<br />

blastidiate, not <strong>of</strong> marginal sorediate to isidiate<br />

areoles. Areoles even at the thallus margin not<br />

individualized, not crenate, not rounded, -0.3<br />

mm. Soredia -60 µm Rinodina colobina<br />

31 Thallus gray, with ochre-yellow to almost rust<br />

colored regions, these K+ violet .<br />

Chaenotheca ferruginea<br />

31* Thallus not with ochre- to rust colored, K+ violet<br />

regions . 32<br />

32 Thallus KC- violet, gray, with usually convex to<br />

hemispherical, rarely almost flat white, 1-2(4)<br />

mm wide soralia. Prothallus very rarely zoned.<br />

Picrolicheninic acid, ± Protocetraric acid, ±<br />

Atranorin Pertusaria amara<br />

32* Thallus not KC+ violet 33<br />

33 Thallus and/or soralia K+ yellow to orange (redbrown)<br />

or P+ definite yellow to red . 34<br />

33* Thallus/soralia K-, P- (or P+ slightly yellowish)<br />

49<br />

34 Commonly living on wood. Thallus indefinite<br />

(usually in the substrate), only soralia<br />

conspicuous, C- 35<br />

34* Commonly living on bark . 37<br />

35 Soralia whitish, yellow-whitish, gray-whitish, K±<br />

dirty brownish-red to K-, P+ (yellow to) red,<br />

usually flat, -1 mm. Fumarprotocetraric acid,<br />

(Protocetraric acid), rarely traces <strong>of</strong> Gyrophoric<br />

acid Pertusaria pupillaris<br />

35* Soralia <strong>of</strong>ten darker. Without Fumarprotocetraric<br />

acid 36<br />

36 Soralia brown, dark gray, gray-bluish, whitish<br />

when shaded, K+ yellow, P+ orange, rounded to<br />

elliptical -1 mm. Thallus in the stratum. Stictic<br />

acid, ± Norstictic acid . Xylographa vitiligo<br />

36* Soralia green-gray, gray, blue-gray, gray-white,<br />

green-yellowish, or greenish-white, K+ orange to<br />

red-brown, P+ yellow to yellow-orange, -0.4(0.8)<br />

mm, occasionally coalescing. Thallus <strong>of</strong>ten also<br />

developed on the substrate. Atranorin, norstictic<br />

acid Buellia griseovirens<br />

37 Thallus and/or soralia P- to P+ yellow . 38<br />

37* Thallus and/or soralia P+ yellow-orange, orangered<br />

to rust-red . 41<br />

38 Soralia P+ yellow, K+ orange to red-brown (but<br />

at times rather indefinite), -0.4(0.8) mm, usually<br />

flat or somewhat concave, <strong>of</strong>ten somewhat<br />

projecting, not infrequently bordered by one ±<br />

frayed “thallus collar”, greenish-white, greenyellowish,<br />

gray, green-gray, or gray-blue.<br />

Thallus thin, light gray. Atranorin, Norstictic<br />

acid . Buellia griseovirens<br />

38* Soralia P- (to yellowish), K- to K+ yellow or<br />

brown, without ± frayed “thallus collar”. Thallus<br />

P-, K+ yellow . 39<br />

39 Soralia yellow to yellow-green, with usnic acid, -<br />

2.5 mm (also enlarged by soralia coalescing),<br />

concave to commonly clearly convex. Thallus <strong>of</strong><br />

separate to coherent low warts, gray, greenishgray,<br />

color clearly taken from the soralia.<br />

Atranorin, Planaic acid. Very rare on acid bark<br />

in the mountain regions Mycoblastus alpinus<br />

39* soralia without definite yellow tint, without Usnic<br />

acid, smaller 40<br />

40 Soralia dusty blue-gray, K+ yellowish to brown,<br />

-0.3 mm, ± convex, standing upon pale greenish,<br />

gray to gray-brown, rounded, flat to somewhat<br />

convex, -0.2 mm areoles, sometimes the areoles<br />

completely covered over. Soredia -30 µm.<br />

Atranorin, Zeorin. On nitrogen-rich bark and<br />

mosses. . Rinodina griseosoralifera<br />

40* Fresh soralia light greenish-gray to cream<br />

colored, whitish in the herbarium, K+ yellow, -<br />

0.8 mm, ± round, concave to flat, rarely convex,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten coalescing in the center <strong>of</strong> the thallus.<br />

Thallus white to white-gray, coherent, smooth to<br />

warty. Soredia -40 µm. Atranorin and others<br />

↑ Lecanora impudens<br />

(If thallus conspicuously thick, completely<br />

granular sorediate, ap. brown-rose, pruinose,<br />

above all on Pinus mugo on the moors:<br />

L. mughosphagneti Poelt & Veza)<br />

41 Fruiting bodies are contained in the “soralia”, K+<br />

yellow, P+ yellow, then red or K+ yellow, then<br />

reddish, P+ orange-red. ↑ Pertusaria<br />

trachythallina and P. multipuncta<br />

41* Soralia without fruiting bodies 42<br />

42 Thallus and/or soralia P+ orange, with Thamnolic<br />

acid or Norstictic acid . . 43<br />

42* Thallus and/or soralia P+ yellow, then red or<br />

immediately red or rust-red. With Fumarprotocetraric<br />

acid or Argopsin or Pannarin, without<br />

Norstictic acid, without Thamnolic acid . 44<br />

43 Thallus appearing partly large granular, partly<br />

finely sorediate (Thallus interior as a rule entirely<br />

disintegrating into soredia), at least in the<br />

marginal parts warty-lumpy(-knobby), light gray,<br />

usually extended. Soralia usually irregularly<br />

delimited to coalescing, diffuse, cream colored to<br />

light gray-greenish, rarely also separated and<br />

convex. Soredia 30-80 µm. Thallus/soralia K+<br />

intensively yellow to orange, C+ yellow, P+<br />

orange. Thamnolic acid, ± elatinic acid,<br />

62


±(Squamatic acid). Above all on Confers in the<br />

mountains. Loxospora elatina<br />

43* Thallus thin, light gray, also in the substrate,<br />

usually only the soralia conspicuous. Soralia<br />

round to elliptical, usually flat or somewhat<br />

concave, <strong>of</strong>ten somewhat protruding and sharply<br />

(almost crater- or collar-like) bordered, -0.4 (06)<br />

mm, greenish-white, green-yellowish, gray,<br />

green-gray, or green-blue. Soredia -40 µm.<br />

Soralia K+ orange to red-brown (but at times<br />

rather indefinite), C- or C+ yellowish, P+<br />

yellow-orange. Atranorin, Norstictic acid.<br />

Widespread. . Buellia griseovirens<br />

44 With Argospin or Pannarin. Thallus and soralia<br />

K-, C-. Soralia pale greenish to yellow-greenish,<br />

rarely yellowish 45<br />

44* With Fumarprotocetraric acid. Thallus (so far as<br />

developed) and soralia P+ yellow, then (orange)<br />

red, K- to K+ yellow or dirty brownish-red. 46<br />

45 With Argospin. Thallus usually thin, indefinite<br />

to thin areolate, with rounded, -0.5 mm in size,<br />

but also coalescing, pale greenish to yellowgreenish,<br />

usually flat soralia. Soralia P+ rust-red,<br />

UV-. In mountain forests above all at the base <strong>of</strong><br />

the stems . Biatora epixanthoidiza<br />

45* With Pannarin, ± Zeorin. Thallus <strong>of</strong> scattered,<br />

rarely closing together, gray-brown to greenishbrown,<br />

brown-whitish, ± rounded, but also<br />

crenate, sometimes appearing squamulose, -05<br />

(0.9) mm wide areoles. Soralia very small,<br />

punctiform, at times brownish tinted, -0.4 mm,<br />

whitish, pale greenish, greenish-yellow, standing<br />

on the areoles or directly on the substrate.<br />

Thallus/soralia P+ orange to red, UV+ orange. .<br />

Rinodina efflorescenes<br />

46 Thallus greenish, gray-greenish, irregularly<br />

sorediate and here ± yellow-greenish, P+ red, K-<br />

to weakly yellowish. Fumarprotocetraric acid, ±<br />

usnic acid . Lecanora conizaeoides<br />

46* Thallus gray, whitish or indefinite, soralia<br />

whitish, gray, greenish, or bluish to<br />

brownish-gray . 47<br />

47 Thallus developed upon the substrate, light gray<br />

to gray, with or without dark brown to brownblack<br />

prothallus lines, unevenly warty or<br />

somewhat fissured, with at first small delimited<br />

(0.15-0.5 mm wide), ± concave, later larger and<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten coalescing pale greenish, whitish, bluish- to<br />

brownish-gray soralia, K+ yellow. Atranorin,<br />

fumarprotocetraric acid. Thallus sometimes with<br />

irregular apothecia-like warts, -0.8 mm wide<br />

structures <strong>of</strong> gelatin consistency (+ Tremella<br />

lichenicola Diederich). Mycoblastus fucatus<br />

47* Not sorediate thallus commonly indefinite, ±<br />

within the substrate. Prothallus indefinite or<br />

whitish 48<br />

48 Without Atranorin. Soralia ± concave to flat,<br />

rounded to elliptical, single, -0.7 mm, or 2-3<br />

coalescing, producing a non-coherent crust,<br />

whitish, slightly yellow- or gray-whitish, K+<br />

dirty brownish-red to K-, P+ (yellow to) red.<br />

Soredia 40-60(80) µm. Fumarprotocetraric acid,<br />

(Protocetraric acid), rarely (Gyrophoric acid).<br />

UV-/+ weakly blue-whitish . .<br />

Pertusaria pupillaris<br />

48* With Atranorin. Soralia at first separate, later<br />

producing one coherent thick sorediate crust,<br />

gray, bluish-gray, yellowish-green, or whitishgray,<br />

K+ yellow, P+ red. Soredia 40-120 µm.<br />

Atranorin, Fumarprotocetraric acid, Protocetraric<br />

acid, Zeorin . Megalaria pulverea<br />

49 Thallus with rounded black soralia, on wood,<br />

gray, warty areolate, medulla I+ blue.<br />

Thelomma ocellatum<br />

49* Soralia not black, if dark, then lichens not on<br />

wood. Medulla I- . 50<br />

50 Soralia in the case <strong>of</strong> good development craterlike<br />

encircled by a collar-like, frayed (curved<br />

inward) margin, consisting <strong>of</strong> erupting thallus<br />

pustules. On base-rich bark. Ch- . 51<br />

50* Soralia otherwise, not encircled by a frayed<br />

margin consisting <strong>of</strong> erupting thallus pustules<br />

52<br />

51 Soralia gray-green to dusty blue-green, -0.3(0.5)<br />

mm. Thallus gray, or bluish-gray. . .<br />

Caloplaca obscurella<br />

51* Soralia yellowish-green to white-greenish, -0.3<br />

mm. Thallus whitish Caloplaca ulcerosa<br />

52 Thallus <strong>of</strong> very fine low-lying to erect, threadcylindric,<br />

branch segments thereby minutely<br />

“fruticose”, 50-400 µm thick. Segment<br />

(“branchlets”) 12-35 µm thick, pale yellowish to<br />

green-yellowish, partially disintegrating into pale<br />

yellowish soredia, soredia 15-40 µm. Cortex<br />

cells with fine, -1 µm high papillae.<br />

Predominantly on elder and maple .<br />

Macentina stigonemoides<br />

52* Thallus not <strong>of</strong> very fine cylindrical, branched<br />

segments. Not commonly on elder and maple.<br />

53<br />

53 Thallus very indefinite, commonly mossdwelling,<br />

only the soon extending greenish to<br />

yellow-greenish sorediate regions conspicuous,<br />

not delimited. R-, Ch-. .<br />

Mycobilimbia epixanthoides<br />

53* Thallus with other characteristics, generally not<br />

only sorediate regions recognized, if mossdwelling,<br />

then soralia whitish to gray . 54<br />

54 Sorediate regions green to yellow-green or<br />

brownish. With Usnic acid or Perlatolic acid or<br />

Divarcatic acid. On nitrogen-poor habitats 55<br />

54* Sorediate regions whitish or blue-gray, gray, or<br />

greenish-gray. Without those substances. On<br />

nitrogen-poor or eutrophic habitats . 57<br />

55 Soralia with Usnic acid, -2.5 mm (also coalescing<br />

into larger soralia), yellow to yellow-green,<br />

concave to generally definitely convex. Thallus<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten very extensive, <strong>of</strong> separate to coherent low<br />

warts, gray, greenish-gray, color clearly taken<br />

63


from the soralia. Atranorin, Planaic acid. UV-.<br />

Very rare on acid bark in mountain regions<br />

Mycoblastus alpinus<br />

55* Soralia without usnic acid, smaller, but also<br />

coalescing, greenish, yellow-greenish to pale<br />

yellowish (if clearly brownish see also in area<br />

doubtless dying Fuscidea lightfooti). Thallus<br />

usually small, -2.5 cm, greenish, light greenish,<br />

yellowish-green, warty, in the case <strong>of</strong> good<br />

development with a brownish prothallus, UV+<br />

white . 56<br />

56 With Divaricatic acid. Thallus usually only -1<br />

cm . Fuscidea pusilla<br />

56* With Perlatolic acid. Thallus <strong>of</strong>ten also larger<br />

. Ropalospora viridis<br />

57 With sphaerophorin. Soralia punctiform,<br />

rounded, white- to greenish-gray or brown tinted.<br />

Thallus (warty) areolate, gray to brownish,<br />

medulla/soralia UV+ white. At the base <strong>of</strong> trees<br />

with acid bark in the mountains<br />

Lecidea pullata<br />

57* With other substances. 58<br />

58 Soralia/soredia dark blue-gray, lead-gray, dark<br />

gray to gray (to greenish-gray). On nitrate-rich<br />

habitats and base-rich bark. 59<br />

58* Soralia ± whitish. Thallus whitish to gray. 60<br />

59 Soralia -0.3 mm, ± convex, sometimes<br />

completely covering the areoles. Thallus areoles<br />

small, -0.2 mm, pale greenish, gray to graybrown,<br />

rounded, flat to somewhat convex.<br />

Soredia -30 µm. Atranorin, Zeorin. On bark and<br />

mosses . Rinodina griseosoralifera<br />

59* Soralia not convex. Upper surface entirely or<br />

partially granular-sorediate to granular-isidiate.<br />

Single ap. are generally to be found in the case <strong>of</strong><br />

longer searches. Ch- . ↑ 30<br />

60 Thallus with sharply defined, rounded to rarely<br />

elliptical, concave to flat, rarely convex, only<br />

isolated to coalescing soralia. . 61<br />

60* Thallus at least partially with irregularly defined,<br />

diffuse coalescing soralia, which erupt from small<br />

warts, light gray, gray-white to cream colored,<br />

channeled to smooth, sometimes with whitish<br />

prothallus. Soralia whitish, cream colored,<br />

yellowish-white, or greenish-white. Soredia 50-<br />

90 (120) µm. Ap. very rare. Variolaric acid. (If<br />

with fatty acids, see Pertusaria albescens). C±<br />

yellow. Sometimes difficult to isolate . 62<br />

61 Montane species. Thallus cream colored,<br />

yellowish-white to gray-white, ± smooth,<br />

Prothallus indefinite. Soralia -1(2) mm wide,<br />

rounded to elliptical, <strong>of</strong>ten surrounded by a<br />

“margin”, whitish, slightly yellowish, concave to<br />

flat, rarely convex,. Soredia -150 µm. Variolaric<br />

acid, Lichesterinic acid. Montane species .<br />

Ochrolechia alb<strong>of</strong>lavescens<br />

61* Widespread. Thallus gray, <strong>of</strong>ten extensive, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

with definite, (whitish-green gray) zoned<br />

prothallus, clearly darker than the soralia.<br />

Soralia -2.4(4) mm wide, rounded, concave to<br />

moderately convex, with margin. Soredia large, -<br />

200(300) µm. Sterile. Fatty acids. (always allo-<br />

Pertusaric acid) . Pertusaria albescens<br />

(if thallus unevenly lumpy, with indefinitely<br />

defined granules on the lumps, in part coalescing<br />

small soralia: var. corallina)<br />

62 Thallus without lichesterinic acid, with part<br />

sharply defined, part diffuse coalescing soralia,<br />

rarely finally uniformly sorediate. Above all in<br />

lower to central sites Ochrolechia turneri<br />

62* Thallus with Lichesterinic acid, thin, shortly<br />

entire surface mealy to granular sorediate. Above<br />

all montaine, on acid bark<br />

Ochrolechia microstictoides<br />

63 Thallus with isidia or thallus at least partially <strong>of</strong><br />

elongated, partially <strong>of</strong> rounded granules . 64<br />

63* Thallus without isidia, not <strong>of</strong> such granules.. . 73<br />

64 “Isidia” black, cylindrical Key VIIIa/1<br />

64* Without black isidia 65<br />

65 Thallus with Trentepohlia-algae, on scraped<br />

places <strong>of</strong>ten gold-brown to yellow-gold<br />

(scratches), “isidia” like the thallus whitish to<br />

light gray, hemispherical to short cylindrical,<br />

with pycn. <strong>Lichens</strong> <strong>of</strong> shades habitats .Key VIIIa/11<br />

65* Thallus with true green algae, on scraped places<br />

not gold-brown to orange-yellow. Isidia, if<br />

occurring, commonly without pycn 66<br />

66 Thallus K+ (yellow, then) blood-red or K+<br />

yellow. Thallus gray-white, light gray, greenishgray.<br />

Isidia relatively delicate, -0.2 mm thick,<br />

0.5(1) mm high, sometimes slightly browned<br />

above . GS Pertusaria<br />

66* Thallus K- (Caloplaca herbidella small spots<br />

also K+ red) 67<br />

67 Thallus <strong>of</strong> very small coraloid to isidiate<br />

elongated granules, black-brown to brown, in the<br />

shade light greenish-brown, C+ red (usually only<br />

to be seen on shaded thalli or microscopically in<br />

squash preparations), granules 25-150 x 25-50<br />

µm. On acid substrates<br />

Saccomorpha icmalea<br />

67* Thallus not brown . 68<br />

68 Thallus C+ orange or C+ red . GS Pertusaria<br />

68* Thallus C-, K- . 69<br />

69 Thallus thin, filmy, blue-green, green (green)<br />

gray, smooth to warty, with 0.1 mm long, needle-<br />

to thorn-like, gray-green, ± transparent structures<br />

. . Gyalideopsis anastomosans<br />

69* Thallus <strong>of</strong> partially elongated to coralloid isidialike<br />

granules or 40-120 µm thick or <strong>of</strong> very finely<br />

branched, almost dwarf fruticose segments or 12-<br />

35 µm thick. . 70<br />

70 Thallus <strong>of</strong> very fine decumbent to erect, threadcylindrical,<br />

branched segments, thereby minutely<br />

“fruticose”, 50-400 µm thick. Segment<br />

(“branchlets”) 12-35 µm thick, pale yellowish to<br />

green-yellowish, partially also disintegrating into<br />

pale yellowish soredia, soredia 15-40 µm. Cortex<br />

cells with fine, -1 µm high papillae.<br />

Predominantly on elder, or maple<br />

64


Macentina stigonemoides<br />

70* Thallus granular isidiate to coralloid isidiate,<br />

granules 40-120 µm thick, not erupting sorediate<br />

71<br />

71 Thallus white-gray, yellowish-gray, pale<br />

greenish-gray, thickly covered with mostly<br />

cylindric to clearly coralloid isidia (to coarse<br />

granular), sometimes in places with<br />

orange-yellow, K+ deep-red pycnidia and isidia<br />

points. In high rainfall, oceanic sites, in regions<br />

occurring on bark or oak or sycamore<br />

. Caloplaca herbidella<br />

71* Thallus pale gray-greenish to pale greenish, in<br />

the herbarium bleaching and light gray to beige,<br />

<strong>of</strong> rounded to elongated and weakly coraloid, in<br />

part also somewhat flattened granules. On longer<br />

studies usually isolated light brown or dark<br />

brown to blackish ap. are to be found. Above all<br />

on oak, or ash . 72<br />

72 Thallus granules/isidia not browned. Sometimes<br />

brown to rose-brown ap. initial stages are to be<br />

found. Above all on oak, ash, maple, or Norway<br />

maple . Bacidia rubella<br />

72* Thallus granules/isidia <strong>of</strong>ten somewhat browned<br />

on the upper side. Sometimes dark brown to<br />

blackish ap. initials are to be found. Above all<br />

on oak Bacidia biatorina<br />

73 Thallus yellow 74<br />

73* Thallus not yellow. 75<br />

74 Thallus green-yellow to citron yellow, <strong>of</strong> ±<br />

convex, -0.5 mm wide areoles or granules, on<br />

trees with acid bark on ± rain protected sites,<br />

above all on oak, or alder<br />

Chaenotheca chrysocephala<br />

74* Thallus yellow to slightly orange-yellow, <strong>of</strong><br />

about 0.07-0.15 mm thick, <strong>of</strong>ten uniformly<br />

ordered, separate to coalescing granules (C.<br />

xanthostigma) or <strong>of</strong> flattened to convex, 0.3-1<br />

mm wide areoles (C. vitellina). ↑ Candelariella<br />

75 Thallus warty-large granular, gray, in places<br />

orange to rust-brown, there K+ red<br />

Chaenotheca ferruginea<br />

75* Thallus appearing squamulose, not orange to<br />

rust-brown in places 76<br />

76 Squamules convex to vesicular or unevenly<br />

deformed, in places flattened, gray-green, yellowbrown,<br />

or dark brown, variously colored<br />

according to the exposure to light, dull to weakly<br />

shiny Hypocenomyce caradocenis<br />

76* Squamules concave, flat to convex or uneven,<br />

with entire, lobed or crenate margin, gray-green<br />

to dark brown, shiny Hypocenomyce friesii<br />

(for additional squamulose species see Agonimia<br />

tristicula, or Lopadium disciforme)<br />

Key VIIId: Sterile Crustose <strong>Lichens</strong> on<br />

soil, Raw Humus or Plant Remains<br />

1 Thallus citron yellow, or light yellow 2<br />

1* Thallus not citron yellow 3<br />

2 Thallus entirely finely mealy. Colonizing rain<br />

protected sites (overhanging scarps, under root<br />

hollows (Psilolechia, Chaenotheca furf.)<br />

GS Lepraria<br />

2* Thallus granular to squamulose. On rainy<br />

habitats . Arthrorhaphis<br />

3 Thallus black-brown to brown, in the shade light<br />

greenish-brown, warty (C-) or <strong>of</strong> very small<br />

elongated to coralloid granules (C+ red, usually<br />

only seen on abraded thalli or in microscopic<br />

squashed preparations), granules 25-150 x 25-50<br />

µm. On acid substrates . Saccomorpha<br />

3* Thallus otherwise, not brown 4<br />

4 Thallus <strong>of</strong> fresh shiny, dark green plump globules<br />

with Coccomyxa-algae, R-, on moist moss<br />

covered, plant remains, or peat<br />

Omphalina umbellifera<br />

very widespread species<br />

4* Thallus not <strong>of</strong> such globules . 5<br />

5 Thallus fleck-wise orange to rust colored, there<br />

K+ violet-red, extensive, light gray, light<br />

greenish-gray, or gray green, producing a single<br />

coherent, granular to warty crust (granules about<br />

0.05-0.2 mm), in places with greenish-white to<br />

light greenish, convex, soon coalescing soralia,<br />

C+ red, P-. Soralia 18-25 µm. Gyrophoric acid<br />

Trapeliopsis pseudogranulosa<br />

5* Thallus not fleck-wise orange to rust colored . 6<br />

6 Thallus with entirely fine granular to mealy upper<br />

surface or from beginning to end granular to<br />

mealy 7<br />

6* Thallus not entirely granular or mealy 9<br />

7 Thallus C- to C+ yellowish, whitish, gray, bluegreen<br />

tinted whitish, or pale greenish, commonly<br />

on non rain exposed sites GS Lepraria<br />

7* Thallus C+ red, on rainy sites, commonly on<br />

mosses . 8<br />

8 Thallus medium gray to blue-gray, C+ red, P red,<br />

consisting <strong>of</strong> 0.1-0.4 mm thick granules, with<br />

argopsin, and gyrophoric acid. Algae micareoid,<br />

about 4-7 µm thick . Micarea<br />

8* Thallus white to whit-gray, <strong>of</strong>ten darker in the<br />

center, (mostly non persistent) C+ red-orange,<br />

P+ citron-yellow, <strong>of</strong>ten rounded rosetted, 0.08-<br />

0.2 mm thick granules, with Alectorialic acid,<br />

Angardianic acid. Algae larger .<br />

Lepraria neglecta<br />

9 Thallus C+ orange to red 10<br />

9* Thallus C- to C+ yellowish 11<br />

10 Thallus granular to warty areolate or appearing<br />

squamulose, areoles -0.5 mm. Soralia whitish,<br />

slightly greenish or dull green-gray to blue-gray<br />

GS Trapelia<br />

10* Thallus very thick, uneven, not granular or<br />

granular-warty, gray-white to light gray. Soralia<br />

pale yellow-greenish to whitish. Usually in the<br />

high mountains GS Pertusaria<br />

11 Thallus thin, indefinite, coherent, dirty loam<br />

colored to greenish-gray, when fresh somewhat<br />

65


slimy. Soralia pale greenish, soon irregular to<br />

coalescing Trapeliopsis gelatinosa<br />

11* Thallus definite . 12<br />

12 Thallus light greenish-brown to greenish, <strong>of</strong><br />

spherical to elongated or coralloid granules,<br />

granules 25-150 (200) x 25-50 µm, C+ (at least<br />

in squash preparations) red, K-<br />

. Saccomorpha icmalea<br />

12* Thallus not <strong>of</strong> such fine, elongated to coraloid<br />

granules, K+ yellow, C- . 13<br />

13 Thallus <strong>of</strong> convex (-hemispherical) areoles,<br />

whitish to light gray, <strong>of</strong>ten extensive on acid soil<br />

banks, or open slopes, P+ yellow. Atranorin,<br />

Baeomycesic acid, ± Squamatic acid, Barbatic<br />

acid . Dibaeis baeomyces<br />

13* Thallus gray, gray-green, or brownish gray, when<br />

moist light green, P+ orange 14<br />

14 Thallus rosetted, at the margin with definite,<br />

elongated, crenate, -5 mm wide lobes, interior ±<br />

squamulose. On the upper surface are cut <strong>of</strong>f<br />

about 0.2 mm flat to convex schizidia, which<br />

leave behind concave scars. Stictic acid .<br />

Baeomyces placophyllus<br />

14* Thallus without such marginal lobes, truly<br />

crustose to small squamulose, squamules -1 mm,<br />

not sorediate or with diffuse greenish to whitish<br />

soralia, at times with small, up to 0.2 mm wide<br />

blastidia (bursting out or the upper surface part <strong>of</strong><br />

the cortex). Stictic acid, ± Norstictic acid, ±<br />

Gyrophoric acid . Baeomyces rufus<br />

The Genera and Their Species<br />

The genera are ordered alphabetically. The<br />

descriptions <strong>of</strong> the genera and their species are<br />

divided into three sections: 1. Introduction, 2.<br />

Genus characteristics and determination, and 3.<br />

Ecology and distribution <strong>of</strong> the species. The<br />

introduction gives a short characterization <strong>of</strong> the<br />

genus and a cursory summary view <strong>of</strong> the habitat<br />

(biotype) where the species occur in<br />

<strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong>; it is especially thought <strong>of</strong><br />

as an opportunity for a few notable facts. The<br />

introduction includes also a detailed description<br />

<strong>of</strong> the diagnostic and systematically significant<br />

sources <strong>of</strong> genus characteristics followed by keys<br />

for the species <strong>of</strong> the genus. In the third section<br />

is given the ecology, frequency and endangered<br />

status <strong>of</strong> the species as well as their distribution<br />

in Europe and in southwestern Germany and<br />

surroundings. Remarks about the literature forms<br />

the conclusion.<br />

The keys are not <strong>of</strong>ten lacking, they are there<br />

for ease in keying the species <strong>of</strong> the genera<br />

treated and identifying them from one another in<br />

a related or similar genus. In these cases, the<br />

genus names and the corresponding keys are<br />

indicated (“Determination ↑ Genus xy”).<br />

Absence <strong>of</strong> such an indication – which is the rule<br />

only in the instance <strong>of</strong> solely a species extensive<br />

genus – keying out the species to a genus key<br />

I-VIII on pages 66-99.<br />

Species, which are supplied with author names<br />

in the key, are described further only in the<br />

ecology and distribution. Those which are, in the<br />

main, not found in <strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong>, in the<br />

same way as all species, are provided in brief<br />

with ecological/chronological descriptions.<br />

If not otherwise mentioned, the spores are<br />

colorless and are developed eight per ascus.<br />

Conidia and spermatia are designated generally<br />

as pycnospores (pycnidiospores). With them are<br />

the many still unknown functions <strong>of</strong> the slow to<br />

be recognized structures. Pycnospores are, if not<br />

otherwise mentioned, colorless and single celled.<br />

Color production may give only one detail <strong>of</strong><br />

the breadth <strong>of</strong> variation <strong>of</strong> the species.<br />

Absconditella Vézda<br />

Introduction<br />

The species <strong>of</strong> Absconditella are very<br />

inconspicuous crustose lichens with<br />

gray-greenish thallus and very small, whitish,<br />

pale yellow, rose or red-brown colored apothecia<br />

with concave disks and proper margin. They<br />

grow on dead or dying mosses, thus they live<br />

above all on peat mosses A. sphagnorum, or on<br />

small stones (silicate rock) on long time dew<br />

moistened sites, as A. delutula, others live on<br />

humus and soil. The area <strong>of</strong> A. delutula extends<br />

over central Europe (up to the southern part <strong>of</strong><br />

Scandinavia). A. sphagnorum occurs in southern<br />

and central Scandinavia as well as the foothills <strong>of</strong><br />

the Alps; quite recently these species were<br />

reported from the moors <strong>of</strong> south Black Forest.<br />

Further species <strong>of</strong> the approximately 10 species<br />

included in the genus are not known in Germany.<br />

Genus Characteristics and Keys<br />

66


Thallus crustose, thin, usually gray-yellow, gray,<br />

or greenish, when moist <strong>of</strong>ten ± gelatinous, with<br />

coccoid green algae. Apothecia with sunken,<br />

concave disks, light colored with a proper<br />

margin. Exciple paraplectenchymatous or <strong>of</strong><br />

parallel hyphae, colored or colorless.<br />

Hypothecia <strong>of</strong>ten indefinite. Hymenium I-/I+<br />

yellowish, K/I-. Paraphyses simple, rarely<br />

branching above, thin, slightly thickened above.<br />

Epihymenium colorless or slightly colored. Asci<br />

cylindric to narrowly clavate, thin-walled, with<br />

tholus, I+ red-brown. Spores elongate<br />

ellipsoidal, fusiform or almost needle-like, 2- to<br />

multicellular, cross-septate.<br />

1 Sp. 4-celled, fusiform, 20-28 x 5-6 µm. On sandy<br />

humus soils. Ap. -0.4 mm, whitish, pale<br />

yellowish, pale brownish, sunken. Thallus very<br />

thin, grayish to blackish, R- . A. trivialis<br />

1* Sp. 2-celled. <strong>Lichens</strong> on peatmoss or rock.<br />

Thallus thin, gray-greenish, R- . 2<br />

2 On peatmoss. Ap. 0.1-0.4 mm, whitish to<br />

yellowish, when moist light rose. Sp. 10-12 x 4-5<br />

µm . A. sphagnorum<br />

2* On rock. Ap. -0.2 mm, whitish, yellowish to rosebrown,<br />

depressed. Sp. 8-15 x 3-5 µm<br />

A. delutula<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Absconditella delutula (Nyl.) Coppins & Kilias<br />

(A. modesta (Hegetschw.) Vézda m.<br />

(Hegetschw.) Grumm.)<br />

In the foothills up to montane regions on silicate<br />

rocks, on rocks over base-rich soils, on road<br />

banks, scarps, on shady, wind-protected, cool<br />

substrates, subneutroph.,-m. acidoph., m.<br />

photoph.-v.skioph., anitroph.centr – rare,<br />

probably <strong>of</strong>ten overlooked; süHü, O, SFW<br />

Absconditella sphagnorum Vézda & Poelt<br />

In montane and high montane, heavy rainfall<br />

regions in the high moors on dead, for the most<br />

part on blue-green algae overgrowing peatmosses<br />

(Sphagnum) on hummocks, above all in the late<br />

autumn, very to extreme acidophytic, very<br />

photophytic, v.-e.acidoph., v.photoph.,<br />

substrathygroph., in the Spagnion magell. Bormieur<br />

– v.rare (2); süSch, Av<br />

Absconditella trivialis (Willey ex Tuck.) Vézda<br />

On acid, sandy humus, foist soils on open sites,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten with blue-green algae, pioneer ephemeral<br />

habitats – mieur – rare; Westf, Alps<br />

Lit: POELT & VÉZDA 1977, VÉZDA 1965b.<br />

Acarospora Massal.<br />

Introduction<br />

The genus Acarospora includes lichens with<br />

squamulose to purely crustose, commonly<br />

areolate, sometimes marginally lobed thallus with<br />

sessile to usually sunken, apothecia with thalloid<br />

margins. The thallus and apothecia are as a rule<br />

light to dark brown or red-brown, rarely<br />

yellowish or rust-red colored. From time to time<br />

the true thallus color is covered over by a whitish<br />

pruinosity. The very small, single-celled<br />

colorless spores sit in a large number (usually<br />

over a hundred) in the ascus. In Germany the<br />

genus numbers ca. 30 to 35 species (partially<br />

unsatisfactorily known). Concerning the species<br />

validity numerous species have still indefinite<br />

descriptions. As a result <strong>of</strong> taxonomic and<br />

diagnostic problems, but also as a result <strong>of</strong> the<br />

frequently scarcely possible procurement <strong>of</strong><br />

vouchers <strong>of</strong> the species, the principal occurrence<br />

on anthropogenic substrates (tombstones,<br />

monuments, and mural crowns), the distribution<br />

<strong>of</strong> Acarospora species also in the region is still<br />

entirely unsatisfactorily known.<br />

Of the Acarospora species growing on rock;<br />

the most <strong>of</strong> them prefer light-rich sites. A.<br />

macrospora, A. heppii, A. glaucocarpa and the<br />

closely related A. cervina occur on lime-rich<br />

rocks, the remaining indigenous species are<br />

silicate dwellers. A. sinopica lives only on heavy<br />

metal or iron sulfide-rich silicate rock, e.g. on<br />

processed ore. A. smaragdula is found likewise<br />

occasionally on heavy metal-, e.g. copper-rich<br />

substrate, preferring however in contrast to the<br />

acidophilic A. sinopica so-called neutral and<br />

basic silicate rock. Many indigenous species<br />

have their strong point on rocks with weakly acid<br />

to weakly basic weathered rind, above all on<br />

slightly calcareous (or even dust impregnated)<br />

sandstone (shell-sandstone, or clay- red marl<br />

sandstone), thus A. gallica, A. oligospora, A.<br />

paupera, A. tongletii, A. umbilicata, A.<br />

versicolor and A. nitrophila. Since that kind <strong>of</strong><br />

sandstone with base-rich upper surface is<br />

scarcely contiguous, on the other hand it is rather<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten used in the region as building stone (e.g.<br />

for walls), these species occur predominantly or<br />

almost exclusively on anthropogenic habitats. A.<br />

heppii, which also commonly occurs on lime-rich<br />

67


substrates, is found especially on rock on shady<br />

sites, e.g. in forests.<br />

A. fuscata, A. glaucocarpa, A. heppii, A.<br />

macrospora, A. nitrophila, A. veronensis as well<br />

as A. sinopica are widespread throughout<br />

Europe. A. peliscypha is arctic alpine; it is<br />

known in Germany from the high Black Forest<br />

and the Harz. A southern distribution picture is<br />

shown by A. cervina, A. gallica, A. oligospora,<br />

A. umbilicata and A. versicolor, whose northern<br />

distribution boundary lies through Central<br />

Europe or Southern Scandinavia. A. paupera<br />

and A. tongletii have their presumptive<br />

distribution strong point in the summer-green<br />

deciduous forest region.<br />

Genus Characteristics and Keys<br />

Thallus crustose, commonly clearly developed<br />

and areolate to almost squamulose, sometimes<br />

with enlarged areoles at the margin and ±<br />

placoid, usually light to dark brown, red-brown,<br />

black-brown, rarely rust color or yellowish,<br />

sometimes pruinose, with paraplectenchymatous<br />

upper cortex, underside without cortex. With<br />

coccoid green algae. Apothecia single to usually<br />

several per areole, usually sunken or hollowed<br />

out, rarely crowded sessile, with brown red-<br />

brown to brown-black disk and indefinite to<br />

projecting thalloid margin. Hyp. colorless to<br />

pale. Exc. usually only weakly developed. Hym.<br />

I+ blue. Epihym. usually ± brown. Paraphyses<br />

very numerous, thin, stuck together, simple to<br />

branching and bound. Asci with usually more<br />

than 100 sp., clavate, with tholus (I-, KI-, very<br />

rarely I+ blue). Sp. 1-celled, spherical to<br />

elongate-ellipsoidal. Pycnospores ellipsoidal to<br />

spherical. Usually Ch-, rarely Gyrophoric- or<br />

Norstictic acid.<br />

Many Acarospora species are still insufficiently worked,<br />

accordingly the species concept is not established; especially<br />

the breadth <strong>of</strong> variation is at this time not adequately known;<br />

pruinosity which is diagnostically important in the classical<br />

key is at best partially modified (lime content <strong>of</strong> the<br />

substrate) to strongly altered.<br />

1 Thallus yellow to greenish-yellow . 2<br />

1* Thallus brown, gray-brown, red-brown, ochre, or<br />

rust-red 3<br />

2 Thallus coherent, areolate, radiate lobed at the<br />

margin with enlarged areoles (placoid), usually ±<br />

round, -4(6) cm, but also <strong>of</strong>ten growing together,<br />

in the interior thickly covered with ap.,<br />

sometimes sterile. Ap. yellow, -1.5 mm. K-<br />

↑ Pleopsidium<br />

2* Thallus scattered to grouped, ± rounded areoles,<br />

not placoid. Ap. dark brown to black-brown,<br />

commonly punctiform, rarely distended.<br />

Areoles/squamules smooth to wrinkled, flat, -<br />

1.5(2) mm. K+ red ↑ A. smaragdula<br />

3 On limestone, R-, Ch- . 4<br />

3* On silicate rock . 8<br />

4 Thallus only developed as clearly margined ap.,<br />

otherwise lacking or indefinite. Ap. ± round,<br />

single, scattered to rarely 2-3 grouped 5<br />

4* Thallus clearly developed, squamulose to<br />

areolate. Areoles with at times 1 to several ap. 6<br />

5 Ap. 0.2-0.4(0.5) mm, definitely scattered, rarely<br />

2-3 grouped, warty projecting, with concave disk,<br />

pale brown to reddish-brown, with ± same<br />

colored margin, regularly round. Sp. 3-6 x 1.5-<br />

2.5 µm. Thallus indefinite, very thin to almost<br />

lacking, pale brown to light gray A. heppii<br />

5* Ap. definitely larger, 0.7-2(3) mm, mostly<br />

whitish pruinose, flat, raised margin, round or<br />

flattened on opposite sides. .↑ A. glaucocarpa<br />

6 Sp. 7-12 x 3-6 µm, less than 100 per ascus. Ap. -<br />

1 mm. Thallus usually red-brown to light brown,<br />

rarely ochre, greenish-brown, squamules areolate<br />

to almost cracked areolate, areoles 0.5-5 mm,<br />

running together, mostly sterile at the thallus<br />

margin. Ap. to 1-3(8), ± sunken, red-brown to<br />

dark brown, darker than the thallus, without<br />

margin or with definite thalloid margin. Algae<br />

layer ± uniformly coherent . A. macrospora<br />

6* Sp. 4-8 x 1.5-3 µm, to more than 100 per ascus.<br />

Ap. -1.5 (2.5) mm, red-brown, squamules 0.5-5<br />

mm. Probably not a clearly separable species (A.<br />

glaucocarpa s. l.) 7<br />

7 Ap. not pruinose, to 1-4, usually sparse, sunken.<br />

Squamules light to dark chestnut brown, brownred,<br />

gray-brown, <strong>of</strong>ten (partially) whitish<br />

pruinose, with whitish margin, ± flat, commonly<br />

running together. Algae layer ± closed or<br />

breaking into groups and with very uneven upper<br />

surface . A. cervina<br />

7* Ap. ± white pruinose or non-pruinose, usually<br />

single, ± sunken, finally protruding, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

engaging the greatest part <strong>of</strong> the squamule,<br />

usually numerous. Thallus very variable.<br />

Squamules olive-, gray-, light-brown, olive- gray,<br />

non-pruinose, rarely pruinose, <strong>of</strong>ten light at the<br />

margin, sometimes nearly lobed, usually convex<br />

or uneven, scattered to growing together, even<br />

overlapping shingle- like. Algae layer commonly<br />

disintegrated into groups or with very uneven<br />

upper surface . A. glaucocarpa<br />

8 Thallus rust-red to rust-brown, areolate, marginal<br />

areoles <strong>of</strong>ten clearly enlarged and then thallus<br />

radiate-rosetted (placoid), ap. puncti-form, dark,<br />

± sunken, usually to 2-6 per areole. Sp. 3-3.5 x<br />

1.2-1.6 µm. R-, Ch- A. sinopica<br />

(Compare a. rust-brown form <strong>of</strong> A. smaragdula<br />

var. lesdainii (harm.) H.Magn.: Ap. usually<br />

68


larger, thallus not radiate- rosetted with enlarged<br />

marginal areoles, rust- brown to ochre)<br />

8* Thallus not rust-red to rust brown 9<br />

9 Thallus or ap. K+ red (crystals), C-. Norstictic<br />

Acid 10<br />

9* Thallus and ap. K-, C- or C+/KC+ red . 11<br />

10 Thallus light gray-brown to light red-brown,<br />

areolate to almost squamulose, areoles for the<br />

most part taken up by ap., rounded to angular, -1<br />

mm. Ap. K+ red, single, rarely to 2-5, flat or<br />

concave, light margined, -4.0 mm. Sp. 4-6 x 1.5-<br />

2 µm. * A. paupera<br />

10* Thallus yellowish-brown, light brown, beige,<br />

rarely red-brown or rust colored or greenish-<br />

yellow, squamulose, K+ red or K-. Squamules<br />

scattered or in small groups, rounded to irregular<br />

and crenate, <strong>of</strong>ten with uneven upper surface,<br />

mostly 0.5-2 mm, only a small part taken up by<br />

ap. Ap. mostly 3-7, brown-black, punctiform,<br />

rarely with disk opened out (mostly -0.8 mm).<br />

Sp. 3-5 x 1-1.5(2) µm. * A. smaragdula<br />

11 Thallus KC+ red. Gyrophoric acid 12<br />

11* Thallus KC- 16<br />

12 Thallus pruinose . 13<br />

12* Thallus not pruinose . 14<br />

13 Ap. 0.3-1.8 mm, disk brown to black-brown, very<br />

uneven to umbilicate. With enlarged marginal<br />

areoles, therefore appearing lobed. Areoles 0.4-<br />

2.2 mm, convex, brown, <strong>of</strong>ten pruinose. Sp. 3-5<br />

x 1.5-2 µm. *. On calcareous or neutral/basic<br />

silicate rock - mieur; MRh<br />

A. bullata Anzi<br />

13* Ap. -0.4 mm, <strong>of</strong>ten only punctiform, hollowed<br />

out, without recognizable margin, disk not<br />

conspicuously uneven. Thallus squamulose to<br />

areolate, dark brown to black- brown, squamules<br />

05-3 mm, mostly in a commonly pruinose,<br />

brown, very variable in size, thallus. Marginal<br />

areoles <strong>of</strong>ten sterile, enlarged or not, sometimes<br />

appearing lobed. Sp. 3-5 x 1.5-2 µm<br />

* . A. umbilicata auct.<br />

(In contrast to occasionally pruinose forms <strong>of</strong> A.<br />

fuscata ap. smaller. Species concept unclear at<br />

this time. The forms found in the region<br />

probably not belonging to A. umbilicata Bagl.)<br />

14 Ap. disk commonly smooth or very slightly<br />

rough, not wrinkled, not umbilicate, ap. -1 mm,<br />

hollowed out to level with the thallus upper<br />

surface, mostly angular or irregular, <strong>of</strong>ten darker<br />

than the thallus, red-brown to black-brown.<br />

Thallus squamulose to (in the interior) areolate,<br />

light to dark brown, or red-brown, usually ±<br />

shiny, concave, flat or uneven, 0.5-1.5(3) mm.<br />

Sp. 4-6 x 1-1.5 µm. Hym. 70-120 µm.<br />

* . A. fuscata<br />

14* Ap. disk wrinkled uneven or with umbilicus.<br />

Hym. 80-100 µm. Very rare species 15<br />

15 Ap. -0.3 (0.8) mm, mostly to 3-6, dark brown,<br />

clearly margined, ± circular, hollowed out, disk<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten with an umbilicus. squamules pale yellow-<br />

brown, from flat, close standing to scattered, 0.4-<br />

1.4 mm wide, ± pale underside squamules.<br />

* ! A. gallica<br />

15* Ap. -1.4 mm, dark red-brown, finally projecting<br />

to sitting up, with erect thalloid margin and<br />

wrinkled to <strong>of</strong>ten umbilicate disk, <strong>of</strong>ten close<br />

standing. Thallus squamulose, squamules <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

appearing lobed, shiny, light- to dark brown,<br />

convex to uneven, 0.5-3 mm. Sp. 4-6 x 1.5-2<br />

µm. * A. peliscypha<br />

16 Sp. 9-13 x 5-6 µm, only to ca. 16-64 per ascus.<br />

Areoles olive- to dark brown, undersides pale,<br />

usually scattered and rounded, ± convex, 0.5-1<br />

(1.5) mm. Ap. single, -0.6(1) mm, round, blackbrown<br />

. A. oligospora<br />

16* Sp. clearly smaller, to more than 64 per ascus . 17<br />

17 Thallus pruinose 18<br />

17* Thallus not pruinose 19<br />

18 Thallus ± thickly pruinose, under the pruinosity<br />

light brown to light red-brown, squamulose<br />

areolate, squamules flat to convex, rounded to<br />

angular, 0l5-2mm. Ap. ± hollowed, commonly<br />

without projecting thalloid margin, usually blackbrown,<br />

0.2-0.5 mm. Sp. 4-7 x 1.5-2 µm. Paraph.<br />

ca. 1.5 µm thick. Hym. 90-130 µm<br />

.A. versicolor<br />

18* Thallus weakly to thickly pruinose, pruinosity<br />

mostly truly variable in each thallus and only<br />

occurring in the case <strong>of</strong> lime influence. Ap. <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

with raised thalloid margin<br />

. ↑ A. nitrophila (31)<br />

19 Ap. -1.5(2) mm, red-brown to brown-black,<br />

definite (usually raised) margin, to 1 (2-3) per<br />

squamule, finally <strong>of</strong>ten clearly projecting and ±<br />

sessile, rounded to distorted. squamules scattered<br />

to running together, moderate to dark brown,<br />

rounded, flat to convex. Hym. low, -75 µm high,<br />

paraphyses -3.5 µm (above -5 µm) thick. sp. 3-6<br />

x 1.5-2.5 µm . A. badi<strong>of</strong>usca<br />

19* Ap. rarely over 0.8 mm. Hym higher. Paraph. -<br />

2µm 20<br />

20 Ap. commonly with warty rough disk, red- brown<br />

thin margined, -0.8(1.4)mm. Hym. (120)140-<br />

170 µm. Squamules 1-5 mm, yellow-brown,<br />

light- to dark-brown, dull, usually uneven,<br />

underside ± pale, usually scattered to in small<br />

groups, <strong>of</strong>ten appearing lobed. Sp. 3.5-5.5 x 1.5-<br />

2 µm A. scabrida<br />

20* Ap. disk usually not warty-rough . 21<br />

21 Thallus <strong>of</strong> single, ± rounded, -2 mm large,<br />

weakly convex areoles or flowing together warty<br />

areolate, yellow-brown, light brown, beige, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

with uneven upper surface, usually 0.5-2 mm,<br />

underside ± blackish. Hym. (60)125-140(250)<br />

µm. Ap. usually to 3-7, punctiform or rarely with<br />

opened up disk (up to 0.8 mm), with or without<br />

margin. Paraph. 1-15 µm thick. Sp. 2.5-5 x 1-<br />

1.5(2) µm. Norstictic acid A. smaragdula<br />

69


21* With other characteristics (ap. usually not<br />

punctiform. Hym. rarely over 120 µm,<br />

exception: A. pyrenopsoides). Without Norstictic<br />

acid . 22<br />

22 Thallus only clearly developed as an ap. margin,<br />

otherwise lacking or indefinite. Ap. ± round,<br />

single, scattered to rarely 2-3 in a group, 0.2-<br />

0.4(0.5) mm. Paraph. -1 µm. On calcareous or<br />

basic silicates . ↑ A. heppii (5)<br />

22* Thallus clearly developed, squamulose to<br />

areolate. Areoles with from time to time 1 up to<br />

several ap. Paraph. thicker. Lichen not limited<br />

to calcareous or basic silicates . 23<br />

23 Ap. <strong>of</strong>ten irregularly formed, angular or<br />

elongated, rarely round. Disk sunken, margin<br />

scarcely raised or indefinite. Hym. ca 60-80 µm<br />

(rarely up to 100 µm). Sp. 3-5 x (1.5)2-2.5 µm.<br />

A. impressula s.l. . 24<br />

23* Ap. as a rule ± rounded . 26<br />

24 Thallus cracked-areolate. Areoles mostly<br />

angular, closely flowing into one another, dark<br />

brown to black-brown, underside dark, 0.4-1.5<br />

mm, from time to time without ap. Ap. 1-5 per<br />

areole, hollowed out, -0.4 mm, concave to flat,<br />

rounded to angular. Paraph. 1.5-2 µm .<br />

A. impressula<br />

24* Thallus not consisting throughout <strong>of</strong> cracked<br />

areolate crust. Squamules single to mostly only a<br />

few grouped between/in other lichens, convex,<br />

red-brown to gray-brown, shiny, -1.8 mm. Ap.<br />

0.1-1.5 mm, irregularly formed, <strong>of</strong>ten elongate, <strong>of</strong><br />

a color similar to the thallus. Often parasitic 25<br />

25 Squamules red-brown, ap. to 2-5 per squamule.<br />

Medulla granular because <strong>of</strong> crystals. E.g. on<br />

Aspicilia species A. hospitans<br />

25* Squamules red-brown to gray-brown. Ap. to 2-<br />

10 per squamule. Medulla without crystals .<br />

A. insolata<br />

26 Thallus very pale brown to pale yellowish, very<br />

thin, cracked areolate, areoles flat to slightly<br />

concave, -0.8 mm. Ap. to 1-2, red- brown,<br />

sunken. Sp. 3-6 x 1-2 µm A. tongletii<br />

26* Thallus definitely darker . 27<br />

27 Thallus cracked areolate. Areoles angular, closely<br />

flowing into one another, flat, dark brown to<br />

black-brown, underside dark, 0.4-0.7 (1.0) mm,<br />

from time to time without ap. Ap. 1-5 per areole,<br />

-0.4 mm, concave to flat .<br />

↑ A. impressula (24)<br />

27* Thallus otherwise . 28<br />

28 Parasitic. Ap. mostly up to 2-10 per squamule 29<br />

28* Not parasitic 30<br />

29 Sp. 3-5 x 2-3 µm. Squamules convex, shiny, redbrown,<br />

gray-brown . A. insolata (25)<br />

29* Sp. 3-6 x 1.5-2 µm. Squamules strongly convex,<br />

dark brown to black-brown .<br />

A. pyrenopsoides (31)<br />

30 Ap. 0.1-0.5 mm, without margin, concave<br />

(hollowed out), to 1-3 red-brown to dark brown.<br />

areoles red-brown, dark red-brown, 0.2-1.4 mm,<br />

scattered or several to a group, rounded to<br />

angular. Sp. 3-5 x 1.4-2 µm. Hym. 60-100 µm<br />

A. veronensis<br />

30* Ap. usually at least partially with raised margin.<br />

Areoles appearing squamulose. Sp. 3-6 x 1.5-2<br />

µm . 31<br />

31 Squamules mostly dark brown, 0.4-2.5 mm,<br />

mostly convex (also light brown to brown, even<br />

to uneven, -4mm, almost squamulose, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

crenate-lobed: v. praeruptorum), ap. -1.2 mm,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten with somewhat rough disk. Hym. 70-130<br />

µm. Paraph. 1.5-2(2.5) µm, above -5(6) µm.<br />

Very form rich A. nitrophila<br />

31* Squamules dark brown to black brown, strongly<br />

convex. Ap. -0.7 mm, sunken, colored similar to<br />

the thallus. Hym. 70-150 µm. Paraph. 1.3-1.7<br />

µm, above -3 µm ! A. pyrenopsoides<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Acarospora badi<strong>of</strong>usca (Nyl.) Th.Fr.<br />

In high montane and alpine sites (rarely lower, as<br />

well as above all in dry-warm, continental sites:<br />

dealpin) on basic or calcareous or lime dust<br />

impregnated silicate rock and lime removed<br />

limestone, on very rain sheltered to rained upon<br />

surfaces, also on moderately dunged bird roosts,<br />

subneutrophic-neutrophic, extreme to very<br />

photophytic, moderately nitrophytic, on lower<br />

sites e.g. in Lecanoretum demissae, in higher in<br />

Aspicilion mastr. – arct-alp(pralp) – very rare<br />

(1); Vog, Ju<br />

Acarospora cervina Massal.<br />

Up to the montane zone on limestone on discreet<br />

places, like Placocarpus schaer. (↑), Char.<br />

Placocarpetum schaereri – mieur (subco)-med –<br />

rare (3); Ju, FrJu, Sju, O+, Ne, Mn, Th<br />

Acarospora fuscata (Nyl.) Th. Fr.<br />

Euryöke species, up to the alpine zone, above all<br />

on acid lime-free silicate rock, above all on<br />

sloping and horizontal surfaces, high point on<br />

sunny completely rain exposed places on ± hard<br />

rock, also as a apophyte in limestone frequent on<br />

wall crowns, tombstones etc. <strong>of</strong> lime- free natural<br />

stone, (subneutrophic-) moderate- extreme<br />

acidophyte, moderate-very phototrophic,<br />

anitrophytic to extremely nitrophytic,<br />

predominantly in crustose lichen stands, in<br />

pioneer habitats and permanent regions, Char.<br />

Rhizocarpetea geogr. – bor-med(mo) –<br />

rather(moderately) frequent<br />

Acarospora gallica H. Magn.<br />

70


Similar to A. umbilicata (↑), Lecidella carp. (↑) –<br />

mieur-med – O (Heidelberg), Th<br />

Acarospora glaucocarpa (Ach.) Körber<br />

Very euryöke species, up to the alpine zone on<br />

lime poor to above all lime-rich rock, on very<br />

small boulders, rocks on round heads, steep, and<br />

overhanging surfaces <strong>of</strong> rock, rarely also on<br />

walls, even on nitrogen rich sites (dust, bird<br />

dunged), on moderate to very light rich, rainy to<br />

extremely rain sheltered habitats, basiphytic, (a-)<br />

to moderate nitrophytic, e.g. in the Aspicilion<br />

calc. – bor-med(mo) -- very rare; Sju, Ju, FrJu<br />

and Al very rare, besides (v.)rare (Mn, Ne, Hü,<br />

süRh, Vog, Eif, He, Th)<br />

Acarospora heppii (Naegeli ex Hepp) Naegeli<br />

ex Körber<br />

Up to the montane zone on lime-rich to lime-<br />

poor rock (e.g. weakly calcareous silicate rock<br />

marlly or sandy carbonate rock, lime- containing<br />

artificial stone), above all on the rocks lying on<br />

soil on road borders, scarps, in abandoned gravel<br />

pits, scree slopes, subneutrophic - basiphytic,<br />

(v.skioph.-)m. -extremely phototrophic, e.g. with<br />

Arthonia lap. -- bor bor-smed(?-med) – very<br />

rare, overlooked; SJu, Ju, FrJu, süHü-HRh, Ne,<br />

Mn, He, Th, süRh, O, Eif, Ml<br />

Acarospora hospitans H.Magn. (A. impressula<br />

Th.Fr. v. hospitans (H.Magn.) Clauz. & Roux)<br />

Similar to A. insolata (↑) - bor-med-mo - rare;<br />

süSch, Al<br />

Acarospora impressula Th.Fr. (A. atrata Hue)<br />

Up into the high montane zone on lime free,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten heavy metal-, at least iron-rich silicate rock<br />

on sunny surfaces, extremely acidophytic,<br />

extremely to very photophytic, ombroph.,<br />

anitrophytic, e.g. in Acarosporion sin, Parmelion<br />

conspersae – s’bor-mieur – rare; süSch, O, Eif<br />

Acarospora insolata H.Magn.<br />

Above all in montane and alpine, extremely high<br />

precipitation regions on lime-free, mineral rich or<br />

slightly calcareous silicate rock and flat toped<br />

lime deficient limestone, mostly on sunny<br />

surfaces parasitic on crustose lichens, above all<br />

Aspicilia-species and Rhizocarpon geogr, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

also on iron-rich rock, (subneutrophic.-)<br />

moderate (extremely) acidophytic, extremely to<br />

very photophytic, a-/m nitrophytic, above all in<br />

the Asicilietum cin., Umbilicarion cyl. – (bor-<br />

)mieur-smed – rare; süSch, Vog, Rhön, Al<br />

Acarospora macrospora (Hepp.) Massal. ex<br />

Bagl. (incl. ssp. murorum (Massal.) Clauz. &<br />

Roux, A. murorum Massal.)<br />

Up to alpine zone on mostly lime-rich rock<br />

predominantly on steep sloping and vertical<br />

surfaces as well as overhanging rocks on fissured<br />

or earth encrusted sites, on rain sheltered sites<br />

also on from time to time moistened cliffs, on<br />

m.- ex.(v.) light rich habitats, basiphytic,<br />

extremely xerophytic, m. nitrophytic, e.g. in the<br />

Caloplacetum cirr., but mostly on anomalous<br />

small habitats – bor-med -- Sju, Ju, FrJu, Th, Al,<br />

besides very rare: Ne, Eif<br />

Acarospora nitrophila H.Magn<br />

var. nitrophila<br />

Up into the alpine zone on silicate rock, above all<br />

on basic to neutral or dust impregnated or<br />

slightly eutrophic silicate rock, a pioneer on hard<br />

magmatic silicates, <strong>of</strong>ten a snyanthrop on wall<br />

crowns, tombstones, old ro<strong>of</strong> tile, above all on<br />

rain exposed, light-rich habitats, <strong>of</strong>ten on<br />

horizontal/sloping surfaces, subneutrophic,<br />

extremely to very photophytic, m- to rather<br />

nitrophytic – arct-med – moderately frequent;<br />

very rare natural occurrence<br />

var. praeruptorum (H.Magn.) Clauz. & Roux<br />

(A. praeruptorum H.Magn.)<br />

On extremely rain sheltered vertical- and<br />

overhanging surfaces on crystalline magmatic or<br />

metamorphic, mineral rich silicate rock,<br />

extremely acidophytic, -subneutrophytic, m. to<br />

ex. photophytic, mostly only in association with<br />

few lichens. – mieur-med – rare; e.g. Sch, Mos,<br />

Eif, O<br />

Acarospora oligospora (Nyl.) Arnold<br />

In hilly and submontane, mostly very warm<br />

regions on basic or slightly lime impregnated<br />

silicate rock, <strong>of</strong>ten on sandstone, on wall crowns,<br />

on rock over base-rich soil, <strong>of</strong>ten on eutrophic<br />

sites and then also on acid silicate rock,<br />

subneutroph. - neutroph., rather to very photoph.,<br />

m.nitroph., in the Lecidelletum carp. -- mieursmed<br />

– rare (2); Pf, Ne, Bo, Vgb, Fr, FrJu,<br />

Westf, Al<br />

Acarospora paupers H. Magn. (A. tongletii var.<br />

p. (H. Magn.) Clauz. & Roux)<br />

Like. Lecidella carp. (>), above all synanthrop<br />

on sandstone – Ne, Ju, Fr, FrJu, Th<br />

Acarospora peliscypha Th.Fr.<br />

In alpine, rarely high montane, high rainfall sites<br />

on wind and radiation exposed silicate rock,<br />

71


especially in region <strong>of</strong> bird roosts, m.-ext.<br />

acidoph., v.photoph., m.(-rather) nitroph., in the<br />

Umbilicarion cyl, in contact with the<br />

Ramalinetum cap. – arct-alp – v.rare ( R );<br />

süSch, Hz<br />

Acarospora pyrenopsoides H.Magn.<br />

On silicate rock on steep faces and on<br />

overhanging ± light-rich sites – v.rare ( R );<br />

süSch<br />

Acarospora scabrida Hedl. ex H.Magn.<br />

In montane region on usually weathered,<br />

fragmented, dust impregnated silicate rock, e.g.<br />

on vertical faces and overhangs – bor-mieur -<br />

v.rare (1); süSch<br />

Acarospora sinopica (Wahlenb.) Körber<br />

Up into the alpine zone on lime-rich, heavy-<br />

metal-rich, at least FeS2-rich silicate rock,<br />

especially in (formerly) ore mining regions, also<br />

on ore dumps and waste, <strong>of</strong>ten on rust colored to<br />

black (MnO) oxidized substrate, on horizontal-<br />

to (in high rainfall regions) overhanging surfaces,<br />

on sunny sites above all on <strong>of</strong>ten dew moistened<br />

surfaces near soil, places with high heavy metal<br />

content, edaphic stenök, but r.euryök, r.v.acidoph.,<br />

m-s.potoph., anitroph., Char.<br />

Acarosporetalia sin. – arct-smed-mo – rare (3);<br />

süSch, Vog, BayW, Ts, Sauerl, Erz, Hz<br />

Acarospora smaragdula (Wahlenb.) Massal.<br />

A. undata Clauz., Roux & Wirth)<br />

Up into the alpine zone on calcareous or basic to<br />

neutral or ± eutrophic silicate rock, the principal<br />

form largely in high places is cracks <strong>of</strong> rock<br />

walls <strong>of</strong> mineral rich rock (above all on vertical<br />

surfaces) and on bird roosts, var. lesdainii v.<br />

subochracea H.Magn. and other forms on heavy<br />

metal-rich, lime-free rock (like A. sinopica ↑).<br />

Principal form subneutroph. -m.acidoph., m.-r.(v)<br />

photoph., <strong>of</strong>ten in initial stages -arct-mieurmo/alp-med-mo/alp<br />

– v.rare (1); Vog, süSch, Ne,<br />

Ju, BayW, Ts, Hz<br />

Acarospora tongletii Hue (A. rehmii H.Magn.,<br />

A. variegata H.Magn.<br />

Like Lecidella carp (↑), A. oligospora (↑), above<br />

all synanthrop on sandstone, especially wall<br />

crowns – mieur – rare (3); Eif, Fr, o<br />

Acarospora umbilicata auct.<br />

In hilly-submontane, warm to rather warm,<br />

usually rather precipitation poor region on<br />

calcareous or lime impregnated or basic silicate<br />

rock, primarily on sandstone, <strong>of</strong>ten synanthrop<br />

on walls, on sunny, <strong>of</strong>ten dust impregnated<br />

habitats, subneutroph., thermoph., m.(r.)nitroph.,<br />

above all in the Lecidelletum carp.,<br />

also in the Caloplacetum teich. –mieur(subatl?)-<br />

med – rare (3); Rh, Hü, Ne, Ju, Sch, O, Mn, Sp,<br />

Pf, Eif<br />

Acarospora veronensis Massal.<br />

Up into the alpine sites on acid to basic, as well<br />

as also on calcareous silicate rock (and upper<br />

surfaces <strong>of</strong> de-limed limestone), <strong>of</strong>ten on<br />

somewhat eutrophic sites, thus on walls, on bird<br />

roosts, on soil lying rocks (e.g. on roadways),<br />

also on artificial rock (ro<strong>of</strong> tiles), pioneer on hard<br />

rock, subneutroph.-m.acidoph., r.-v.photoph.,<br />

(a-)m.nitroph., in the Lecidelletum carp.,<br />

Aspicilietum cin., Buellio-Rhizocarpetum etc. –<br />

bor-med – v.rare; e.g. Sch, Vog, O, Eif, He, Th<br />

Acarospora versicolor Bagl. & Carestia<br />

On mineral rich silicate rock, like A. umbilicata<br />

(↑) – mieur-med – rare; süSch, süRh-HRh, O, Pf,<br />

Mos, Eif<br />

LIT: MAGNUSSON 1929, 1935, CLAUZADE & ROUX 1981,<br />

1985<br />

Acrocordia Massal.<br />

(Determined ↑ Arthopyrenia)<br />

Introduction<br />

The Acrocordia species have a little<br />

differentiated crust, <strong>of</strong>ten scarcely visible thallus<br />

with Trentepohlia algae and relatively large,<br />

black perithecia with two to four celled,<br />

ellipsoidal spores in cylindrical asci. The four<br />

species occurring in Germany also occur in<br />

<strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong>. A. conoidea and A. salweyi<br />

live on limestone on shaded rock (above all on<br />

steep surfaces) and are distributed from the<br />

Mediterranean region to southern Scandinavia.<br />

A. gemmata and A. cavata reside on deciduous<br />

tree bark; they prefer oak and ash in oak-<br />

hornbeam and ash stands in mild-winter places.<br />

Both occur in the zone <strong>of</strong> summer-green<br />

deciduous forests and in the Mediterranean<br />

region and have western tendencies.<br />

Genus Characteristics<br />

72


Thallus crustose, little differentiated, thin or in<br />

the substrate, with Trentepohlia. Per. largely<br />

sunken to sessile, black, among the non<br />

indigenous species also light colored. Exc.<br />

spherical, colorless to brownish, surrounded by<br />

an entire or hemispherical brown-black<br />

involucrellum. Paraphysoids thin, sparsely<br />

branched or reticulate bound. Without<br />

periphyses. Asci 8-, rarely 4-spored, cylindric,<br />

K/I-, fissitunicate, with definite tholus and ocular<br />

chamber. Sp. one series, ellipsoidal to elongate<br />

ellipsoidal, with usually rounded ends, 2- rarely<br />

4-celled, with thick septum and with finely<br />

ornamented upper surface, not shrunken at the<br />

septum. Pycnosp. (narrow) ellipsoidal. Ch-.<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Acrocordia cavata (Ach.) R.Harris<br />

Like A. gemmata (↑), mostly on relatively<br />

smooth bark, predominantly on Ash, like<br />

Anisomeridium nyss. (↑) – mieur(-atl)-med –<br />

v.rare; süRh, HRh, Ju<br />

Acrocordia conoidea (Fr.) Körber<br />

(Arthopyrenia c. (Fr.) Zahlbr.)<br />

Above all in submontane and montane regions on<br />

carbonate rock (Above all limestone and<br />

dolomite), usually on relatively smooth,<br />

unweathered, compact or fine pored rock on<br />

m.rainy to rather rain-sheltered, <strong>of</strong>ten slightly<br />

moist, shaded steep sloping to vertical faces, on<br />

m.warm to rather cool, humid, wind sheltered<br />

habitats in forests, valleys, on shaded slopes,<br />

basiph., m-photoph.-r.skioph., anitroph., Char.<br />

Acrocordion con. – mieur-med – rare; Ju, Sju,<br />

FrJu, Al, otherwise v.rare (HRh-süSch, Bo, Bit,<br />

Th)<br />

Acrocordia gemmata (Ach.) Massal. (A. alba<br />

(Schrader) B. de Lesd., Arthopyrenia a.<br />

(Schrader) Zahlbr., A. gemmata (Ach.) Massal.,<br />

A. Sphaeroides (Wallr.) Zahlbr.)<br />

Up into the montane zone, above all in (r.)mild<br />

winter places, on subneutral-m.(r.)acid, cracked,<br />

also slightly decayed bark <strong>of</strong> deciduous trees<br />

(middle <strong>of</strong> the stem), above all on Oak, Ash in<br />

Oak-Hornbeam and Ash-w. on m.light-rich, mild,<br />

wind protected habitats, <strong>of</strong>ten in pastures and<br />

hanging valleys, basiph., m.photoph.-r.skioph.,<br />

anitroph., Char. Acrocordion con. – mieur-med –<br />

rare; Ju, SJu, FrJu, Al, otherwise v.rare (HRh-<br />

süSch, Bo, Bit, Th)<br />

Acrocordia salweyi (Leighton ex Nyl.) A.L.Sm.<br />

(Arthopyrenia s. (Leighton ex Nyl) Zahlbr.)<br />

On limestone on shaded habitats, <strong>of</strong>ten on porous<br />

substrate (tufa, mortar) – mieur-subatl-med –<br />

v.rare ( R ); Ne (Jagst)<br />

LIT: COPPINS 1988*, POELT & VÉZDA 1977, PURVIS et al.<br />

1922, SWINSCOW 1970<br />

Adelolecia Hertel & Haf.<br />

(Determined ↑ Lecidea PT 4)<br />

Introduction<br />

There are at present two species <strong>of</strong> Adelolecia<br />

known. A. pilati has an indefinite, rarely definite<br />

crustose thallus and black apothecia with<br />

lecideine proper margin. It differs from Lecidea<br />

in the construction <strong>of</strong> the asci among others. The<br />

lichen usually sits on vertical faces <strong>of</strong> fragmented<br />

silicate rocks, especially on sloping, iron-rich<br />

rock. It is arctic-alpine distributed and is known<br />

in outer alpine central Europe from southern<br />

Black Forest, the Bohemian Forest and the<br />

South.<br />

Genus Characteristics<br />

Thallus crustose, whitish, <strong>of</strong>ten indefinite, with<br />

coccoid green algae. Ap. sitting up with a<br />

narrow base with a proper margin, black. Exc. <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>of</strong> radial lying hyphae, K+ purple-red or K-.<br />

Hyp. colorless, light brown, light greenish. Hym.<br />

colorless to slightly greenish, I+ blue. Epihym.<br />

green. Paraphyses ± simple, strongly cemented.<br />

Asci clavate-cylindrical, <strong>of</strong> the Biatora-type.<br />

Sp. 1(-2) celled, narrowly ellipsoidal. Ch- or<br />

Atranorin.<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Adelolecia pilati (Hepp) Hertel & Haf. (Lecidea<br />

pilati (Hepp) Körber)<br />

In high montane and alpine, very high<br />

precipitation sits on lime-free, usually upper<br />

surface friable, weathered, micaceous and rather<br />

iron-rich silicate rock on rather rain protected to<br />

moderately rain exposed sloping surfaces,<br />

r.acidoph., anitroph., usually only with very few<br />

73


companions, also in the Acarosporion sin. –<br />

arct-h’mo/alp – v.rare (3); süSch, BayW<br />

LIT.: HAFELLNER 1984*, VAINO 1934<br />

Agonimia Zahlbr.<br />

Introduction<br />

Of the three species in the extensively distributed<br />

genus, one is in Germany. The thallus consists <strong>of</strong><br />

greenish squamules bearing black perithecia,<br />

which in the case <strong>of</strong> A. tristicula show a conic or<br />

barrel-like form and a warty-folded upper<br />

surface. The large spores are multicellular<br />

muriform.<br />

A. tristicula grows on mosses over base-rich<br />

substrates, e.g. over calcareous rocks, rarely on<br />

old, mossy deciduous tree trunks. The species<br />

occurring in western Europe from the<br />

Mediterreanean region to the high north is rarely<br />

found up to now in central Europe, however it<br />

has certainly been overlooked.<br />

Genus Characteristics<br />

Thallus <strong>of</strong> very small squamules, in non<br />

indigenous species also coarse granular, light<br />

green-gray or blue gray to brownish. Squamules<br />

rounded to elongated, <strong>of</strong>ten incised, with<br />

paraplectenchymatous cortex, cells on the upper<br />

surface with short papillae. Photobiont coccoid<br />

green algae. Per. spherical to keg-form or<br />

irregularly conical. Exc. outside brown, interior<br />

light to colorless. Per. in the upper part with<br />

numerous simple to sparsely branched<br />

periphyses. Paraphyses lacking. Asci thinwalled,<br />

scarcely thickened above, I-, Sp. to 1, 2<br />

or 8, colorless to pale brown, ellipsoidal,<br />

muriform multicellular. Ch-<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Agonimia tristicula (Nyl.) Zahlbr.<br />

Predominantly in hilly to montane, mild climate,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten oceanic sites on bark and on mosses on old<br />

tree trunks, on mosses over rock, commonly in<br />

half-shaded habitats in light forests, near brooks,<br />

as a rule on subneutral (to moderately acid),<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten somewhat decayed bark, e.g. on Ash, or<br />

Oak, e.g. with Normandina, Candelaria reflexa,<br />

in the Lobarion, Acrocordietum gemm.,<br />

subneutroph., r.hygroph., anitroph. – bor-med,<br />

subatl – (r.)rare, easy to overlook, since <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

sterile; Sch, Ne, Ju, SJu<br />

LIT: COPPINS & JAMES 1978, JAMES IN POELT & VÈZDA<br />

1981.<br />

Alectoria Ach.<br />

Introduction<br />

Alectoria includes yellow to pale greenish-yellow<br />

or even blackish fruticose lichens <strong>of</strong> bushy erect<br />

to beard-like pendant growth forms with rounded<br />

stalks to slightly flattened segments. The<br />

apothecia have brown disks with a thalloid<br />

margin, the species remain however commonly<br />

sterile. After removal <strong>of</strong> the greater part <strong>of</strong> the<br />

species as the genus Bryoria the genus contains<br />

eight species mainly distributed in the boreal<br />

zone, <strong>of</strong> which two are indigenous to Germany.<br />

A. sarmentosa lives in oceanic, rainfall and<br />

snow-rich mountain sites in predominately near<br />

natural pine thickets, Fir- and Spruce forests on<br />

the branches <strong>of</strong> the trees. Because <strong>of</strong> air<br />

pollution, however even given intensified<br />

forestry science the species has regressed in the<br />

last ten years, and still appears mostly in a<br />

meager form and is strongly threatened. Its area<br />

stretches over the boreal pine forest zone and the<br />

mountain sites <strong>of</strong> central Europe and the<br />

Mediterreanean region. A. ochroleuca, an arctic-<br />

alpine species <strong>of</strong> the dwarf shrubby heath and<br />

turf above the tree line, occurs in the neighboring<br />

Allgäu, very rare relicts in the Vogesen, in the<br />

Bohemian Forest and a few other central<br />

European central mountains (here extremely<br />

threatened).<br />

Genus Characteristics and Determination<br />

Thallus shrubby erect to beard-form pendant,<br />

light green-yellow or (not in Germany) brown-<br />

black, with rounded stalk to weakly flattened,<br />

sometimes streaked on the axles <strong>of</strong> the branches,<br />

with whitish, fusiform pseudocyphellae. Without<br />

isidia or soralia. Thallus sections ± radially<br />

symmetrical, cortex <strong>of</strong> periclinal, elongate,<br />

packed hyphae, which are imbedded in richly<br />

developed, thick (usually over 40 µm),<br />

cartilaginous substance. Medulla commonly <strong>of</strong><br />

74


loose hyphae (arachnoid). Photobiont<br />

Trebouxia-like. Ap. with brown to black disk,<br />

with thalloid margin. Asci clavate, thick-walled,<br />

Lecanora-type. Sp. 1-celled, brown, to 2-4 in the<br />

asci. Ch: except in the black species Usnic acid,<br />

frequent depside.<br />

1 Thallus gray-black to dark brown, base rose-gray<br />

to light gray-brown, shrubby erect, branch up to<br />

1.5 mm thick, stem round, base somewhat<br />

flattened. Medulla K+ yellow, C+ red, P+<br />

yellow. Alectorialic acid, Barbatolic acid. – arctalp<br />

– Alps, Sudenten A. nigricans (Ach.) Nyl<br />

1* Thallus pale yellow to light yellow-green. (Usnic<br />

acid) . 2<br />

2 Thallus without pseudocyphellae, delicate, with<br />

small punctiform soralia on the short tips, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

curved back side branches. (Usnic acid)<br />

. ↑ Ramalina thrausta<br />

2* Thallus with streak-form pseudocyphellae, rather<br />

robust. Medulla K-, P- C-. Usnic acid 3<br />

3 Thallus almost exclusively on trees, ± long<br />

pendent, -30 cm, isotonic-dichotomously<br />

branching. Principal axis flattened and long<br />

streaked. Soralia rarely appearing. Ap. rare, disk<br />

ochre, brown to almost black. Medulla KC- or<br />

KC+ rose, UV+ bluish-white. ± Alectoronic<br />

acid, Squamatic acid. * A. sarmentosa<br />

3* Thallus on soil, mosses, erect shrubby to<br />

decumbent, -10(12) cm, ± anisotomic-<br />

dichotomously branched. Principal axis not<br />

clearly flattened. Branch tips <strong>of</strong>ten grayblackish.<br />

Medulla KC- UV-, CK+ yellow.<br />

Diffractic acid. * A. ochroleuca<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Alectoria ochroleuca (H<strong>of</strong>fm.) Massal<br />

In open to the wind alpine and subalpine places<br />

on acid soil on sites snow-free relatively early, on<br />

habitats with strongly fluctuating moisture<br />

conditions, rarely descending below the tree line,<br />

then on light-rich, but shaded surfaces <strong>of</strong> silicate<br />

rock or on mosses between boulders,<br />

m.-e.acidoph., v.ombroph., anitroph., Char.<br />

Loiseleurio-Alectorietum ochr. – arct-mieur-alp<br />

– v.rare; Vog (Rotenbachkopf), Rhön*, BayW<br />

(Arber), Erz, Hz; frequent in alpine sites<br />

Alectoria sarmentosa (Ach.) Ach.<br />

In high montane, rarer in montane, very high<br />

precipitation and snow-rich oceanic places above<br />

all on branches <strong>of</strong> pine and deciduous trees in<br />

near natural pine thickets and Spruce-Fir forests,<br />

above all older pine thickets, (rarer) on Spruce,<br />

on v.-e.humid, cool oceanic habitats, sensitive to<br />

forestry practices. Utilization, m.-r.(v.)acidoph.,<br />

(r.skioph.-)m.-r.photoph., anitroph., in the<br />

Usneion, but scarce in the Evernietum dir. – bor-<br />

smed-mo(-med-mo) – rare (2); süSch (above<br />

900m), nöSch (v.rare), Vog, Al, ThW+<br />

LIT.: BRODO & HAWKSWORTH 1977, HAWKSWORTH 1972.<br />

Amandinea Choisy ex Scheideg. &<br />

Mayrh<strong>of</strong>er<br />

(Determined ↑ Buellia)<br />

Introduction<br />

This segregation <strong>of</strong> the Buellia genus includes<br />

the crustose lichens with two-celled brown<br />

spores, but deviates in the form <strong>of</strong> the pycnospores,<br />

A. punctata very widely distributed in<br />

Europe, principally on bark, but also occurring<br />

on silicate rock.<br />

Genus Characteristics<br />

Thallus crustose, gray to brown, with coccoid<br />

green algae. Ap. sessile, black, with proper<br />

margin. Exc. dark brown. Hyp. light to dark<br />

brown. Epihym. brown. Paraphyses simple or<br />

branched toward the end, thickened above and<br />

with brown pigmented cap. Asci clavate,<br />

Lecanora-type. Sp. 2-celled, brown, with<br />

equally thickened walls or the median wall<br />

thickened, smooth to finely warty. Pycnospores<br />

thread-like curved. Ch-, rarely with Norstictic<br />

acid.<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Amandinea punctata (H<strong>of</strong>fm.) Coppins &<br />

Scheideg. (Buellia p. (H<strong>of</strong>fm.) Massal., B.<br />

punctiformis (H<strong>of</strong>fm.) Massal., B. myriocarpa<br />

(DC.) De Not.)<br />

Up into the high montane (subalpine) places;<br />

rather substrate vague, on trunks <strong>of</strong> Deciduous<br />

and conifers, on tough decaying wood (fence<br />

posts etc.), rare on silicate rock, commonly on<br />

r.-m.acid, ± eutrophic bark, also on rather rain<br />

sheltered sites, avoiding trees with primarily<br />

subneutral bark or only residing in a secondary<br />

acidification (by emissions), commonly on<br />

freestanding trees, on wall surfaces, in<br />

75


settlements, m.-v.acidoph., m.-r.(s.)photoph., a-<br />

to r.nitroph., r.toxitol., above all in the<br />

Parmelietum cap. and (air polluted regions) in<br />

the Buellietum punctatae – (arct-)bor-med –<br />

frequent to very frequent throughout the entire<br />

region, in the south (above all in calcareous<br />

regions) rarer.<br />

LIT: SCHEIDEGGER 1993.<br />

Amygdalaria Norman<br />

(Determined ↑ Lecidea PT 5/PT 6)<br />

Introduction<br />

The Amygdalaria species are crustose lichens<br />

with sunken black, lecideine apothecia, green<br />

algae as symbionts and in addition blue-green<br />

algae in brown cephalodia. Of the up till now,<br />

eight species exclusively living on silicates,<br />

which are very closely related to the Porpidia<br />

genus, three occur in Germany, A. consentiens<br />

(very rare in the Bavarian Alps), A. pelobotryon<br />

(very rare in the Rhön) and A. panaeola, an<br />

arctic-alpine lichen, which is known from the<br />

high Black Forest, Bohemian Forest and from the<br />

Rhön and grows on sites that are relatively long<br />

snow-covered, cool moist on low rocks.<br />

Genus Characteristics<br />

Thallus crustose, clearly developed, <strong>of</strong> flat to<br />

convex areoles, beige, gray, or brown, <strong>of</strong>ten rose<br />

tinted, with brown-red (to gray) cephalodia<br />

between the areoles, sometimes with soralia.<br />

Photobiont Trebouxia-like green algae,<br />

Stigonema in the cephalodia. Ap. sunken,<br />

Aspicilia-like with thalloid margin, rarely sitting<br />

up, black to brown-black, flat to concave,<br />

sometimes with a navel, without definite, rarely<br />

with proper margin. Exc. commonly weakly<br />

developed and then, rarely (not in the species<br />

occurring in Germany) clearly developed, brown.<br />

Hyp. black-brown. Hym. I+ blue, <strong>of</strong><br />

paraphysoid-like, branched and reticulate,<br />

hyphae shrunken toward the ends and at the<br />

septae. Epihym. brown to brown-black. Asci<br />

narrow clavate, <strong>of</strong> the Porpidia-type. Sp. 1celled,<br />

ellipsoidal, when young surrounded by a<br />

slime halo. Pycnosp. bacillar. Ch: <strong>of</strong>ten with<br />

Gyrophoric acid.<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Amygdalaria panaeola (Ach.) Hertel & Brodo<br />

(Lecidea p. (Ach.) Ach.<br />

In high montane to alpine, rarely montane places<br />

on moist neutral to basic silicate rock (mineralrich<br />

Gneiss, Slate, basalt etc.) on high<br />

precipitation, longtime snow covered, cool,<br />

rather light-rich , usually away from the sun<br />

habitats, e.g. in boulder slopes, maritime<br />

boulders, single boulders in thin turfs,<br />

subneutroph.-m.acidoph., m.-r.photoph.,<br />

anitroph., e.g. in the Porpidion tub. – arct-mieurh’mo/alp<br />

– (v.)rare, because <strong>of</strong> removal <strong>of</strong> stones<br />

(2); süSch, Vog, He (Meissner, Rhön, je lx),<br />

BayW<br />

Amygdalaria pelobotryon (Wahlenb.) Norman<br />

(Aspicilia p. (Wahlenb.) Th.Fr.)<br />

Rather like A. panaeola – arct-bor(-mieur-h’mo)<br />

– very rare; Rhön (1x)<br />

LIT.: BRODO & HERTEL 1987<br />

Anaptychia Körber<br />

(Determined ↑ Physcia)<br />

Introduction<br />

The perhaps 10 species <strong>of</strong> the genus are gray or<br />

brown, narrow lobed fruticose and foliose lichens<br />

with flat lecanorine apothecia with dark brown to<br />

black disk and greenish to brown-black twocelled<br />

spores. In a few species – as in the case <strong>of</strong><br />

A. ciliaris – the ends <strong>of</strong> the thallus lobes are<br />

conspicuously bristly ciliate.<br />

Only A. ciliaris has been recorded in the<br />

region. It lives on mineral-rich, <strong>of</strong>ten slightly<br />

dust impregnated bark <strong>of</strong> deciduous trees on<br />

light-rich habitats, <strong>of</strong>ten on avenue trees. The<br />

lichen is as a result <strong>of</strong> developing air pollution<br />

strongly in decline. Formerly distributed over<br />

the entire <strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong> region, it is today<br />

disappearing in the north and northwest. The<br />

European area stretches from the Mediterranean<br />

area up to southern Scandinavia.<br />

Genus Characteristics<br />

Thallus fruticose, segments branched,<br />

dorsiventrally flattened, upper side gray to<br />

76


own, sometimes (as in A. ciliaris) velvety hairy<br />

because <strong>of</strong> hyphae extending from the upper<br />

cortex, with one <strong>of</strong> the thick walled packed,<br />

periclinal oriented hyphae making up the cortex,<br />

underside without cortex and without rhizines or<br />

(non indigenous species) with cortex and with<br />

rhizines. With green algae. Ap. ± stalked, with<br />

permanent thalloid margin and darker, sometimes<br />

pruinose disk. Hyp. colorless to yellow-brown.<br />

Epihym. brown. Paraphyses branching above<br />

and ± thickened, scarcely cemented. Asci <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Lecanora-type. Sp. dark brown, 2-celled,<br />

ellipsoidal, some narrowed at the septum,<br />

uniformly thin-walled, with finely areolate or<br />

warty upper surface. Pycn. in small warts,<br />

pycnosp. short fusiform. Ch: ± Atranorin, Zeorin<br />

(non indigenous species e.g. also without lichen<br />

substances).<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Anaptychia ciliaris (L.) Körber ex Massal.<br />

In the high montane zone, in lower places though<br />

strongly in regression only yet partially, above all<br />

on old freestanding deciduous trees on cracked,<br />

mineral-rich, also (lime) dust impregnated bark,<br />

overgrowing moss, mostly on avenue and field<br />

trees (above all ash, linden, maple), sometimes<br />

also in illuminated mountain forests, very rare on<br />

rock, optimal today on moderate- to rather- high<br />

precipitation, rather open to the wind sites,<br />

subneutroph., mesoph., (a-)m.(-r)nitroph. (yet<br />

sensitive to ammonium), Char. Parmelietum ac.,<br />

also in the Lobarion – s’bor-med-mo – rare (3);<br />

in not reduced specimens almost only still in SJu,<br />

Ju, süSch, Av, Al, besides SFW, Bo, Ne; Mn,<br />

Rhön, Eif, O and süRh almost +; formerly in the<br />

entire region, e.g. in Th, frequent.<br />

LIT: LYNGE 1935<br />

Anema Nyl. ex Forss.<br />

(Determined ↑ Phylliscum)<br />

Introduction<br />

The Anema-species are blue-green algae lichens<br />

with thalli <strong>of</strong> small, few millimeter wide,<br />

blackish, mostly slightly organized squamules or<br />

rosettes, which are attached to the substrate with<br />

a navel. In the moist state they swell up gelatin-<br />

like. The lecanorine margined apothecia are<br />

sunken. The three species recorded in Germany<br />

<strong>of</strong> the rather small genus occur on calcareous<br />

rock on surfaces occasionally flooded by seeping<br />

water on warm habitats. A. tumidulum is until<br />

now known from dry-warm valleys in Moravia,<br />

lower Austria, south Germany and south Norway.<br />

A. decipiens occurs from the Mediterranean<br />

region up to the warm region <strong>of</strong> central Europe<br />

and into Norway.<br />

Genus Characteristics<br />

Thallus clod-like, squamulose to schield-form<br />

and then umbilicate and <strong>of</strong>ten appearing lobed,<br />

black, sometimes pruinose, <strong>of</strong> a somewhat gelatin<br />

consistency, unstratified, <strong>of</strong> one ± thick hyphal<br />

net with embedded blue-green algae with<br />

yellow-brown colored gelatin enveloped<br />

(Gloeocapsa) at the thallus margin. Ap. sunken,<br />

with punctiform opening, later opening wide,<br />

lecanorine. Exc. not developed. Hyp. light.<br />

Hym. I+ blue. Paraphyses unbranched, septate.<br />

Asci clavate, <strong>of</strong>ten regenerated at the tips, with a<br />

very thick gelatin envelop in the upper part. Sp.<br />

to 8 or less, 1-celled, ellipsoidal. Ch-.<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Anema decipiens (Massal.) Forss.<br />

On limestone, rarely calcareous silicate rock, on<br />

sunny, from time to time seep moistened rocks<br />

like Thyrea (↑), e.g. in the Psorothchion schaer. –<br />

(s’bor-)mieur-med – rare; SJu, Ju, FrJu, Ne,<br />

süHü<br />

Anena tumidulum Henssen ined. (A.<br />

moedlingense auct.)<br />

On calcareous or basic silicate rock (e.g. basalt,<br />

green stone), rarely calcareous sedimentary rock,<br />

on sporadically seep moistened surfaces on warm<br />

habitats, like Peltula (↑) – mieur-med? -- very<br />

rare (1); süSch (1x), Ju (1x), Lahn (1x)<br />

LIT.: HENSSEN & JORGENSEN 1990, MORENO & EGEA 1992b.<br />

Anisomeridium (Müll.Arg.) Choisy<br />

(Determined ↑ Arthopyrenia)<br />

77


Introduction<br />

The genus Anisomeridium with its thin or<br />

embedded in the substrate crustose thallus, the<br />

black perithecia and the two- to many-celled<br />

spores is reminiscent <strong>of</strong> Arthopyrenia, however it<br />

is distinguished by a series <strong>of</strong> anatomical<br />

characters, e.g. in ascus structure. They include<br />

above all species occurring in the subtropics and<br />

mild temperate regions. Two lichenized species<br />

occur in Germany. A. nyssaegenum lives in mild<br />

places on subneutral deciduous tree bark and is<br />

distributed in western Europe up into central<br />

Scandinavia.<br />

Genus Characteristics<br />

Thallus crustose, thin to in the substrate, whitish<br />

to gray, with Trentepohlia. Per. sunken to<br />

sessile, hemispherical to globose. Exc. ± dark,<br />

light toward the base, with or without<br />

involucrellum. Involucrellum without<br />

incorporated tissue <strong>of</strong> the tree bark. Hym. I-.<br />

Pseudoparaphyses thin, branched and bound,<br />

periphyses lacking. Asci cylindric-clavate, K/I-,<br />

fissitunicate, with tholus and indefinite or shorter<br />

and wider ocular chamber. Sp. 1- to 2 series, 2-<br />

to 4-celled, egg shaped to clavate-fusiform, the<br />

middle septum <strong>of</strong>ten somewhat shifted toward<br />

the end <strong>of</strong> the spore, smooth, without perispore.<br />

Pycn. sunken to sessile and globose to conic<br />

protruding, black. Pycnosp. in two types, almost<br />

spherical, ellipsoidal, egg- shaped to short<br />

cylindric, sometimes – embedded in a gelatinous<br />

substance – becoming free as packets. Ch-.<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Anisomeridium biforme (Borrer) R.Harris<br />

(Arthopyrenia biformis (Borrer) Massal.)<br />

In hilly and submontane, winter mild, rather<br />

oceanic places on smooth to cracked bark, above<br />

all on trunks <strong>of</strong> older deciduous trees in light<br />

forests (e.g. Oak-Hornbeam forests), m.acidoph.,<br />

m.photoph., r.-s.hygroph., anitroph., Char.<br />

Acrocordietum gemm. – mieur-atl-smed – v.rare<br />

(+++); Eif<br />

Anisomeridium nyssaegenum (Ellis & Everh.)<br />

R.Harris (Thelidium juistense Erichsen)<br />

In hilly and submontane, rather winter mild<br />

places on humid habitats in pasture trees, Ash<br />

stands along brooks, oak-hornbeam forests, on<br />

subneutral bark above all on ash, similar to<br />

Acrocordia gemm. (↑), Arthonia cinn. (↑), but<br />

usually more basal on the trunk <strong>of</strong> cracked bark,<br />

(r.skioph.-)m.(-r.) photoph., hygroph., anitroph.,<br />

in the Acrocordion gemm. – mieur-subatl-med –<br />

r.rare (-m.frequent), overlooked; e.g. Rh, O, Sch,<br />

Ne, SFW, Eif<br />

LIT.: COPPINS 1988*, HARRIS 1975, PURVIS ET AL. 1992.<br />

Arthonia Ach.<br />

Introduction<br />

Arthonia, with several hundred species <strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong><br />

the most significant lichen genera, including<br />

crustose lichens with mostly thin,<br />

undifferentiated <strong>of</strong>ten scarcely visible or living in<br />

the substrate, whitish, gray to brownish thallus<br />

and rounded to irregularly formed, lobed,<br />

branching or star-formed, brown to black or<br />

cinnabar red fruiting bodies without definite<br />

margins and with cross-septate spores.<br />

Symbionts are Trentepohlia-, rarely coccoid<br />

green algae. Some species are lichen dwelling<br />

fungi, as A. clemens, A. fuscopurpurea and A.<br />

glaucomaria.<br />

The indigenous lichenized species (ca. 27 <strong>of</strong><br />

the 34 are recorded in Germany) live entirely<br />

preferably on bark in forests and tree stands<br />

along brooks on radiation protected, rather<br />

humid sites. A. cinnabarina, A. dispersa, A.<br />

elegans, A. galactites, A. patellulata, A.<br />

punctiformis, A. radiata, A. reniformis, A.<br />

stellaris and A. zwackhii “prefer” smooth bark <strong>of</strong><br />

deciduous trees and sometimes also fir, A.<br />

patellulata and A. galactites especially poplar,<br />

the remainder hornbeam and ash. Here is <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

also found A. spadicea, which however also<br />

occurs on smooth bark – almost always at the<br />

base. A. leucopellaea and A. vinosa usually sit<br />

on older fir and spruce.<br />

The few indigenous rock-dwelling live on<br />

more or less rain- and wind-protected overhangs<br />

<strong>of</strong> silicate rock and boulders, e.g. maritime<br />

boulders and in narrow valleys, like A.<br />

arthonioides, A. endlicheri and A. insulata. A.<br />

lapidicola grows on calcareous rock, especially<br />

on small stones lying on soil.<br />

Almost all indigenous species (differing<br />

behavior usually reflects ecology) avoid dust<br />

impregnation or manuring <strong>of</strong> the habitat. One<br />

78


such progressive eutrification <strong>of</strong> the habitat by<br />

nutrient-rich dust has likely substantially<br />

contributed to the pronounced regression <strong>of</strong><br />

Arthonia species. Numerous species are in<br />

recent years no longer to be found; almost all<br />

were limited to lower sites, the especially<br />

strongly altered clean-air species, however also<br />

have been subject to other human engagements<br />

(e.g. development, forestry and farming).<br />

By far the most <strong>of</strong> the indigenous species <strong>of</strong><br />

the genus represented principally in tropical<br />

regions, prefer mild to moderately cool regions<br />

and fail to break into the boreal zone.<br />

Numbering in this group <strong>of</strong> species with principal<br />

area in central European, summer-green<br />

deciduous forest region to partially in the<br />

Mediterreanean region are A. arthonioides, A.<br />

caesia, A. cinnabarina, A. elegans, A. endlicheri,<br />

A. fuliginosa, A. insulata (where the northern-<br />

most boundary in the region is reached), A.<br />

medusula, A. byssacea and A. spadicea; with<br />

exception <strong>of</strong> the two latter, which penetrate<br />

toward the north up to perhaps the distribution<br />

boundary <strong>of</strong> pedunculate oak (Quercus robur),<br />

not reaching Scandinavia or only in the extreme<br />

south or southwest (A. arthonioides, A.<br />

cinnabarina, A. pruinata, A. stellaris). A.<br />

punctiformis and A. vinosa are distributed from<br />

the Mediterranean region up into central<br />

Fennoscandia, whereby finally advancing further<br />

toward the north. Many Arthonias presumably<br />

avoid (north-) western Europe and the extensive<br />

mediterranean zone, thus A. byssacea, A. caesia,<br />

A. cinereopruinosa, A. insulata and the central<br />

Sweden occurring A. helvola. A. galactites is<br />

distributed from the Mediterranean region over<br />

western Europe to south England and central<br />

Germany. A. leucopellaea is native from<br />

southern Scandinavia and from Great Britain to<br />

the north German lowlands as well as in central<br />

European mountains (Black Forest, Vogesen,<br />

Bohemian Forest, Alps, Tatra, et al.). The area<br />

<strong>of</strong> A. radiata, A. dispersa, presumably also A.<br />

patellulata and A. lapidicola, reaches over the<br />

greatest part <strong>of</strong> Europe.<br />

Genus Characteristics and Determination<br />

Thallus crustose, undifferentiated, thin or into the<br />

substrate, with Trentepohlia, rarely coccoid<br />

green algae, lacking in the case <strong>of</strong> saprophytic or<br />

parasitic species. Ap. very variously formed,<br />

rounded to elongate or branched to star-form,<br />

red-brown to black, sometimes whitish or red<br />

pruinose, without thalloid- and without proper<br />

margin. Exc. lacking or reduced. Hyp. indefinite<br />

to definite, colorless to dark. Epihym. colorless<br />

to red-brown or dark brown. Hym. colorless to<br />

yellowish, brownish or reddish, I+ orange, red or<br />

blue, K/I+ blue. Paraphysoids richly branching<br />

and reticulate bound, ends <strong>of</strong>ten thickened and<br />

with pigmented cap. Asci clavate, bulging to<br />

almost spherical, with thick tholus, <strong>of</strong>ten with<br />

definite ocular chamber. Sp. usually colorless, 2-<br />

to 8-celled, cross-septate, usually egg-shaped to<br />

fusiform. Pycnosp. as a rule short cylindric to<br />

ellipsoidal. Frequently Ch-.<br />

Key Part 1: Lichenized, with thallus<br />

Key Part 2: Not lichenized, living on the thallus<br />

or in the apothecium <strong>of</strong> lichens<br />

Key Part 1: Lichenized Species<br />

1 Thallus on rock 2<br />

1* Thallus on bark, rarely on wood . 6<br />

2 On lime-rich rock. Thallus with pure green<br />

algae, indefinite to scruffy-warty, gray to<br />

brownish. Ap. black, almost sunken to<br />

protruding, rounded to irregularly angular, flat to<br />

convex, -0.5 mm. Epihym. red-brown, Hyp. ±<br />

dark brown, also olive tinged. Sp. 2-celled, 11-<br />

18 x 4-7 µ, shrunken at the septum, cells unequal.<br />

Thallus R- A. lapidicola<br />

2* On silicate rock. Thallus with Trentepohlia algae<br />

(when scratched, gold-brown to orange) 3<br />

3 Hyp. brown-black, Epihym. brown-blackish to<br />

carbonaceous. Ap. black, not pruinose. Thallus<br />

C-, KC-,K-/± yellowish, P-, Ch- . 4<br />

3* Hyp. light. Ap. pruinose, flat, thallus yellowishwhite,<br />

C+/KC+ red, K-/± yellowish, P- 5<br />

4 Sp. 2-celled, 10-16(19) x 4-6 µm, colorless,<br />

finally pale brownish, warty. Ap. rounded to<br />

shortly elliptical, flat, ± margined, -0.35 mm,<br />

with clearly developed exc. Hym. pale brown.<br />

Thallus very thin, yellowish to brownish .<br />

Melaspilea granitophila<br />

4* Sp. (3-)4-celled, ± wedge-form (cells unequal in<br />

size), 12-16 x 4-6 µm. Ap. rounded to rarely<br />

elliptical, almost flat to convex, -0.8(1) x 0.5 mm.<br />

Thallus rose, whitish in the herbarium, yellowishwhite<br />

to pale greenish, thin to thick, pliable,<br />

scurfy to mealy A. Arthonioides<br />

5 Thallus <strong>of</strong> scattered, not coherent granules. Ap.<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten rare, light blue pruinose, rounded to lobed,<br />

-0.6 mm. Sp. usually 4-celled, 12-18 x 6-7 µm .<br />

A. insulata<br />

5* Thallus coherent, moderately to rather thick, very<br />

uneven, tubercular, almost lobed at the margin,<br />

dull, <strong>of</strong>ten finely uneven, pale rose, brownishgray<br />

in the herbarium, usually partially sorediate.<br />

Ap. very rare, thickly grayish pruinose,<br />

irregularly angular to boxed, -0.8 mm. Sp. 4-<br />

79


6celled, 14-20 x 5-7 µm. Pycn. numerous, 0.1-<br />

0.2 mm wide, sunken to wart-like, pycnosp. 15-<br />

25 x 1 µm. Lecanoric acid A. endlicheri<br />

6 Sp. 2-celled. Ap. dark brown, brown-black, or<br />

black, <strong>of</strong>tentimes pruinose. . 7<br />

6* Sp. at least 3-celled . 15<br />

7 Ap. elongate, linear to winding, simple <strong>of</strong><br />

branched, -1 mm long, 0.2 mm wide, blackish.<br />

Hym. and sp. <strong>of</strong>ten weakly developed (relatively<br />

ephemeral lichens), epihym. olive-green, olivebrown,<br />

or black-brown, hyp. colorless. Sp.<br />

mostly (10)12-14(15) x 3-5 µm. Thallus very<br />

thin, with Trentepohlia A. dispersa<br />

(Sp. 15-18 x 5-7 µm, epihym. light brown or<br />

olive, at the side a dark brown exc.-like zone<br />

developed, atl: A. excipienda (Nyl.) Leighton)<br />

7* Ap. rounded to fleck form . 8<br />

8 Hym. K+ red, purple or violet . 9<br />

8* Hym. without this reaction . 12<br />

9 Ap. black, round, rarely elliptical, -0.8 mm, flat.<br />

Thallus without algae (algae possibly occurring<br />

very isolated), whitish, K+ yellowish, without<br />

prothallus. Epihym. black-brown, hym. ±<br />

yellowish or brown. Sp. 11.5-15 x 3.5-5 µm,<br />

egg-shaped, surface <strong>of</strong>ten somewhat irregular.<br />

Pycnosp. 11-16 x 0.7 µm, strongly curved<br />

. A. galactites<br />

9* Ap. at least not black when moist, but with a<br />

reddish tone. Thallus with Trentepohlia-algae 10<br />

10 Sp. 7-10 x 3-4 µm, colorless, cells <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

somewhat unequal in size. Ap. red-black to<br />

blackish, deep red-brown when moist,<br />

compressed, usually scarcely convex, mostly<br />

rounded, -1(1.5) mm. Hym. usually brownish to<br />

orange-brown, K+ indefinite purple (pigment not<br />

soluble in K). Hyp. reddish. Thallus without<br />

cortex and indefinite <strong>of</strong> thin, greenish to olive<br />

(never orange), <strong>of</strong>ten smooth, R- . A. spadicea<br />

10* Sp. larger, colorless, <strong>of</strong>ten brown and warty when<br />

older . 11<br />

11 Ap. sunken (<strong>of</strong>ten not projecting above the<br />

thallus), irregularly rounded to mostly short<br />

lobed, elongate distorted, fleck- to almost starform<br />

(branched), ± flat, red-brown to brownblack,<br />

-0.5 mm. Sp. 12-18 x 5-7 µm, cells<br />

slightly to definitely unequal, with warty upper<br />

surface, brown when old. Hyp. red-brown to<br />

black-brown, K- or K+ olive or red. Epihym.<br />

almost colorless, yellowish, even red-brown.<br />

Hym. ± colorless and K- or K+ olive-green or<br />

hym. brownish and K+ violet-red. Thallus very<br />

thin, yellowish- white to gray-olive or brownish,<br />

R-. Pycn. rare, Pycnosp. 3.5-4 x 0.7 µm<br />

A. didyma<br />

11* Ap. sessile, mostly rounded, convex, red-brown<br />

to dark brown to almost black (when moist ±<br />

brown-red), more rarely red-orange, -0.8 mm.<br />

Sp. 10-17 x 4-7 µm, cells mostly equal size, with<br />

finely warty upper surface, sometimes brown<br />

with age. Hyp. ± brown-red. Epihym. scarcely<br />

developed, hym. reddish-yellow to brownish, K+<br />

purple. Thallus mostly ochre to orange (K+ red),<br />

more rarely yellowish to yellowish-gray. Pycn.<br />

frequent, pycnosp. 4-6 x 1 µm. ?Anthraquinone<br />

. A. vinosa<br />

12 Thallus with Trentepohlia-algae. Ap. red- brown<br />

to brown-black, rounded to appearing boxed,<br />

fleck-form, ± flat, mostly not projecting above<br />

the thallus. Sp. 12-18 x 5-7 µm<br />

A. didyma (11)<br />

12* Thallus with true green (protoccoid) algae, sp.<br />

narrower, with unequal sized cells. Ap. black,<br />

round. R- 13<br />

13 Paraph. ends not or slightly colored, erect (not<br />

bent over). Hyp. brown-black. Hym. usually<br />

yellow-green. ap. ± flat, -0.7 mm. Sp. 9-15 x 3-5<br />

µm. Thallus very thin gray-whitish<br />

A. patellulata<br />

13* Paraph. ends with brown walls and bending away<br />

from the hym. upper surface. Paraph. very thin.<br />

Hyp. yellow-brown to brown-red. Ap. flattened<br />

to hemispherical, -0.4 mm. Thallus gray-green to<br />

olive green 14<br />

14 Ap. sessile to depressed, flat to convex, rounded<br />

to irregular in outline, -0.4 mm. Paraph. ends<br />

with a brown cap, sp. (9)11-16 x (2.7)3.5-5(6)<br />

µm. Hyp. colorless to yellow-brown. Thallus<br />

smooth to granular A. apat1etica<br />

14* Ap. sessile narrowed at the base, convex, ±<br />

marginless, -0.25 mm. Paraph. ends without<br />

brown cap, epihym, greenish-brown or reddishbrown.<br />

Sp. 8-12 x 2.3-3.8 µm. Hym. pale olive<br />

or colorless. Hyp. brown-red, K-/K+ dark olivebrown.<br />

Thallus granular A. muscigena<br />

15 Ap. (mostly only at the margin <strong>of</strong> the disk) red<br />

cinnamon brown to purple-brown. (epi-) hym.<br />

K+ purple, purple-violet, red. With<br />

Trentepohlia-algae. . . 16<br />

15* Ap. dark brown, brown-black, or black,<br />

sometimes whitish pruinose. Hym. K- or K+<br />

olive 18<br />

16 Sp. 3-celled, 8-12 x 3-5 µm. Ap. rust-red,<br />

strongly red-orange when moistened, rounded to<br />

elongate, flat, depressed to almost sunken, -0.8<br />

mm, <strong>of</strong>ten coalescing. Hym. yellow-orange to<br />

red, K+ purple to violet A. helvola<br />

16* Sp. 4-6(7)-celled. Ap. numerous, rounded,<br />

streaked to star-form branching, epihym. ± redbrown,<br />

K+ red to purple. Thallus whitish to<br />

ochre. Anthraquinone . 17<br />

17 Ap. cinnamon brown to dark purple-brown,<br />

nonpruinose, -0.8(1.0) x 0.2 mm, streaked, with<br />

pointed ends, <strong>of</strong>ten branching to star-form (then<br />

larger). Hym. -45 µm, colorless to pale yellowreddish.<br />

Sp. 12-17(19) x 4-6(7) µm, 4-5(6)celled,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten weakly developed A. elegans<br />

17* Ap. brown-red, at the margin shiny cinnabar-red<br />

pruinose, in the center usually whitish pruinose, -<br />

1(1.5) x 0.7 mm, four angled, lobed, rarely<br />

streaked. Hym. 60-70 µm. Epihym. K+ red to<br />

80


violet. Hym. and Hyp. colorless to brown-red.<br />

Sp. (15)18-28 x 5-9 µm, 5-6(7)-celled<br />

A. cinnabarina<br />

18 Ap. pruinose, underneath blackish or brown 19<br />

18* Ap. nonpruinose. Thallus R-, at best K+ slightly<br />

yellowish . 26<br />

19 Thallus with true (protococcoid) algae, whitish to<br />

gray-greenish, granular-scurfy to mealy,<br />

herbarium specimens covered with fine needle<br />

crystals. Ap. rather rare, bluish- gray pruinose, ±<br />

rounded, sitting up, ± flat, -0.6 mm. Epihym. and<br />

hyp. dark red-brown. Sp. 4-celled, shrunken at<br />

the septa, 15-20 x 4-6 µm. ?Zeorine A. caesia<br />

19* Thallus with Trentepohlia-algae, whitish, gray- to<br />

yellowish-white, not granular- leprose 20<br />

20 Hyp. brown-black. Thallus K-/± yellowish, C-,<br />

KC-, P- 21<br />

20* Hyp. colorless or light colored. 23<br />

21 Ap. margined, flat, thickly white pruinose, ±<br />

sunken to closely depressed sessile. Sp. 4-celled,<br />

14-27 x 2-3 µm. Unknown lichen substances<br />

↑ Lecanactis amylacea<br />

(When sp. longer, thallus with whitish pycnidia,<br />

see L. abietina)<br />

21* Ap. without margin 22<br />

22 Ap. black, thick white pruinose, rounded to<br />

elliptical, convex, -1 mm, <strong>of</strong>ten lacking. Sp. 4-6<br />

celled, 13-23 x 5-8 µm, one <strong>of</strong> the end cells<br />

usually definitely larger. Pycn. numerous,<br />

blackish, usually white margined, -0.3 mm.<br />

Pycnosp. 5-6 x 1-2 µm, <strong>of</strong>ten with apparent two<br />

part content. Thallus white, definitely developed,<br />

coherent A. byssacea<br />

22* Ap. dark brown to black, weakly pruinose (then ±<br />

gray) to nonpruinose, irregularly rounded to<br />

lobed, <strong>of</strong>ten with whitish cob webby margin,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten uneven, -2 mm, always occurring. Sp. 4-5<br />

celled, (9)12-17(19) x (3)4-4.4(5) µm, upper sp.<br />

cell not enlarged. Without pycn. Thallus<br />

whitish, cream colored, cobweb-like to scruffy or<br />

indefinite. Unknown lichen substances<br />

. A. leucopellaea<br />

23 Thallus cracked, strongly developed, gray- to<br />

yellowish-white, K-, C+/KC+ red, P-. Ap.<br />

brown, thickly bluish-white pruinose, numerous,<br />

± crowded, rounded, angular or lobed, -0.6 mm.<br />

Epihym. red-brown. Sp. 4-5 celled, upper cell<br />

not enlarged, 13-24 x 4.5-7 µm. Pycn. rare, pale<br />

to red-brown, pycnosp. 10-16 x 0.5-0.7 µm.<br />

(Arthoniaic acid) . A. pruinata<br />

23* Thallus C-/KC-, K- or K+ yellow/red. Yet<br />

insufficiently clarified group 24<br />

24 Epihym. blue-black (dark olive-brown), K+<br />

greenish. Sp. 9-18 x 2-3 µm, usually 4-5 celled,<br />

uppermost cell not enlarged. Ap. <strong>of</strong>ten spare,<br />

blackish, sometimes dark gray pruinose, elongate<br />

to richly star-form branched, flat, sunken, -2 mm.<br />

Thallus P-, K-/± yellowish. Pycn. frequent,<br />

blackish, <strong>of</strong>ten white pruinose, somewhat<br />

protruding. Pycnosp. 5-6 x 1.2 µm<br />

A. medusula<br />

24* Epihym. brownish, red-brown to dark brown, K+<br />

olive to olive-brown. Sp. over 4 µm wide, with<br />

age brownish and finely warty, uppermost cell<br />

enlarged. Ap. numerous, ± sunken to depressed<br />

sessile . 25<br />

25 Ap. soon strongly convex, round, elliptical to<br />

lobed, not coalescing , blackish, thickly blue-gray<br />

pruinose, -0.8(1) mm. Sp. 3-4(5) celled, 12-18 x<br />

4-7 µm. Thallus well developed, gray-white, P+<br />

yellow-orange, K-/K± yellowish, with numerous<br />

black pycn., pycnosp. 4.5-6 x 0.7-1 µm.<br />

Psoromic acid . A. cinereopruinosa<br />

25! Ap. flat to moderately convex, crowded, mostly<br />

angular and to star-like to coalescing into<br />

irregularly groups, red-brown to blackish, graywhite<br />

pruinose, -0.7 mm. Sp. 4-5 celled, 16-24 x<br />

5-7 µm. Hym. 40-50 µm. Thallus well<br />

developed, gray-white, P- to P+ partially yellow,<br />

K- or K+ yellow to red (unknown substances, ±<br />

Norstictic acid). Without Pycn . A. zwackhii<br />

25* Ap. flat to moderately convex, rounded, angular<br />

to elongate or lobed, coalescing into irregular to<br />

star-like groups, brown-black, whitish pruinose,<br />

thereby mostly ± cocoa colored, -1 mm. Sp. 4-5<br />

celled, 15-22 x 6-8(9) µm, ± wedge-form. Hym.<br />

50-65 µm. Thallus P-, K-/± yellowish, without<br />

pycn A. fuliginosa<br />

26 Hyp. brown-black. Sp. 4-5 celled . 27<br />

26* Hyp. ± light 30<br />

27 Sp. 25-42 x 2.5-4 µm, <strong>of</strong>ten curved<br />

↑ Schismatomma pericleum<br />

27* Sp. clearly shorter 28<br />

28 Sp. (3-)4 celled, ± wedge-shaped (upper cell<br />

enlarged), 12-16 x 4-6 µm. ap. rounded,<br />

Lecidea-like, rarely elliptical, almost flat to<br />

convex, -1 mm. Thallus commonly indefinite.<br />

On bark crossing over to rock .<br />

A. arthonioides (4)<br />

28* Sp. end cell not clearly enlarged, sp. 4-5 celled<br />

29<br />

29 Ap. round, sessile, Lecidea-like, flat to<br />

moderately convex, black, 0.2-0.5 mm. Paraph.<br />

ends slightly thickened, in gelatin, with definite<br />

brown caps. Hyp. colorless to red-brown. Sp.<br />

(11)13-16(18) x 3-5 µm, 4(5) celled. Thallus<br />

thin, membranous, light yellowish to whitish .<br />

A. mediella<br />

29* Ap. irregularly rounded to lobed, brown to<br />

brown-black, flat to uneven, <strong>of</strong>ten over 0.5 mm.<br />

Paraph. ends not thickened, <strong>of</strong>ten free, without<br />

definite caps. Sp. (9)12-17(19) x (3)4-4.5(5) µm,<br />

4-5 celled A. leucopellaea (22)<br />

30 Sp. 4-5(5) celled, 18-22(26) x 6-8(9) µm,<br />

uppermost cell usually clearly enlarged. Ap. dark<br />

red-brown to blackish, commonly branched (with<br />

side branches) to star-form, rarely elongate-<br />

81


linear, sunken, ± flat, -2 mm. epihym. dark redbrown,<br />

K+ greenish, hyp. ± light. Thallus<br />

whitish to ochre-yellowish, coherent, <strong>of</strong>ten with<br />

brown prothallus. With center running lichen<br />

substances A: 2-3. Very rare oceanic lichen<br />

A. stellaris<br />

30* Uppermost cell not noticeably enlarged. Ap.<br />

black, flat to moderately convex, commonly not<br />

repeatedly branched. Epihym. black to dark<br />

brown or greenish 31<br />

31 Thallus under the bark, scarcely visible, without<br />

algae. Ap. rounded, elliptical to elongate-streak<br />

form, rarely branched, <strong>of</strong>ten with apparent<br />

margin <strong>of</strong> tree bark tissue, -0.8(1.4) x 0.4 mm, in<br />

section 40-60 µm high. Hym. 25-50 µm, µm, I+<br />

blue. Sp. 4-(rarely -6) celled, 13-23(26) x 4-7(8)<br />

µm. Hym. and sp. <strong>of</strong>ten poorly developed. Ch-<br />

A. punctiformis<br />

31* Thallus over the bark, clearly visible, thin,<br />

membranous, usually whitish to greenish, rarely<br />

ochre-yellow, with Trentepohlia-algae . 32<br />

32 Sp. 6-7 celled, 13-20 x 4-5 µm. Ap. -1(1-5) mm,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten closely crowded and coalescing, fleck like,<br />

rounded to irregular, <strong>of</strong>ten unevenly wrinkled.<br />

Hym. I+ orange. Epihym. blackish. Thallus<br />

strongly wrinkled, somewhat shiny<br />

. A. reniformis<br />

32* Sp. 4-, rarely to 5 celled, 15-20 x 4.5-6 µm,<br />

sometimes slightly wedge-form. Ap. -1.5 mm,<br />

usually lobed or branched or irregularly angular,<br />

rarely rounded to elongate, brown to black,<br />

sunken, ± flat. Hym. colorless or slightly<br />

brownish, I+ blue, epihym. brownish or greenish,<br />

K+ greenish. Thallus rather variable<br />

. A. radiata<br />

Key Part 2: Species living on <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

(selection)<br />

1 Sp. 2 celled . 2<br />

1* Sp. 3-4 celled, elongate-egg shaped 4<br />

2 Ap. developed in the hym. <strong>of</strong> lichens <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Lecanora dispersa group and blackens the ap.<br />

disk <strong>of</strong> that species, 0.1-0.4 mm, black, rounded,<br />

flat to moderately convex. Sp. 9-15 x 3-5 µm,<br />

colorless A. clemens (Tul.) Th.Fr<br />

2* Ap. develops on the thallus <strong>of</strong> foliose lichens 3<br />

3 On Peltigera (lactucifolia). Ap. 0.5-1.5 mm, redbrown<br />

to brown-black, rounded, flat to convex,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten surrounded by light dying host tissue.<br />

Epihym. orange- to red-brown, hym. pale orange-<br />

to red-brown variegated. Paraph. 1.5-2.5 µm.<br />

Sp. 9-15 x 3-5 µm. With red-brown pycn. (in<br />

groups or at the margin <strong>of</strong> the ap.) .<br />

A. fuscopurpurea (Tul) R.Sant.<br />

3* On Physcia, Phaeophyscia and Xanthoria. Ap.<br />

0.1-0.35 mm, <strong>of</strong>ten crowded, rounded, convex.<br />

Epihym. brown, hyp. colorless to dark red-<br />

brown. Paraph. 1.4-2.5 µm. Sp. 10-14 x 3.5-5<br />

µm, colorless. Without Pycn. A. epiphyscia Nyl.<br />

4 Ap. in the hym. <strong>of</strong> Lecanora rupicola and<br />

blackening their disk, 0.3-1 mm, black, with the<br />

upper surface <strong>of</strong> the host disk breaking open or<br />

vaulting over it. Epihym. brown to olive-brown,<br />

K+ greenish, hyp. colorless. Paraph. 1.5-2 µm.<br />

Sp. 11-17 x 5-6.5 µm, (2)3-4 celled .<br />

A. glaucomaria Nyl.<br />

4* No distinct ap. developed. Asci and paraph <strong>of</strong><br />

the fungus between those <strong>of</strong> the host. Paraph.<br />

1.5-3 µm thick, thickened above by olive-brown<br />

pigment up to 5.5 µm. Sp. 12-17(20) x 3.5-5(6)<br />

µm, colorless A. intensa Almq.<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Arthonia arthonioides (Massal.) Th.Fr. (?A.<br />

exilis auct., Allarthonia e. auct.)<br />

Above all only (high)montane zone on cracked<br />

bark <strong>of</strong> deciduous trees, e.g. oak, in<br />

oak-hornbeam forests. – (s’bor-)mieur-smed –<br />

süHü, at this time. insufficiently known<br />

Arthonia arthonioides (Ach.) A.L.Sm. (A.<br />

xylophila V.Wirth & P. James, A. aspersa<br />

Leighton)<br />

Up to montane sites on radiation- and wind<br />

protected overhanging surfaces on silicate rock,<br />

favoring sandstone, commonly also on bark <strong>of</strong> fir<br />

(and wood) in old near natural forests, on cooloceanic,<br />

very humid or high rainfall habitats,<br />

readily on maritime boulders, rather acidoph.,<br />

anombroph., (m.potoph.-)r.skioph., anitroph., in<br />

community <strong>of</strong> the Chrysotrichetalia chlor. –<br />

mieur- (sub)atl(-med-subatl) – v.rare (R); nöSch,<br />

O, ThW, Lux<br />

Arthonia byssacea (Weigel) Almq.<br />

In hilly and submontane sites in deciduous forest,<br />

especially pasture forests, cool oak-Hornbeam<br />

forests, almost only on old oak with deeply<br />

cracked bark on rain sheltered places in the lower<br />

stem region in species-poor habitats, r.acidoph.,<br />

r.skioph., (r.-)v.hygroph., anombroph., anitroph.,<br />

Char. Arthonietum pruinatae – r.rare (3); above<br />

all süRh, Ne, Do, in addition süHü-HRh, SJu,<br />

Bo, Ju, but otherwise rare or disappearing<br />

Arthonia caesia (Flotow) Arnold (Allarthonia c.<br />

(Flotow) Zahlbr.)<br />

In hilly and submontane sites in deciduous<br />

forests, especially Hornbeam, m.acidoph., in<br />

Graphidetalia-community – mieur – v.rare (?, or<br />

82


only rarely fruiting and overlooked or confused<br />

with Lepraria species); O, HRh<br />

Arthonia cinereopruinosa Schaerer<br />

In hilly to (high)montane sites in mild winter<br />

regions on deciduous and conifer trees,<br />

especially on mineral-poor bark, such as oak,<br />

spruce and fir, in the interior <strong>of</strong> forests (e.g.<br />

oak-hornbeam forests), on rather- to very shady,<br />

rather humid, rather rain-sheltered habitats,<br />

r.acidoph., anitroph., in the community <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Leprarion inc. – s’bor-mieur – v.rare (0);<br />

süHü-HRh (around Lörrach)m süRh (Freiburg).<br />

It is questionable whether the records from the<br />

region under this name really belong to this<br />

repeatedly falsely understood species<br />

Arthonia cinnabarina (DC.) Wallr. (A.<br />

tumidula (Ach.) Ach., A. Gregaria (Weigel)<br />

Körber)<br />

In foothills and submontane, warm to<br />

moderately cool sites in cool oak-hornbeam<br />

forests and in oak-pasture forests (Pruno-<br />

Fraxinetum, Carici-Fraxinetum), <strong>of</strong>ten in brookside<br />

ash stands, also in linden-maple forests,<br />

preferably on s<strong>of</strong>ter, base-rich bark, above all on<br />

ash, rare on other deciduous trees and spruce, on<br />

moderately light rich to rather light-poor, rather<br />

to very humid habitats, m.acidoph.-subneutroph.,<br />

ombroph., anitroph., penetrating into many<br />

regions through algae-covered dark and dust<br />

influence, Char. Opegraphetum ruf. – mieur-<br />

subatl-smed(-med) – rare (2); above all Ne,<br />

süRh-HRh, Bo, Do, SFW, valleys <strong>of</strong> Ju and Sch<br />

(up to 650 m), Av, Al additionally nöRh, O, Sp,<br />

Rh-Mn-T, Eif, SJu<br />

Arthonia didyma Körber<br />

Up into the (high)montane zone on mostly<br />

smooth bark deciduous and conifer (shrubs,<br />

hornbeam, spruce et al.) in the interior <strong>of</strong> near<br />

natural forests, m.-r.acidoph., r.skioph.,<br />

r.hygroph., m.-r.ombroph., anitroph., in the<br />

Graphidion, usually with Graphis scripta,<br />

Opegrapha atra – s’bor-smed(-med) – r.rare,<br />

probably <strong>of</strong>ten overlooked; Sch (up to 1350 m),<br />

süHü-HRh, süRh, SJu, additionally rare Ju, Ne,<br />

O, Rhön, Th, Al<br />

Arthonia dispersa (Schrader) Nyl.<br />

Up into the montane zone on smooth bark <strong>of</strong><br />

deciduous-, rarer on conifers, above all on young<br />

stems and branches, soon disappearing on the<br />

bark becoming cracked, probably the most<br />

frequent on ash, weakly competitive pioneer, also<br />

on rather open to the wind habitats, subneutroph.<br />

-r.acidoph., m.-r.photoph., m.-r.hygroph.,<br />

ombroph., anitroph., e.g. in the Lecanoretum<br />

subf., e.g. with A. radiata, Arthopyrenia punctif.<br />

– bor-med – r.rare; e.g. Ne, Hü, Sch, O, Ju, Rh,<br />

Mos<br />

Arthonia elegans (Ach.) Almq.<br />

In winter mild, foothills and submontane sites on<br />

smooth bark <strong>of</strong> deciduous trees (above all ash<br />

and hornbeam) and on spruce in the interior <strong>of</strong><br />

forests, above all ash stands (e.g. Carici-<br />

Fraxinetum) and cool spruce shrub forests, on<br />

rather light poor to moderately light rich, very<br />

humid, sheltered habitats, m.acidoph., anitroph.,<br />

e.g. in the Opegraphetum ruf. – mieur(atl)-med –<br />

v.rare (0); süSch (Haslach), nöSch (<strong>Baden</strong>-B),<br />

SJu, Ml, Bo (Konstanz), SFW, FrJu, O<br />

(Heidelberg), Sp?, Rh-Mn-T, Eif<br />

Arthonia endlicheri (Garov.) Oxner (A. lobata<br />

(Flörke) Massal.)<br />

In hilly, rather warm, mild winter sites on rain<br />

sheltered overhanging and vertical surfaces <strong>of</strong><br />

silicate rocks (e.g. maritime boulders), in the<br />

region like A. insulata (↑), yet probably on<br />

warmer habitats, <strong>of</strong>ten on hard rock –<br />

s’mieur(subatl)-med – v.rare (0); süSch<br />

(Wieladingen, Kinzigtal), O (Heidelberg), MRh-<br />

Ts (Lorch), Eif<br />

Arthonia fuliginosa (Turner & Borrer) Flotow<br />

Penetrating into montane, high rainfall, oceanic<br />

influenced sites in the interior thinned out<br />

spruce-fir and spruce-beech forests on spruce-fir<br />

on moderately well lighted, very humid, mild to<br />

cool habitats, preferring old near natural stands,<br />

dying out in lower sites, r.acidoph., r.ombroph.,<br />

anitroph., e.g. in forests with Lobarion-fir or in<br />

the Parmelion perl. – mieur-subatl-med(subatl),<br />

oc – v.rare (0);Ne(Trillfingen, probably +) Fr +,<br />

Al, Ml<br />

Arthonia galactites (DC.) Duf.<br />

In warm summer and rather mild winter, hilly<br />

sites in thinned out forests, especially pasture<br />

forests and on ± free standing deciduous trees,<br />

preferring smooth bark, most frequent on poplar,<br />

subneutroph., m.-r.photoph., r.xeroph., anitroph.,<br />

e.g. in pioneer stages <strong>of</strong> the Xanthorion –<br />

s’mieur(atl)-med – v.rare, also easily overlooked<br />

(0); süRh, nöRh (around Karlsruhe)<br />

Arthonia helvola (Nyl.) Nyl.<br />

83


In the hilly and submontane zone on smooth to<br />

flat-cracked bark <strong>of</strong> deciduous and conifer trees<br />

in forests, e.g. alder-ash forests in mild winter<br />

sites, probably r.acidoph., (r.)v.hygroph.,<br />

anitroph. – s’bor-mieur – v.rare (0); O<br />

(Heidelberg), Ml (Frauental in Zug)<br />

Arthonia insulata (B. de Lesd.) Redinger<br />

In hilly, mild winter places on rain sheltered<br />

overhangs, on rocks and boulders <strong>of</strong> silicate<br />

rock, on mild- to cool oceanic, very humid, r.v.light-poor<br />

habitats, e.g. on maritime boulders,<br />

r.acidoph., anombroph., anitroph., in a<br />

community <strong>of</strong> the Chrysotrichetalia chlor. –<br />

s’mieur-atl-smed – v.rare (0); O (Heidelberg)<br />

Arthonia lapidicola (Taylor) Branth & Rostrup<br />

(Allarthonia l. (Taylor) Zahlbr.)<br />

Up into the alpine zone above all on lime-rich<br />

rock, but also on lime impregnated silicate rock,<br />

frequent on rocks lying on soil, rarer on boulders,<br />

cliffs, also tiles, walls, basiph.-subneutroph.,<br />

ombroph., r.xeroph., r.photoph., euryöke, but<br />

competitively weak pioneer – bor-smed – r.rare;<br />

probably wide-spread, but <strong>of</strong>ten overlooked,<br />

above all Rh, Hü, Ne, besides e.g. SJu, Ju, Mn,<br />

Rhön, Eif<br />

Arthonia leucopellaea (Ach.) Almq.<br />

In montane and above all high montane, high<br />

rainfall, rather oceanic places on very humid cool<br />

(to cold), r.(-v)light poor habitats above all on<br />

spruce and fir, rarer e.g. on beech or birch, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

in high valleys, basins, r.(-v)acidoph.,<br />

r.anombroph., anitroph., Char. Lecanactidetum<br />

ab., usually with Thelotrema – s’bor(atl)-zentr-<br />

mo – rare (3); Sch, Vog, Al, besides BayW<br />

Arthonia mediella Nyl.<br />

In montane to high montane sites in near natural<br />

spruce-beech and spruce-fir forests on spruce and<br />

fir, more rarely on deciduous trees or on wood,<br />

on r.shaded, cool to cold, very humid habitats,<br />

r.-v.acidoph., anitroph. – bor-mieur-mo – rare;<br />

süSch, Fr (probably +), Th<br />

Arthonia medusula (Pers.) Nyl<br />

In hilly, rather warm to warm, mild winter sites<br />

on old oak, rarely other deciduous trees, above<br />

all in river-pastures (Stellario-Carpinetum,<br />

Querco, Ulmetum), probably like A. pruinata (↑)<br />

– zentr-smed – v.rare +; Mrh (Lorchhausen), SJu<br />

(Liestal)<br />

Arthonia muscigena Th.Fr. (A. leucodontis<br />

(Döbb. & Poelt) Coppins, Bryostigma l. Döbb &<br />

Poelt)<br />

In hilly to montane sites on mostly smooth,<br />

subneutral bark or free-standing deciduous trees<br />

(e.g. ash, walnut, Norway maple), on branches <strong>of</strong><br />

elder, also over mosses, also in open forests,<br />

subneutroph., r.photoph., anitroph., in the<br />

Lecanorion subfuscae – mieur-smed – r.rare ?;<br />

e.g. süRh, süHü-HRh, Ne, Ju, SJu, Sch, Al<br />

Arthonia patellulata Nyl. (Allarthonia p. (Nyl.)<br />

Zahlbr.)<br />

Up into the montane zone on smooth bark <strong>of</strong><br />

deciduous trees, almost only on Populus tremula,<br />

subneutrophytic pioneer – bor-mieur(-med) –<br />

v.rare, probably also overlooked; nöRh, Fr, Al<br />

Arthonia pruinata (Pers.) A.L.Sm. (A. impolita<br />

(H<strong>of</strong>fm.) Borrer)<br />

In hilly, mild winter sites in deciduous forests<br />

almost only on older oak on deep-cracked bark,<br />

like Lecanactis amyl. (↑), Char. Arthonietum<br />

pruinatae (e.g. with Lecanactis amyl.,<br />

Chrysothrix cand., probably also A. byssacea) –<br />

mieur-atl-med – v.rare (0); süHü, nöRh, Rh-Mn-<br />

T +, MRh-Ts, ?Eif<br />

Arthonia punctiformis Ach.<br />

Up into the high montane zone on smooth bark<br />

<strong>of</strong> deciduous trees, very rarely on conifers, above<br />

all on thinner twigs <strong>of</strong> young stems, disappearing<br />

from cracked bark, competitively weak pioneer<br />

lichen, above all on ash, mostly on moderate to<br />

rather light-rich habitats, subneutroph.-<br />

r.acidoph., ombroph., anitroph., in the<br />

Lecanorion subf., also in the Graphidion, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

with Arthopyrenia punctif. – s’bor-med – r.rare<br />

(3); above all Sch, Vog, almost lacking in drywarm<br />

regions<br />

Arthonia radiata (Pers.) Ach.<br />

Up to the tree-line on smooth to slightly cracked<br />

bark (i.e. smooth paths ) <strong>of</strong> deciduous trees and<br />

spruce, preferably on ash, elder, beech, Sorbus,<br />

above all on young stems and on branches, in the<br />

interior shady forest as well as on free-standing<br />

trees, with regard to climate euryöke species,<br />

high point on subneutral and moderately acid<br />

bark on rather to very humid habitats,<br />

subneutroph.-r.acidoph., r.(v.)skioph.-r.photoph.,<br />

m.-r.ombroph., a-(m.)nitroph., also still in rather<br />

epiphyte-poor regions, Char. Graphidetalia –<br />

(s’)bor-med – moderately frequent; widespread<br />

84


in the region, yet lacking in regions <strong>of</strong> strong air<br />

pollution<br />

Arthonia reniformis (Pers.) Nyl.<br />

Up into submontane sites on smooth bark<br />

deciduous trees, above all on the trunk <strong>of</strong> elder,<br />

rarer on beech, hazel-bush etc., similar to<br />

Strigula glabra (↑) – mieur-(zentr)-med – v.rare<br />

(0), very easily overlooked; süSch. O, Fr<br />

Arthonia spadicea Leighton<br />

In the hilly and submontane, more rarely in the<br />

montane zone, on bark on the trunk and above all<br />

on the base <strong>of</strong> the trunk <strong>of</strong> deciduous and conifer<br />

trees, <strong>of</strong>ten on somewhat rotting, on rain<br />

moistened basal bark on oak, in the interior <strong>of</strong><br />

forests, e.g. oak-hornbeam forests, m.-r.acidoph.,<br />

r.-v.hygroph., r.anombroph., r.skioph., anitroph.,<br />

r.toxitol., in the Graphidion, also in contact with<br />

Calicion-community – s’bor-smed-mo – r.rare;<br />

e.g. süRh, Hü, HRh, Sch (Tieflagen), Ne, SFW,<br />

SJu, Ju, Av, O, Rh-Mn-T, Th<br />

Arthonia stellaris Krempelh.<br />

In hilly and submontane, rarely montane sites in<br />

mild winter, oceanic influenced regions on<br />

smooth bark trunks <strong>of</strong> deciduous and spruce<br />

forests (e.g. spruce-beech forests) on very humid,<br />

moderately light-rich, mild (to cool) oceanic<br />

habitats, m.-r.acidoph., anitroph., in the<br />

Graphidion – mieur(atl)-smed(atl), oc – v.rare<br />

(0); Sch (<strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Baden</strong>, Haslach)<br />

Arthonia vinosa Leighton (A. lurida auct.)<br />

Above all in the montane zone on deciduous and<br />

conifer trees, on (<strong>of</strong>ten also somewhat decaying)<br />

bark and on wood <strong>of</strong> ‘debarked’ trees,<br />

predominantly on fir, spruce and oak, especially<br />

on the central trunk and on the base <strong>of</strong> the trunk<br />

o older trees in closed near natural forests,<br />

r.-v.acidoph., anitroph., r.-v.hygroph., m.r.anombroph.,<br />

anitroph., in the Calicion vir. in<br />

very species poor stands, Char. Arthonietum vin.,<br />

rare in the Opegraphetum verm. – s’bor-smed(med)<br />

– rare; above all Sch, Vog, Sp, Al,<br />

additionally SFW, Ne, nöRh, Rh-Mn-T, Mn, Fr,<br />

Ju, O, Ts, He, ThW, Eif<br />

Arthonia Zwackhii Sandst.<br />

In hilly, mild winter sites in the interior <strong>of</strong> cool<br />

forests, e.g. oak-hornbeam forests, on smooth,<br />

moderate to rather base-rich bark <strong>of</strong> deciduous<br />

trees, above all hornbeam, ash; m.acidoph., in the<br />

community <strong>of</strong> Graphidion – mieur-atl-smed(atl)<br />

– v.rare (0); nöRh (Karlsruhe)<br />

LIT.: COPPINS 1989, COPPINS & JAMES 1978, 1979, PURVIS<br />

ET AL. 1992, REDINGER 1937<br />

Arthopyrenia Massal.<br />

(Keys incl. Acrocordia, Anisomeridium, Strigula)<br />

Introduction<br />

The Arthopyrenia-species are crustose lichens<br />

with generally indefinite, thallus scarcely set<strong>of</strong>f<br />

from the substrate by color, small, hemispherical<br />

projecting perithecia with black top and mostly<br />

two to six-celled spores in asci with <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

conspicuously regenerated ends. Many species<br />

<strong>of</strong> the genus are not lichens. In the case <strong>of</strong> a few<br />

species it questionable whether they are found to<br />

be constantly lichenized. The symbionts <strong>of</strong> the<br />

lichenized species belong to the genus<br />

Trentepohlia. The genus is still insufficiently<br />

known, the species have been little observed.<br />

The Arthopyrenias occur as a rule as first<br />

residents on smooth bark <strong>of</strong> branches and young<br />

stems <strong>of</strong> deciduous trees, especially on hazel,<br />

mountain ash, mulberry, cherry, willow, popular,<br />

birch and ash. They prefer humid habitats as e.g.<br />

stream meadows.<br />

A. lapponina, A. punctiformis, A. rhyponta,<br />

are distributed over the greater part <strong>of</strong> Europe,<br />

somewhat less wide is A. cerasi, while A.<br />

antecellens, A. fraxini, A. grisea and A.<br />

cinereopruinosa from southern Europe to<br />

southern Scandinavia, recently with the high<br />

point in the west.<br />

Genus Characteristics and Determination<br />

Thallus indefinite, in the tree bark, whose upper<br />

surface is colored ± whitish to pale brown, rarely<br />

blackish, when fresh sometimes rose, with<br />

Trentepohlia-algae, many species not lichenized.<br />

Per. rounded to elliptical in aspect, with black<br />

top. Exc. commonly colorless, from the top side<br />

appearing covered over by a dark ro<strong>of</strong>-like<br />

protruding involucre, that incorporates the tree<br />

bark cells. Pseudoparaphyses branched and<br />

reticulate, rarely lacking; sometimes with<br />

downwards growing periphysoids. Asci pear<br />

shaped, clavate with regenerating ends, rarely<br />

cylindric, I-, fissitunicate. Sp. elongate to<br />

85


fusiform or clavate, with mostly 1-3 cross-septa,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten shrunken and asymmetrical (“slipper<br />

shaped”), <strong>of</strong>ten with perispore. Pycnosp. egg<br />

shaped to elongate or filamentous. Ch-.<br />

The determination <strong>of</strong> Arthopyrenia species is<br />

difficult. All species <strong>of</strong> the key R-, Ch-.<br />

1 On clay soil. Per. sunken, light yellowish to<br />

brownish. Sp. 4-celled, 14-28 x 4-9 µm. Thallus<br />

thin, with protococcoid algae .<br />

Strigula sychnogonoides<br />

1! On limestone 2<br />

1* On bark or on mosses . 3<br />

2 Sp. 12-19 x 6-9 µm, 2-celled, with perispore, 1<br />

series in cylindrical ascus ( ). Paraph. rigid,<br />

permanent. Per. 0.6-0.8 mm, hemispherical<br />

projecting. Thallus indefinite to mostly scruffycracked,<br />

rose-gray, gray, greenish-gray, or<br />

brownish . Acrocordia conoidea<br />

(when per. 0.7-1.5, sp. 20-35 x 10-15 µm, invol.<br />

not finally protruding: Acrocordia salweyi)<br />

2* Sp. 18-24 x 4-5 µm, 2- to indefinitely 4-celled,<br />

without perispore, ± 2-series in clavate asci.<br />

Paraph. slimy. Per. -0.2 mm. Thallus whitish,<br />

rose-gray, reddish-brown, thin. SJu, FrJu<br />

Pyrenocollema saxicola<br />

(Massal.) Coppins<br />

3 Sp. with (3)5-7 cross-septa. On bark or mosses<br />

. 4<br />

3* Sp. with at best 3 cross-septa. On bark 6<br />

4 Paraph. mostly unbranched, definite. Asci ±<br />

cylindric. Sp. 1- or ± 2 series in the asci. With<br />

Trentepohlia-algae. Macroconidia 6-8 celled . 5<br />

4* Paraph. richly branched or soon slimy and<br />

scarcely recognizable. Asci ventricose. Sp. ± 2<br />

series to irregularly in the asci. With or without<br />

contingent algae. Thallus indefinite, rarely dark.<br />

Sp. 12-23(26) x 4-8 µm, 4-6(8) celled. Per. -0.2<br />

mm. Hym. (asci) I+ red-brown. To A. grisea ?<br />

A. personii<br />

5 Sp. 20-27 x 3-5 µm, with 6-7 septa. Per. usually<br />

elliptic to elongate, -0.6 mm. Thallus very thin,<br />

whitish. Often with macroconidia in pycn. <strong>of</strong><br />

similar size as the per. Macroconidia 20-30 x 3-<br />

4.5 µm, rounded at the ends. On bark<br />

.Strigula glabra<br />

5* Sp. 25-35 x 5-8 µm, with (5)6-7(9) septa,<br />

fusiform. Per. rounded, -0.45 mm, usually<br />

moderately convex, half sunken, at first covered<br />

with a thin gray thallus layer, later black. Thallus<br />

thin, gray. Pycn. -0.1 mm. Macroconidia 20-30<br />

x 4-6 µm. On mosses and bark Strigula stigmatella<br />

6 Sp. with ± thicker, finely warty perispore (only in<br />

the case definitely stronger enlarging) and thick<br />

septum, 2-celled, 15-27(30 ) x 8-13 µm, not<br />

shrunken at the septum, with rounded ends, 1<br />

series ( ). Ascus cylindric, paraph. rigid erect.<br />

Per. mostly 0.5-1 mm, hemispherical projecting<br />

to almost sunken. Thallus whitish to indefinite<br />

(if sp. 11-16 x 5.5-9 µm, per. 0.3-0.6 mm:<br />

Acrocordia cavata) Acrocordia gemmata<br />

6* Sp. without finely warty perispore, with thin<br />

septa, 1- to ± 2 series or irregular. Asci sub-<br />

cylindric to bulging. Per. -0.5 mm . 7<br />

7 Sp. at least 25 µm long 8<br />

7* Sp. shorter . 9<br />

8 Sp. 30-47 x 7-10 µm, 2-celled, with age because<br />

<strong>of</strong> two additional septa appearing 4-celled, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

shrunken at the septa, slightly pointed, to (4, 6) 8<br />

in slightly clavate asci, (1-)2 series. Paraph.<br />

rigid, branched. Per. -0.5 mm. Not lichenized.<br />

. Anisomeridium macrocarpum<br />

(Körber) V.Wirth<br />

8* Sp. 25-40 x 8-13 µm, 2-celled, with age <strong>of</strong>ten 4celled<br />

and browned, rounded on the ends,<br />

without perispore, ± 2 series to unordered in<br />

bulging-clavate asci. Per. -0.3(0.4) mm. Par.<br />

richly branched. Thallus indefinite, probably not<br />

lichenized . A. antecellens<br />

9 Thallus indefinite or whitish to greenish, with<br />

pointed, conical black, -0.2 mm high, 0.1-0.15<br />

mm thick pycn. with bent pycnosp. extruded in<br />

large packets in gelatin-like substance (single<br />

3.5-4.5 x 1.8-2 µm). Per. rare, -0,25 µm ±<br />

sunken to sessile. Sp. 2(4) celled, 12-23 x 3-5<br />

µm, cells strongly unequal, one up to twice as<br />

long as the other<br />

Anisomeridium nyssaegenum<br />

9* Thallus without conical pycn 10<br />

10 Thallus commonly with 0.1 mm black pycn.<br />

Macroconidia 13-20 x 3-6 µm, 4-celled, with<br />

rounded ends, ± cylindrical. Paraph. mostly<br />

unbranched. Per. 0.3-0.5 mm. Sp. 15-21 x 4-6.5<br />

µm, 4-celled, not shrunken at the septa, fusiform.<br />

Thallus whitish to indefinite, under the bark .<br />

Strigula affinis<br />

10* Thallus without 4-celled conidia. Paraph<br />

branched 11<br />

11 Sp. diagonally in one series to almost 2 series,<br />

with one septum, central or somewhat displaced<br />

to one end, <strong>of</strong>ten with additional apparent<br />

(Pseudo-) septa, <strong>of</strong>ten with somewhat pointed<br />

ends, 10-16 x 4-7 µm. Asci almost cylindric.<br />

Per. 0.2-0.4(0.5) mm. Thallus thin, gray-white.<br />

Pycn. punctiform, pycnosp. 1-1.5 µm, spherical<br />

or 2.5-4 x 1.8-2.7 µm Anisomeridium biforme<br />

11* Sp. ± 2 series to irregularly in the asci, with true<br />

septa. Asci subcylindrical, clavate to bulging. 12<br />

12 On the thallus <strong>of</strong> Graphis scripta, producing<br />

flecks ca. -5 mm in size. Per. numerous, ca. 0.1<br />

mm. Sp. 13-19 x 3-5 µm, 2-celled, a few old ones<br />

to 4-celled, cells usually unequal .<br />

A. microspila Körber<br />

(syn. Stigmidium microspilum (Körber) D.<br />

Hawksw.)<br />

12* Not on Graphis scripta 13<br />

13 Sp. soon 4-celled. Hym. I-. Probably not<br />

lichenized 14<br />

86


13* Sp. 2 celled, only a few old sp. 4-celled (Caution:<br />

oil droplets may simulate 4-cell appearance,<br />

especially in A. punctiformis). Hym. I- . 16<br />

14 Per. usually elliptical, -0.4(0.5) x 0.2 mm. Wall<br />

brown, K+ greenish. Sp. 15-22 x 5-7 µm (with<br />

definite -2 µm thick perispore), clavate, ±<br />

shrunken at the septa. Ascus subcylindricalclavate.<br />

Above all on Prunus A. cerasi<br />

14* Per. rounded, -0.3 mm. Wall not K+ green.<br />

Scarcely on Prunus 15<br />

15 Thallus gray- to brown-black. Sp. 14-20 x 4.5-6<br />

µm, with definite perispore. Per. usually dull.<br />

Ascus clavate A. rhyponta<br />

15* Thallus ± lacking or implied by a light fleck. Sp.<br />

15-22 x 5-7 µm. Mostly on birch. Closely<br />

related to A. punctiformis . A. grisea<br />

16 Sp. with at least 2 µm thick perispore (in K).<br />

Per. wall greenish in K. Probably not lichenized,<br />

but sometimes associated with single algae . 16*<br />

16* Sp. without perispore <strong>of</strong> envelop -1.5 µm thick<br />

(in K) . 17<br />

17 Young per. sometimes whitish (by covering<br />

periderm <strong>of</strong> the tree bark), later black, -0.4 mm.<br />

Sp. 15-22 x 5-8 µm, in the center <strong>of</strong> the cells<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten somewhat indented (“fitted to the waist”).<br />

Paraph. <strong>of</strong>ten with very definite, elongate shining<br />

oil incorporated bodies (in the case <strong>of</strong> A.<br />

lapponina rarer and less definite), -1.5 µm thick.<br />

Thallus producing light gray to yellowish flecks<br />

A. cinereopruinosa<br />

17* Per. all black, -0.5(0.6) mm. Sp. 2-celled (also 4celled<br />

with age) 13-24 x 5.5-9 µm, the cells<br />

commonly unequal in size, not indented in the<br />

center <strong>of</strong> the cells not “fitted to the waist”(or at<br />

best implied in one cell). Paraph. 1.5-2 µm thick.<br />

Thallus indefinite A. lapponina<br />

18 Thallus gray- to brown-black. Sp. 2-celled,<br />

(14)18-23 x 5-6 µm. Per. -0.25 mm, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

somewhat shiny. Asci bulging-sack like. Hym.<br />

I- (dark layered A. persoonii I+ red-brown). “A.<br />

laburni Arnold” . A. punctiformis<br />

18* Thallus ± lacking or implied by a light (rarely<br />

darker) fleck . 19<br />

19 Paraph. lacking or very soon deliquescing. Per. -<br />

0.3 mm, black, per. wall brownish in K. Asci 33-<br />

45 x 14-20 µm. Sp. (12-)14- 17(21) x 4-4.5 µm,<br />

without perispore, shrunken at the septum, each<br />

cell with 2 oil droplets, one or both cells indented<br />

(waist-like). Thallus indefinite to implied by<br />

mostly light flecks. Commonly lichenized, with<br />

Trentepohlia. Above all on hazel. In the region,<br />

at this time, insufficiently known, ecology similar<br />

to A. punctif., e.g. Sch A. salicis Massal.<br />

19* Paraph. occurring . 20<br />

20 Sp. “waist-like” in the center, 14-22 x 5-7 µm, 2celled,<br />

at best a few <strong>of</strong> the old 4-celled, with<br />

definite, ca. 2 µm thick perispore. Per. wall<br />

greenish in K. Paraph. mostly rather distinct.<br />

Young per. commonly appearing light gray. Asci<br />

clavate. Thallus light gray to yellowish-white<br />

A. cinereopruinosa (17)<br />

20* Sp. “not waist-like” in the center <strong>of</strong> the cells, 2celled,<br />

old ones even 4-celled. Perispore thin<br />

(1.5 µm). Per. wall brownish in K. Per. black.<br />

Thallus indefinite to implied by mostly light<br />

flecks . 21<br />

21 Per. 0.25-0.5 mm (<strong>of</strong>ten relatively crowded). Sp.<br />

17-26 x 4.7 µm, ± shrunken at the septa. Cells<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten unequal. Asci 60-90 x 16-25 µm, clavate<br />

. A. fraxini<br />

21* Per. -0.25 mm. Sp. 15-22 x 4-5 µm, 2-celled<br />

(with equal size cells), simulating 4-celled<br />

appearance by oil droplets, slightly shrunken at<br />

the septum. Perispore up to 1 µm thick. Asci 40-<br />

55 x 15-22 µm, bulging sack-like .<br />

A. punctiformis<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Arthopyrenia antecellens (Nyl.) Arnold<br />

Up to high montane sites, especially in mild<br />

winter regions, on smooth, thin bark <strong>of</strong><br />

deciduous, rarely conifer trees, e.g. Corylus,<br />

avoiding base-rich bark, m.-r.acidoph,<br />

m.-r.photoph., anitroph. – mieur – rare; Eif, SJu,<br />

Vog, PfW, O<br />

Arthopyrenia cerasi (Schrader) Massal.<br />

Up to the montane zone on smooth, thin bark<br />

with less water capacity, above all on young<br />

branches, almost only on Prunus (mostly cherry<br />

trees), rarely on hazel, weakly competitive<br />

pioneer lichen, m.-r.acidoph. – mieur-med –<br />

v.rare (?) throughout the entire region, yet<br />

collections mostly old<br />

Arthopyrenia cinereopruinosa (Schaerer)<br />

Massal. (A. pinicola (Hepp) Massal.)<br />

Up to the montane zone on smooth and<br />

flat-cracked bark <strong>of</strong> deciduous trees, especially<br />

on popular (above all aspen) and ash, rarer on<br />

oak, mostly on young stems or on branches in the<br />

forest, especially ash forests, etc. (Alno-Padion)<br />

in valleys and stream pastures, above all in<br />

undisturbed old forests, m.(r.)acidoph.<br />

-subneutroph., m.photoph., r.-s.hygroph.,<br />

anitroph., in initial stages <strong>of</strong> the Graphidion-<br />

community -- mieur-subatl-med -- r.rare (2);<br />

Sch, süRh, nöRh, Ne, Ju, SJu, Bo, O, Eif, Al<br />

Arthopyrenia fraxini Massal<br />

Like A. punctiformis, on smooth bark <strong>of</strong> trees,<br />

especially on Fraxinus – s’bor-med – at this time<br />

insufficiently known, Rh, Sch<br />

87


Arthopyrenia grisea (Schleicher ex Schaerer)<br />

Körber<br />

On thin, smooth bark <strong>of</strong> lower water capacity,<br />

predominantly on birch, facultatively lichenized,<br />

r.(v.)acidoph. – mieur – erratically collected<br />

from Bo, Al, Rh-Mn-T<br />

Arthopyrenia lapponina Anzi (A. fallax (Nyl.)<br />

Arnold)<br />

Up into high montane sites on smooth, thin bark<br />

with lower water capacity, on branches and<br />

young stems <strong>of</strong> deciduous trees and shrubs (e.g.<br />

hazel, oak, ash, hawthorn, Sorbus), rarely on<br />

conifers, e.g. Pinus-twigs, in forests as well as<br />

free-standing trees, weakly competitive pioneer<br />

lichen, facultatively lichenized, r.-m.acidoph.<br />

(subneutroph.) – bor-smed – scattered, (?); Sch,<br />

Vog, süHü-HRh, süRh, Ne, O, Eif, SJu, Al<br />

Arthopyrenia persoonii auct. (to A. grisea ?, A.<br />

pluriseptata auct.)<br />

Probably rather like A. punctiformis (↑), but<br />

avoiding cooler sites, on smooth bark deciduous<br />

trees -- mieur-med – e.g. süSch<br />

Arthopyrenia punctiformis (Pers.) Massal.<br />

Up into the high montane zone on smooth, thin<br />

bark, on almost all species <strong>of</strong> deciduous trees and<br />

shrubs, predominantly on young branches <strong>of</strong> ash,<br />

Sorbus, oak, hazel, in forests and in freer sites<br />

(then usually on humid sites), weakly competitive<br />

pioneer, r.acidoph.-subneutroph., r.photoph.,<br />

climate r.euryök, on algae-covered branches<br />

(eutrophic above in intensively agricultural<br />

regions, clustered spaces) vanishing, e.g. with<br />

Lecanora carpinea in the Lecanorion subf., also<br />

in the stages <strong>of</strong> dark Graphidion – bor-med –<br />

r.rare (-m.frequent); distributed through the<br />

entire region, regionally frequent (e.g. süSch.),<br />

rarer in dry-warm regions<br />

Arthopyrenia rhyponta (Ach.) Massal.<br />

On subneutral and m.acid, smooth bark <strong>of</strong><br />

deciduous trees, especially on branches <strong>of</strong><br />

popular, besides e.g. on hornbeam, oak, Norway<br />

maple, walnut – bor-med – rare (?); süRh-süHü,<br />

O, nöRh, SJu, Al, only individually found<br />

LIT.: COPPINS 1988, KEISSLER 1936-37, VAINIO 1921<br />

Arthothelium Massal.<br />

Introduction<br />

The Arthothelium-species have a thin crustose<br />

thallus and sunken, rounded to usually fleck form<br />

irregular or branched, not bordered, blackish<br />

apothecia. They call to mind Arthonia-species,<br />

differing however in having muriform multicellular<br />

spores. The principally tropic distributed<br />

genus has ca. 10 species in Europe and two<br />

species in Germany. Both indigenous species<br />

grow predominantly on the smooth bark <strong>of</strong><br />

hornbeam and oak in humid forests, e.g. <strong>of</strong>ten in<br />

the hardwood meadow <strong>of</strong> the river and in brook<br />

bordering stands. In the north A. ruanum thrusts<br />

up into the border o the oak area in southern<br />

Scandinavia, while the apparently rarer A.<br />

spectabile reaches only the more north German<br />

lowlands. Both have a subatlantic area. They<br />

are rare in southern Europe and on the British<br />

Isles<br />

Genus Characteristics and Determination<br />

Very like Arthonia, distinguished by the<br />

muriform divided, egg-shaped to ellipsoidal<br />

spores. The indigenous species are lichenized<br />

(Trentepohlia) and distinguished by irregularly<br />

bordered (“fleck-form”), sunken, flat,<br />

brown-black to black, nonpruinose ap.<br />

1 Sp. 26-36 x 12-15µm, with 5-7 cross septae;<br />

mostly cross-celled with at least one long septum.<br />

Hym. red-brown throughout. Ap. -2 mm, black<br />

to dark brown, rounded, angular to lobed.<br />

Thallus well developed, whitish, pale greenish<br />

A. spectabile<br />

1* Sp. 15-26 x 7-11 µm, with 5-7 cross-septa; (2)3-7<br />

cross-cells with at least one long septum. Hym.<br />

red-brown, epihym. dark brown. Ap. irregularly<br />

bordered, fleck-form, -2 mm, not raised. Thallus<br />

olive, olive- brown to yellowish olive or rarely<br />

whitish(gray) A. ruanum<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Arthothelium ruanum (Massal.) Körber<br />

(A. ruanideum (Nyl.) Arnold, A. dispersum<br />

auct.)<br />

Up into the submontane sites on smooth to<br />

flat-cracked bark <strong>of</strong> deciduous trees, above all on<br />

lower and central trunk region <strong>of</strong> hornbeam,<br />

hazel or ash, in cool deciduous forests and<br />

undergrowth on humid, rather light poor<br />

habitats, especially in oak-hornbeam and ash<br />

88


forests. (Pruno-Fraxinetum), m.acidoph.,<br />

r.ombroph., anitroph., Char Graphidion, above<br />

all Opegraphetum ruf., Pyrenuletum nit.,<br />

Graphidetum – mieur-subatl-med-mo – r.rare-<br />

m.frequent (3); scattered in SW-Germany in<br />

correspondingly high sites, today probably<br />

clearly rarer, m.-r.toxitol.<br />

Arthothelium spectabile Flotow ex Massal.<br />

In mild winter hilly, rarely submontane sites on<br />

smooth to flat-cracked bark <strong>of</strong> deciduous trees<br />

(preferably hornbeam or ash) in meadow forests<br />

and brook-side ash stands (above all in cool oak-<br />

hornbeam-, alder-ash forests), on humid, rather<br />

light poor habitats, especially in larger, little<br />

disturbed forests, m.acidoph., r.ombroph.,<br />

anitroph., in the Opegraphetum ruf., Pyrenuletum<br />

nit. – mieur-subatl-smed – v.rare (1); süRh,<br />

süHü-HRh, SJu, nöRh, o, Av<br />

LIT.: COPPINS & JAMES 1979, REDINGER 1937<br />

Arthrorhaphis Th.Fr.<br />

Introduction<br />

The thallus <strong>of</strong> Arthrorhaphis is purely crustose to<br />

squamulose and commonly colored citronyellow.<br />

In the case <strong>of</strong> lichen dwelling species it<br />

is indefinite or over lying the host tissue. The<br />

apothecia are black, the spores cross septate and<br />

needle-like to bacillar. Most <strong>of</strong> the species live<br />

at first as parasites on the thallus <strong>of</strong> lichens, as on<br />

Baeomyces-species, however later mostly<br />

standing alone.<br />

Of the perhaps nine species distributed<br />

principally in the temperate and cold zones, four<br />

occur in Germany and two to three in the region.<br />

They live on acid mineral soils in lacunae <strong>of</strong> thin<br />

turfs, on cool slopes and road sides, A. citrinella<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten also on mosses and silicate rocks. While A.<br />

grisea lives upon Baeomyces, A. citrinella and<br />

A. alpina later become autonomous. They are<br />

distributed principally in north and central<br />

Europe.<br />

Genus Characteristics and Determination<br />

Thallus crustose, granular, warty or squamulose,<br />

usually citron-yellow to yellow greenish,<br />

sometimes disintegrating sorediate, or living in<br />

the host lichen and appearing ± gray to graygreen,<br />

with coccoid green algae. Ap. black,<br />

lecideine, with hollowed out to convex disks.<br />

Exc. weakly developed, dark. Hyp. colorless to<br />

pigmented. Hym. <strong>of</strong>ten with oil droplets, I not<br />

blue. Epihym. blackish to greenish. Paraphyses<br />

thin, sparsely branched and reticulate bound, not<br />

or weakly thickened above. Asci clavate, K/I-,<br />

thin-walled, only weakly thickened above. Sp. 4-<br />

to many celled, cross-septate, fusiform to needle-<br />

like. Ch: yellow species with Rhizocarpic acid.<br />

1 Thallus citron-yellow to yellow-green, with<br />

Rhizocarpic acid. Sp. 8-12 celled 2<br />

1* Thallus gray-greenish, on Baeomyces species<br />

with Stictic acid, ± Norstictic acid, darker than<br />

the host thallus and changing it. Ap. at first <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

projecting top-like, first with a deep sunken, later<br />

with a flattened disk, usually with a permanent<br />

thick margin, -0.5 mm, ± sessile. Epihym.<br />

brownish. Hym. inspersed. Sp. 8- up to 16 cells,<br />

20-70 x 2.5-3.5 µm A. grisea<br />

2 Thallus at least partially <strong>of</strong> compact areoles 3<br />

2* Thallus extensively sorediate 4<br />

3 In the high mountains, usually over weakly Cainfluenced<br />

substrate. Thallus with clearly set <strong>of</strong>f<br />

white to weakly yellowish medulla with<br />

numerous Ca-oxalate crystals (insoluble in<br />

acetone), <strong>of</strong> scattered to coalescing, mostly<br />

convex areoles, which sometimes also break out<br />

crater-form (if areoles elongated at the margin,<br />

see Catolechia). Ap. <strong>of</strong>ten lacking, epihym.<br />

black-brown to blue-green. Sp. (20)25-45(60) x<br />

3-4.5 µm, over one another (multi-storey) in the<br />

ascus. * A. alpina<br />

3* Widely distributed, on acid substrate. Thallus<br />

without white, Ca-oxalate rich medulla (if<br />

crystals occur, then acetone soluble). Areoles flat<br />

to high convex and then <strong>of</strong>ten hollow within, see<br />

relatively rare non-sorediate form <strong>of</strong><br />

A. citrinella (4)<br />

4 In the high mountains over Ca-influenced<br />

substrate. Areoles breaking out crater-form or<br />

thallus entirely sorediate on whitish Ca-oxalate<br />

under layer (Crystals not soluble in acetone)<br />

A. alpina (3)<br />

4* Widely distributed on acid substrates. Thallus <strong>of</strong><br />

sorediate erupting areoles or entirely sorediate,<br />

not on whitish Ca-oxalate under layer, without<br />

crystals or crystals soluble in acetone, <strong>of</strong>ten at<br />

first parasitising Baeomyces, later autonomous.<br />

Ap. soon flat, margined or not, -1 mm. Sp. 8-12<br />

celled, (45)55-80(100) x 2.5-3.5 µm, beside one<br />

another in the ascus. * A. citrinella<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Arthrorhaphis alpina (Schaerer) R.Sant.<br />

(Bacidia flavovirescens v. alpina (Schaerer)<br />

A.L.Sm.)<br />

89


In high montane-alpine sites, rarely lower, on<br />

open sites on cool, weakly calcareous soils –<br />

arct-mieur-alp – v.rare; Fr, Opf, Obay, Al<br />

Arthrorhaphis citrinella (Ach.) Poelt (Bacidia<br />

flavovirescens (Dickson) Anzi)<br />

From the submontane up into the alpine zone on<br />

naked soil, on soil dwelling mosses, mossy<br />

silicate rock, e.g. on road ways, maritime<br />

boulders, on shaded cliffs, <strong>of</strong>ten on or with<br />

Baeomyces rufus (especially over soil), usually<br />

on cool-humid or cool substrate habitats, in high<br />

precipitation sites <strong>of</strong>ten in lacunae <strong>of</strong> thin turfs<br />

on acid humus, sandy stony clay soils (Nardion),<br />

also on rather long snow-covered sites, pioneer<br />

in road grades, r.-e.acidoph., r.hygroph.,<br />

substrate hygroph., r.skioph., s.photoph.,<br />

anitroph., in the Lecideetum ulig., in moss<br />

community., Leproloma membran. stands – arctmieur<br />

– r.rare (3); Sch, Vog, BayW, RhSch,<br />

ThW, Erz, Hz, besides rare: Pf, O, He (Rhön,<br />

Meissner), Bo, Fr, Al<br />

Arthrorhaphis grisea Th.Fr. (Lahmia fueistigii<br />

Körber, Gongylia viridis A.L.Sm.)<br />

In montane-high montane sites on Baeomyces<br />

rufus (↑) and (v.rare) placoph. – bor-mieur-mo<br />

– rare; süSch, O, Fr, BayW, ThW<br />

LIT.: OBERMAYER 1994, POELT 1961B, POELT & VÈZDA<br />

1977<br />

Arthrosporum Massal.<br />

(Determination ↑ Bacidia)<br />

Introduction<br />

A. populorum, the single species <strong>of</strong> the genus, is<br />

characterized by a crustose thallus, black<br />

apothecia with proper margin, sparsely branched<br />

paraphyses and four-celled, bean shaped curved,<br />

colorless spores. The lichen grows on mineralrich<br />

bark on free-standing trees from the central<br />

mediterranean region up to central Scandinavia.<br />

It is rare and declining.<br />

Genus Characteristics<br />

Thallus thin crustose, with coccoid green algae.<br />

Ap. black, with proper margin. Exc. ± purple.<br />

Hyp. almost colorless to slightly red-brown.<br />

Epihym. brown to slightly greenish or purple.<br />

Paraphyses sparsely branched, ends thickened<br />

with pigment layer<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Arthrosporum populorum Massal. (A. accline<br />

(Flotow ex Massal.) Massal., Bacidia acclinis<br />

(Flotow ex Massal.) Zahlbr., B. Populorum<br />

(Massal.) Trevisan)<br />

Up into the montane zone on light or free<br />

standing deciduous trees, predominantly on base<br />

rich bark, above all popular, walnut, oak, and<br />

willow, subneutroph. (-m.acidoph.),<br />

r.(-v.)photoph., a-/m.nitroph., e.g. in the<br />

Xanthorion, <strong>of</strong>ten with Caloplaca holoc. –<br />

s’bor-med-mo – rare (2); e.g. süHü, nöHü, nöRh,<br />

SJu, Ju, FrJu, Mfr, Ne, süSch, Ml, Th<br />

LIT.: HAFELLNER 1984* VAINIO 1922<br />

Aspicilia Massal.<br />

(Lecanora sect. Aspicilia, Key including<br />

Bellemerea, Eiglera, Hymenelia, Lobothallia,<br />

Megaspora, et al.)<br />

Introduction<br />

The Aspicilia-species are crustose lichens with<br />

mostly strongly developed, smooth, cracked or<br />

cracked-areolate, (in the case <strong>of</strong> nonindigenous<br />

species) sometimes marginally lobed, whitish,<br />

gray, green-gray or brownish thallus and sunken<br />

to depressed sessile apothecia with flat or<br />

concave, black or brown, disks surrounded by a<br />

margin. The thallus <strong>of</strong> many species grows<br />

relatively rapidly and <strong>of</strong>ten reaches a large<br />

diameter. In recent time several natural groups<br />

(once more) have been described as their own<br />

genera, thus Clauzadeana, Hymenelia,<br />

Koerberiella, Lobothallia and Pinacisca, from<br />

the former broad composite genus Aspicilia. A<br />

large part <strong>of</strong> the species remaining in Aspicilia,<br />

an always and yet heterogeneous genus are<br />

diagnostically difficult to characterize and<br />

taxonomically not yet satisfactorily clarified.<br />

Several discovered species may not be<br />

considered here.<br />

The Aspicilia-species are almost altogether<br />

rock-dwellers. A. calcarea, A. contorta, A.<br />

candida, A. moenium reside on carbonate rock,<br />

90


the remaining indigenous epilithic species<br />

commonly on lime-free rock. A. caesiocinerea<br />

tolerates dunging and <strong>of</strong>ten grows on bird roosts<br />

and on boulders in brooks. A. cinerea, A.<br />

gibbosa, A. recedens and A. simoensis are found<br />

mostly on light-rich sites on mineral-rich silicate<br />

rocks. A. aquatica lives amphibiously in cool,<br />

clear brooks, A. laevata above all on humid sites<br />

in valleys and forests.<br />

A. aquatica, A. cinerea and A. laevata are<br />

indigenous <strong>of</strong> the north upper central Europe up<br />

into the mountains <strong>of</strong> the mediterranean region.<br />

Also A. moenium might be distributed over the<br />

greater part <strong>of</strong> Europe, mostly on anthropogenic<br />

substrates. The area <strong>of</strong> A. simoensis and A.<br />

recedens culminates in central Scandinavia,<br />

stretching into moderately warm to cool sites <strong>of</strong><br />

the mediterranean regions; up into north<br />

Scandinavia reaching the area <strong>of</strong> A.<br />

caesiocinerea. The lime species A. calcarea and<br />

A. contorta are distributed over the greatest part<br />

<strong>of</strong> Europe (with the exception <strong>of</strong> the northern<br />

boreal zone and the arctic).<br />

Genus Characteristics and Determination<br />

Thallus crustose, weakly cracked to areolate,<br />

sometimes placoid, <strong>of</strong>ten very large, white, gray,<br />

greenish, brownish, sometimes isidiate or with<br />

soralia, with paraplectenchymatous upper cortex.<br />

Photobionts coccoid green algae. Ap.<br />

aspicilioid, sunken with concave to flat, black-<br />

brown to black disk and weakly developed to<br />

disappearing thalloid margin, rarely soon sessile<br />

and with typical thalloid margin. Exc. as a rule<br />

reduced, colorless, sometimes pruinose. Hyp.<br />

colorless or pale. Epihym. greenish to brown.<br />

Hym. high (<strong>of</strong>ten over 100 µm), I+ greenish to<br />

blue. Paraphyses simple to sparsely branched,<br />

but richly reticulate, above short celled and<br />

shrunken at the septa, ends attached. Asci<br />

cylindric to clavate, with tholus, K/I-, with thin<br />

K/I+ blue gelatin envelop. Sp. 1-delled,<br />

ellipsoidal to spherical. Pycnosp. short to<br />

(v.)long bacillar. Ch- or with Aspicilin,<br />

sometimes with Stictic acid, Norstictic acid, et al.<br />

lichen substances.<br />

1 On plant residue, mosses, bark, wood . 2<br />

1* On rock . 3<br />

2 Sp. 18-30 x 20-5 µm. Thallus clod-like areolate,<br />

gray-greenish, usually white pruinose;<br />

occasionally on dust impregnated wood, roots or<br />

the base <strong>of</strong> the trunk overflowing thallus <strong>of</strong> A.<br />

contorta (syn. A. lundensis (Fr.) Uloth), see 9<br />

2* Sp. 30-60 x 16-42 µm. Thallus warty-uneven,<br />

whitish to light gray. Ap. sunken in warts, ±<br />

concave, blackish, occasionally pruinose, with<br />

entire thalloid margin, <strong>of</strong>ten with implied thin,<br />

blackish proper margin, -1(1.5) mm. Ch-<br />

Megaspora verrucosa<br />

3 Thallus rounded, rosetted, clearly narrow-lobed<br />

(placoid) at the margin, brown- to white-gray,<br />

cracked areolate toward the center and <strong>of</strong>ten dark<br />

gray. Marginal lobes close together, uniting, ±<br />

pruinose. K- to K+ red. Ap. -1.5 mm, dark<br />

brown to blackish, numerous. Epihym. brown.<br />

Sp. 11-15 x 6-8 µm. On limestone, rarely<br />

mineral-rich eutrophic silicate rock. Norstictic<br />

acid, ± (Atranorin), rarely Stictic acid or Ch-<br />

Lobothallia radiosa<br />

3* Thallus not lobed at the margin, never K+ red . 4<br />

4 Thallus on lime-rich rock, mortar, concrete 5<br />

4* Thallus on lime-free or very weakly lime-<br />

containing silicate rock 10<br />

5 Thallus with dark brown to blackish soralia on<br />

the underside <strong>of</strong> scattered to thick standing<br />

curved squamules, gray, olive, brownish, white<br />

pruinose. Ap. rare, sunken, brown, pruinose.<br />

Ch- A. moenium<br />

5* Thallus without soralia, with ap . 6<br />

6 Hym. blue(-green) colored above, Ch-. V.rare<br />

mountain species 7<br />

6* Hym. not blue above 8<br />

7 Thallus bluish to gray-blue, intensively colored<br />

when moist, uniform, ± endolithic, the upper<br />

surface <strong>of</strong>ten as if finely hammered. Hym. blue<br />

throughout. Sp. 6-15 x 5-11 µm, rarely<br />

completely developed. Ap. black to dark bluegray,<br />

nonpruinose, soon marginless, <strong>of</strong>ten sunken<br />

in small thallus mounds, very small (0.2-0.4<br />

mm). Ascus without amyloid tholus<br />

Hymenelia coerulea<br />

(if thallus light gray, ap. <strong>of</strong>ten irregularly curved:<br />

H. homalomorpha (Nyl.) Poelt, alpine)<br />

7* Thallus pale ochre, gray-yellowish to dark, not<br />

bluish, very .thin, cracked. Epihym. blue(green).<br />

sp. ellipsoidal, 12-18 x 7-10 µm. Ap. black,<br />

rounded, -0.4 mm, concave, then flat. Ascus with<br />

amyloid tholus . Eiglera flavida<br />

8 Ap. brown-rose to yellowish-rose, oval or<br />

elongated or with irregular outline, concave, -0.5<br />

mm, sunken (into substrate), separated by a crack<br />

in the thallus. Epihym. colorless to pale brown.<br />

Thallus uniformly crustose, ± endolithic, graywhitish.<br />

Sp. ellipsoidal to spherical, 10-24 x 7-<br />

17 µm (if thallus definite, on moist rock, see H.<br />

lacustris, 16). Ch- . Hymenelia prevostii<br />

8* Ap. black, but occasionally whitish pruinose.<br />

Epihym. dark green. Sp. wide ellipsoidal to<br />

almost spherical, 20-30 x 15-25 µm, to (2-)4(6)<br />

per ascus. Difficult group, many forms are not<br />

91


eliably assigned (Pachyospora-group). R-,<br />

Aspicilin 9<br />

9 Thallus chalk white, upper surface <strong>of</strong>ten chalkymealy,<br />

rarely gray-white or slightly ochre,<br />

cracked or cracked areolate (± radially cracked at<br />

the thallus margin), not warty- or clod-like<br />

areolate, <strong>of</strong>ten with gray to dark greenish<br />

prothallus. Ap. black, not or slightly pruinose, ±<br />

sunken, with slightly raised thalloid margin, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

<strong>of</strong> a very irregular (almost lobed) form,<br />

coalescing, -1 mm. * . A. calcarea<br />

9* Thallus clod-like to areolate, gray to olive, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

± whitish pruinose, generally not with chalkymealy<br />

upper surface. Prothallus indefinite. Ap.<br />

mostly rounded, sunken to with a definitely<br />

raised, <strong>of</strong>ten radially striated thalloid margin, to<br />

usually 1-3 per areole. Very variable species. *;<br />

ssp. h<strong>of</strong>fmanniana: thallus gray to brown-gray,<br />

cracked areolate, areoles ± coalescing and<br />

angular, usually 1 ap. per areole: ssp. contorta:<br />

areoles above all on periphery <strong>of</strong> the thallus<br />

scattered and there ± convex, rounded, with<br />

rounded corners, white to gray, mostly 1-3 ap.<br />

per areole A. contorta s.l.<br />

(A. coronata (Massal.) B.de Lesd. is<br />

distinguished by endolithic or semi-endolithic,<br />

yellow-gray to gray-white unorganized thallus,<br />

only cracked areolate in the vicinity <strong>of</strong> the ap.;<br />

ap. -0.4 mm, <strong>of</strong>ten deformed, disk always<br />

strongly pruinose: e.g. Ju, Hü)<br />

10 Thallus with soredia or isidia or ± hemispherical<br />

to short cylindrical papillae, <strong>of</strong>ten sterile . 11<br />

10* Thallus without that kind <strong>of</strong> structures 15<br />

11 Thallus (medulla) or soralia K+ red, with soredia<br />

or isidia-like, papilliaform to coraloid<br />

outgrowths. Norstictic acid. In the region<br />

several difficult to address, partially unclassified<br />

species, among others the following two . 12<br />

11* Thallus K- 13<br />

12 Thallus center gray, dark gray to greenish- gray,<br />

cracked areolate, strongly developed, with<br />

isolated rough, coraloid, sometimes erupting<br />

sorediate isidia groups. Stictic acid and/or<br />

Norstictic acid A. simoensis<br />

12* Thallus light to dark gray, cracked areolate, warty<br />

or smooth, thin, with whitish fleck soralia, *; e.g.<br />

süSch A. grisea<br />

13 Thallus gray-rose to gray, cracked areolate to<br />

areolate, with regular dispersed, short cylindric,<br />

0.3-0.5 mm thick, whitish to light rose isidia.<br />

Isidia one per areole, with a sunken pycn. at the<br />

tip, leaving a concave scar behind after breaking<br />

<strong>of</strong>f. Prothallus dark, ± definite. C-, KC-.<br />

Pycnosp. 3.5-5 x 1-1.5 µm. Ap. very rare, light<br />

to dark red-brown. (Gyrophoric acid) .<br />

Koerberiella wimmeriana<br />

13! Thallus yellow-brown, brown-gray to dark<br />

brown, medulla C+/KC+ red, cracked- or wartyareolate,<br />

areoles dispersed or dominating with<br />

short cylindric isidia-like outgrowths.<br />

Outgrowths without pycnidia, <strong>of</strong>ten erupting<br />

sorediate. Prothallus black. Gyrophoric acid . 14<br />

13* Thallus gray, with soredia . (not treated)<br />

14 Thallus areolate, moderately thick, areoles mostly<br />

convex, coalescing to scattered on black<br />

prothallus, sometimes with isidia-like, cylindric, -<br />

0.25 mm thick, -0.5 mm high outgrowths or with<br />

whitish (sometimes originating on the<br />

outgrowths) soralia. Outgrowths/soralia sparse to<br />

lacking on fruiting specimens. Ap. -1.2 mm,<br />

disks black, furrowed.<br />

* .↑ Rimularia gibbosa<br />

14* Thallus cracked areolate, thin, areoles flat, with<br />

small, hemispherical to short cylindric, -0.1(0.15)<br />

mm thick, -0.2 mm high outgrowths and ca. 0.1<br />

mm large soralia. Ap. very rare.<br />

* ↑ Rimularia intercedens<br />

15 Ap. rose, rose-yellowish, flesh colored, light<br />

brown(red), beige. Ch- 16<br />

15* Ap. blackish, dark brown-red to dark brown,<br />

sometimes whitish to bluish pruinose . 17<br />

16 On occasionally flooded or irrigated surfaces.<br />

Thallus coherent to finely cracked, with smooth<br />

upper surface, whitish, pale yellowish, yellowreddish,<br />

ochre. Ap. concave, permanent sunken,<br />

as a rule appearing marginless, -0.5 mm, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

heaped. Hym. 85-100 µm. Sp. 13-24 x 6-11 µm<br />

Hymenelia lacustris<br />

16* On ± dry rock. Thallus very thin, dirty yellowish<br />

to light ochre, <strong>of</strong>ten indefinite. Ap. at first<br />

strongly concave and sunken, later flattened and<br />

somewhat projecting, -0.3 mm. Hym. 70-85 µm.<br />

Sp. 10-15 x 6-8 µm Hymenelia ceracea<br />

17 Medulla I+ violet. With black prothallus. Alpine<br />

. . 18<br />

17* Medulla I-. Epihym. olive to verdigris green,<br />

rarely brownish 20<br />

18 Ap. (even moist) black. Thallus whitish, grayyellow,<br />

in the herbarium also ochre colored,<br />

warty- or cracked areolate, thick, K+ yellow, then<br />

red. Epihym. green-black, blue-black, olive. Sp.<br />

11-20 x 7-11 µm, wall I-. Norstictic acid. – arctalp<br />

– e.g. Al A. myrinii (Fr.) Stein<br />

18* Ap. dark red-grown to black, brightened up<br />

moist, ± red-brown, sunken to later ± projecting.<br />

Sp. wall (epispore) I+ blue. Epihym. brown .<br />

19<br />

19 Thallus K+ yellow, then red, warty areolate (to<br />

cracked areolate), gray to whitish, also somewhat<br />

red tinted, areoles coherent to <strong>of</strong>ten scattered.<br />

Ap. flat, -1.5 mm. Sp. 8-15(23) µm. Norstictic<br />

acid Bellemerea alpina<br />

(if crater-form blue-gray to blackish soralia start<br />

up from the ap.: Bellemerea subsorediza<br />

(Lynge) R.Sant.)<br />

19* Thallus K-, cracked areolate to warty, coherent or<br />

with scattered areoles, gray (if rust colored: B.<br />

diamartha (Ach.) Haf. & Roux), prothallus <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

indefinite. Ap. -1 mm, but <strong>of</strong>ten punctiform. Sp.<br />

7-18(24) x 5-10 µm .<br />

92


Bellemerea cinereorufescens<br />

20 Thallus (medulla) K+ blue-red. Norstictic acid .21<br />

20* Thallus (medulla) K-, K+ yellow, rarely ± dirty<br />

red-brown 22<br />

21 Thallus cracked areolate (to almost cracked),<br />

gray, brownish-gray, light gray, on blackish<br />

prothallus. Ap. concave, then flat, smooth, with<br />

thick, permanent thalloid margin, black, -1.5 mm.<br />

Sp. 12-22(25) x 6-13 µm. Hym. -115 µm.<br />

Pycnosp. 11-22 x 1 µm. * A. cinerea<br />

21* Thallus cracked areolate, dark gray, brownishgray.<br />

Ap. -0.8(1.5) mm, sunken, with wrinkled,<br />

rounded to angular disk, black. Hym. ca. 150<br />

µm. Sp. 20-25 x 12-15 µm. Pycnosp. 15-28 x 1<br />

µm. *A. epiglypta<br />

22 Hym. carbonaceous black above, hyp. dark<br />

brown. Thallus warty (to cracked) areolate,<br />

cocoa-brown, gray-brown to dark brown, in the<br />

shade also brown-beige, dull. Areoles ±<br />

coalescing to scattered, on a black prothallus,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten (especially when sterile) erupting sorediate,<br />

usually -0.4 mm, medulla C+/KC+ red. Ap.<br />

(warts) -1.4 mm, disk black, at first ± punctiform,<br />

then widening, tuberculate, furrowed, swollen<br />

margin. Sp. 15-25(30) x 9-12.5(14) µm.<br />

Gyrophoric acid Rimularia gibbosa<br />

22* Hym. not carbonaceous black above. Hyp. light<br />

. 23<br />

23 Sp. approximately spherical 20-30 x 15-25 µm.<br />

Ap. <strong>of</strong>ten pruinose A. contorta<br />

23* Sp. ellipsoidal to broadly ellipsoidal. Ap.<br />

nonpruinose . 24<br />

24 Sp. 7-10(14) x 3.5-5(6) µm. Epihym. green- blue<br />

to olive- (brown). Ap. -0.4 mm, black, sunken,<br />

flat without raised thalloid margin. Thallus thin,<br />

areolate, red-brown to brown, slightly shiny,<br />

medulla P+ red, K-, C-. Areoles flat to concave,<br />

on an <strong>of</strong>ten well- developed black prothallus, -0.4<br />

(0.8) mm. Asci broadly clavate. Paraph. richly<br />

branched, anastomosing, not thickened above and<br />

the septa not shrunken. Tholus K/I+ blue.<br />

Argospin Clauzadeana macula<br />

24* Sp. larger, at least 6 µm wide. Ap. over 0.4 mm<br />

wide. Paraph. thickened above, <strong>of</strong>ten shrunken at<br />

the septa. Without Argospin 25<br />

25 Paraph. loose in K. Asci not thickened above,<br />

cylindric. Sp. ellipsoidal, 11-17 x 6-7 µm.<br />

Epihym. emerald green. Ap. -0.8 mm. Medulla<br />

K+ yellow to brownish, P-, KC+ red, C± reddish<br />

. ↑ Schaereria fuscocinerea<br />

25* Paraph. cemented, branched and anastomosing.<br />

Sp. commonly broadly ellipsoidal. Medulla not<br />

KC/C+ red . 26<br />

26 Medulla P+ orange, K+ usually yellow. Thallus<br />

usually dark olive-gray to dark gray, thin to very<br />

thin, indefinite to definite cracked, rarely cracked<br />

areolate, with smooth upper surface. Ap.<br />

numerous, close standing, flat to slightly<br />

concave, with ± definite proper margin, -0.4 mm.<br />

Sp. 13-17(23) x 9-13 µm. Stictic acid, ±<br />

Norstictic acid . A. laevata<br />

26* Medulla P-, K- or after a long time dirty<br />

red-brown 27<br />

27 Sp. (9)11-14 x 7-9 µm <strong>of</strong>ten poorly developed.<br />

Epihym. (yellowish)olive. Ap. -1 mm, brownblack<br />

to black, ± flat, definitely margined, close<br />

standing. Thallus rather thick, cracked areolate,<br />

ash- to lead-gray, <strong>of</strong>ten with brown to brownviolet<br />

tint. Areoles ± uneven, the most fertile,<br />

0.5-2 mm A. recedens<br />

27* Sp. larger. Sometimes difficult to address,<br />

sometimes insufficiently defined, thick layered<br />

species, here only a part <strong>of</strong> the many described<br />

species considered. Ap. black, sunken 28<br />

28 Thallus section (microscope!) in K after<br />

treatment with Epson salts and washing with<br />

water with rust-red crystalline precipitate.<br />

Thallus light gray, yellowish-gray to bluish-gray,<br />

warty areolate (areole margin “deflected”), with<br />

dark prothallus. Medulla (section) opaque<br />

because <strong>of</strong> a ± thick layering <strong>of</strong> granules. Ap.<br />

one per areole, -0.8 mm, with thalloid margin<br />

(exc. indefinite, -25 µm). Sp. 20-26 x 12-14(18)<br />

µm. Hym. 120-150(185) µm A. gibbosa<br />

(A. cupreogrisea Th. Fr. distinguished by<br />

angular, uneven, very dark areoles)<br />

28* Thallus section in K after HCl-treatment without<br />

rust-red crystals, medulla without granules,<br />

section transparent (or because <strong>of</strong> entrapped air ±<br />

opaque). Usually without dark prothallus.<br />

Areoles mostly ca. 0.4-1.2 mm 29<br />

29 Sp. 14-19 x 8-12 µm. Pycnosp. 7-8 µm long.<br />

Thallus dark gray, also with greenish or brownish<br />

color tint, irregularly cracked areolate, thin<br />

(areoles -1 mm wide). Ap. -0.7 (1.0) mm, with<br />

definite black proper margin (exc. 35-100 µm),<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten close standing and considerably varying in<br />

size. Hym. 85-100 (120) µm A. obscurata<br />

29* Sp. broader and mostly longer. Ap. without<br />

black proper margin 30<br />

30 On from time to time flooded sites (brooks).<br />

Thallus light gray, gray, greenish-gray, cracked to<br />

cracked areolate, upper surface mostly smooth<br />

and rather even, K-. Ap. <strong>of</strong>ten sparse. Sp. to 8,<br />

22-27(35) x 14-18 µm. Hym. (110)150-180(200)<br />

µm. Pycnosp. 12-15 µm long. Like A.<br />

caesiocinerea. Cortex cells regularly ordered in<br />

vertical rows A. aquatica*<br />

30* On dry, rarely on flooded sites. Thallus cracked-<br />

to warty-areolate, dark- to light gray, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

slightly blue tinted, gray-white, also brown.<br />

areoles coalescing, very irregular in form and<br />

size, <strong>of</strong>ten uneven, K-, medulla K- or later <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

brownish. Ap. usually numerous. Exc.<br />

indefinite. Sp. <strong>of</strong>ten poorly developed, mostly to<br />

6, (14)20- -30(35) x 12-16(22) µm. Hyp.<br />

(80)120-150(200) µm. Pycnosp. 6.5-9 (12) µm.<br />

Very form rich. Aspicilin A. caesiocinerea s.l..<br />

93


(There have been numerous species described<br />

from relatives <strong>of</strong> A. caesiocinerea, which at this<br />

time are scarcely to be reliably distinguished)<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Aspicilia aquatica Körber (Lecanora a. (Körber)<br />

Hepp)<br />

Like Hymenelia lacustris (↑), but scarcely below<br />

the montane zone – (arct-)bor-med-alp – rare:<br />

Sch, Eif, ThW<br />

Aspicilia caesiocinerea (Nyl.) ex Malbr.)<br />

Arnold s.l. (Lecanora c. Nyl)<br />

Form rich euryöke species, above all in the<br />

submontane-montane, rarely high montane sites<br />

on rain exposed surfaces on silicate rock,<br />

predominately on rather to very light rich,<br />

moderately to very dunged horizontal- and<br />

sloping surfaces, e.g. on the cap <strong>of</strong> bird roosts,<br />

on occasionally flooded boulders in the<br />

uppermost amphibious zone on brook, on ±<br />

irrigated as well as dry (not secondarily<br />

moistened) surfaces, e.g. on boulder scree slopes<br />

on sunny surfaces, also as a pioneer, avoiding<br />

cold sites, (subneutroph.)m.-r.acidoph., M.v.photoph.,<br />

(a-)m.-v.nitroph., Char. Aspicilietea<br />

gibb. – bor-med-mo – m.frequent-r.rare; above<br />

all Sch. Vog, RhSch, Pf, ThW, lacking or<br />

syanthrope in lime regions<br />

Aspicilia calcarea (L.) Mudd (Lecanora c. (L.)<br />

Sommerf., Pachyospora c. (l) Massal.)<br />

Up into the alpine zone on lime-rich to rather<br />

lime-poor rocks (also lime impregnated<br />

sandstone) on rather to very open to light,<br />

according to the rain rather rapidly drying<br />

horizontal and sloping surfaces, on stones in dry<br />

turfs, isolated also on natural rock walls,<br />

avoiding extremely dry-warm sites, basiph.,<br />

r.xeroph., a-/m.nitroph., Char. Aspicilion calc. –<br />

s’bor-med – v.rare; SJu, JU and FrJu m.frequent<br />

additionally e.g. Th, Mn, Ne, süHü, Rh. Saar, Bit<br />

Aspicilia cinerea (l.) Körber (Lecanora c. (L.)<br />

Sommerf.)<br />

Up into the subalpine zone above all on limefree,<br />

hard, crystalline rock on rain exposed, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

± sunny surfaces, <strong>of</strong>ten on boulders in scree<br />

slopes, in meadows, on dry walls, above all on<br />

moderately .nutrient-rich sites, m.-r.acidoph.,<br />

r.xeroph., r.-v.photoph., Char. Aspicilietum cin.,<br />

in the community <strong>of</strong> Aspicilietalia gibb. – bormed-mo<br />

– v.rare; above all Sch, Vog,<br />

additionally E.G. O, Pf, RhSch, He, ThW, Erz,<br />

Al, also as an isolated syanthrope in lime regions<br />

(Tomb stones etc.)<br />

Aspicilia contorta (H<strong>of</strong>fm.) Krempelh.<br />

(Lecanora c. (H<strong>of</strong>fm.) Steiner, Pachyospora c.<br />

(H<strong>of</strong>fm.) Massal.)<br />

ssp. contorta<br />

Primarily on the hilly up into the montane zone<br />

on limestone, rarely on lime-poor or lime<br />

impregnated silicate rock (<strong>of</strong>ten sandstone),<br />

above all as a pioneer on stones and lower<br />

boulders, in stone piles, on gravel, <strong>of</strong>ten on<br />

anthropogenic habitats (walls etc.) and therefore<br />

also migrating to artificial rock, such as e.g.<br />

laundry concrete, but above all in dry trufs,<br />

usually on dust impregnated, <strong>of</strong>ten dew<br />

moistened in the mornings, but relatively dry<br />

warm habitats exposed to rain, basiph.-<br />

neutroph., m.nitroph., Char. Aspicilion calc.,<br />

above Aspicilietum cont. – (s’bor)mieur-med –<br />

r.rare-moderately frequent; above all lime region<br />

ssp. h<strong>of</strong>fmanniana Ekman & Fröberg (A.<br />

h<strong>of</strong>fmannii auct., Lecanora h. auct.)<br />

Like ssp. contorta (↑), but frequently on limepoor,<br />

lime-impregnated or basic silicate rock –<br />

s’bor-med – rare; throughout the whole region,<br />

above all on anthropogenic habitats<br />

Aspicilia epiglypta (Norrlin ex Nyl.) Hue<br />

On mineral-rich or basic silicate rock on light<br />

rich habitats – (s’bor-)mieur – v.rare; Rhön<br />

Aspicilia gibbosa (Ach.) Körber (Lecanora g.<br />

(Ach.) Nyl.)<br />

Up into the montane sites on sunny silicate<br />

boulders and cliffs, like Lasallia (↑), Parmelia<br />

conspersa (↑), sometimes syanthrope on wall<br />

crowns (above all sandstone), Char. Aspicilietea<br />

gibb. – mieur – r.rare; e.g. Sch<br />

Aspicilia grisea Arnold<br />

In montane-high montane sites on silicate rock,<br />

above at near soil, <strong>of</strong>ten dew moistened cliff<br />

surfaces or on stones – s’bor-mieur – rare; Sch,<br />

Vog<br />

Aspicilia laevata (Ach.) Arnold (Lecanora l.<br />

(Ach.) Nyl., A. sylvatica Arnold)<br />

In sub- to high montane sites on silicate rock on<br />

shady, humid habitats, usually in forests and<br />

valleys, readily on brooks and on from time to<br />

time moist cliffs, m.-r.acidoph., substrate<br />

hygroph., r.skioph.-m.photoph., e.g. in the<br />

94


Porpidion tub. – bor-med-mo – r.rare; Sch, Vog,<br />

O, He, Th, ThW, Eif, Al<br />

Aspicilia moenium (Vainio) Thor & Timdal (A.<br />

excavata Thor & Timdal)<br />

In hilly and submontane, precipitation poor to<br />

m.precipitation rich sites as a rule synanthrop on<br />

anthropogenic substrates, above all concrete<br />

walls, cement, in the first line on vertical surfaces<br />

on rather to very light-rich habitats, like e.g.<br />

Caloplaca teicholyta – (s’)bor-mieur – rare; Ne<br />

Aspicilia obscurata (Fr.) Arnold (Lecanora o.<br />

(Fr) Nyl.)<br />

In montane, high precipitation sites on silicate<br />

rocks, on open to moderately open lying boulders<br />

and rocks – bor-mieur – rare; Sch<br />

Aspicilia recedens (Taylor) Arnold (A.<br />

bohemica Körber)<br />

In submontane and montane, high precipitation<br />

sites on silicate rock, like Lasallia (↑) in the<br />

Lasallietum, Parmelietum consp., Ephebetum --<br />

bor-mieur – rare (2); süSch, HRh, nöSch, Vog,<br />

O, Sp<br />

Aspicilia simoesis Räsänen<br />

Predominantly in montane, high precipitation<br />

sites on silicate rock on sunny habitats, like<br />

Umbilicarietum deustae, Parmelietum consp. –<br />

mieur-smed(-med) – rare (3); süSch, Ju, He,<br />

Alpine<br />

LIT.: CLAUZADE & ROUX 1985, FRIES 1871, FRÖBERG 1989,<br />

MAGNUSSON 1939, OZENDA & CLAUZADE 1970<br />

Bacidia De Not.<br />

Introduction<br />

The genus Bacidia includes crustose lichens with<br />

little differentiation to almost squamulose or<br />

coralline-isidiate, usually gray or pale greenish<br />

thallus and whitish, rose, orange, brown or black<br />

apothecia with proper margin and cross-septate<br />

spores. Species with relatively thick, fusiform<br />

spores and variant ascus structure were recently<br />

removed from the genus and placed in<br />

Mycobilimbia and Biatora. Species with very<br />

thin, needle-like to filamentous spores and<br />

filamentous pycnospores in usually whitish<br />

pycnidia and with an <strong>of</strong>ten conspicuous finely<br />

granular thallus were given autonomy in the<br />

genus Bacidina.<br />

The Bacidias are dwellers on rock, bark,<br />

mosses and plant detritus. They prefer weakly<br />

acid, subneutral and weakly basic, mineral-rich<br />

substrates. Subneutral bark, thus on Norway<br />

maple and maple, elm, willow, ash, walnut or<br />

black elder, are colonized by e.g. B. rubella, B.<br />

rosella, B. fraxinea, B. polychroa, B. incompta,<br />

B. arceutina, B. beckhausii, B. assulata and B.<br />

naegelii. Prerequisite pH conditions may be<br />

totally avoided by bark being enriched by dusting<br />

with nutrient materials, B. rubella frequently<br />

occurs exclusively in this sort <strong>of</strong> relationship.<br />

Therefore, these species are predominantly in<br />

forests and brook accompanying, and to be found<br />

on willows adjoining thickets. B. subincompta,<br />

B. globulosa, B. laurocerase, B. hegetschweileri<br />

and B. subacerina grow on moderately to even<br />

rather acid bark, lastly especially on beech and<br />

spruce in moist mountain forests, the others e.g.<br />

on ash and oak.<br />

B. trachna and the south and central Europe<br />

distributed B. fuscoviridis requires as a rule lime-<br />

containing rock on sunny sites. B. bagliettoana<br />

and B. herbarum grow over dying mosses and<br />

other plant detritus over lime rock or lime-rich<br />

soils; both occur throughout Europe almost<br />

exclusively in the high mountains.<br />

The area <strong>of</strong> many Bacidia-species covers the<br />

north largely with the common beech or the<br />

pedunculate oak and chestnut oak (Quercus<br />

robar and petraea) and ends in southern<br />

Scandinavia, including the greatest part <strong>of</strong> west-<br />

and central-Europe (partially also southeast<br />

Europe) as well as the mountain sites <strong>of</strong> the sub-<br />

mediterranean regions, occupying also the zone<br />

<strong>of</strong> the summer-green deciduous forest; <strong>of</strong>ten --<br />

with the exception <strong>of</strong> B. fraxinea – a subatlantic<br />

tendency is recognized. To these species are<br />

numbered the also for the most part ecologically<br />

resembling epiphytes B. arceutina, B. assulata,<br />

B. biatorina, B. friesiana, B. polychroa, and B.<br />

rosella. Advancing further toward the north, up<br />

into the southern boreal zone, B. rubella, B.<br />

circumspecta, B. subacerina and B. trachona.<br />

In <strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong> one recognizes<br />

perhaps 20 <strong>of</strong> the ca 29 species <strong>of</strong> Bacidia<br />

occurring in Germany. Almost all <strong>of</strong> the<br />

epiphytic Bacidias are becoming rarer and<br />

threatened. The causes <strong>of</strong> this repression are the<br />

acidification and eutrophication <strong>of</strong> the bark and<br />

the removal suitable carrier trees, such as<br />

Norway maple and common maple. Only B.<br />

95


ubella is still relatively widespread; from the<br />

northwest however it is also disappearing.<br />

Genus Characteristics and Determination<br />

Thallus crustose, unorganized and thin to<br />

cracked, warty, or granular-coralloid, whitish,<br />

pale greenish, light gray, or pale brownish, with<br />

spherical to broadly ellipsoidal green algae. Ap.<br />

± sessile, flat to convex, with proper margin.<br />

Exc. <strong>of</strong> coherent, radial hyphae. Hyp. colorless<br />

or colored. Epihym. colorless, brown, red-<br />

brown, olive, green etc. Hym. colorless, I+ blue.<br />

Paraphyses simple, rarely branching, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

thickened above. Asci clavate to narrowly<br />

clavate-cylindric, <strong>of</strong> the Bacicia-type, with thick,<br />

K/I+ blue tholus, below which is embedded a<br />

narrow-cone like, I+ pale blue central plug, with<br />

a very small ocular chamber, wall I-, with a thin<br />

outer I+ blue gelatin envelop. Spores crossseptate,<br />

mostly 4-12 celled, elongate, fusiform,<br />

needle-like or worm-like. Ch: almost always<br />

without lichen substances, always R-.<br />

Remarks: Unless otherwise stated in the key, thallus R- (in<br />

most cases then presumably also CH-)<br />

Overview <strong>of</strong> the Parts <strong>of</strong> the Key<br />

On rock . PT 1<br />

On mosses and soil . PT 2<br />

On bark or wood . PT 3<br />

Bacidia PT 1: Rock Dwelling Species<br />

1 Sp. spiral-like twisted to strongly curved. Ap.<br />

black-brown to black, convex without margin . ↑<br />

Scoliciosporum umbrinum<br />

1* Sp. straight or only weakly curved . 2<br />

2 Sp. needle-like, long pointed, mostly ±<br />

indefinitely septate 3<br />

2* Sp. fusiform to bacillar 6<br />

3 Hyp. red- to dark brown. Ap. ± flat . 4<br />

3* Hyp. colorless to yellow-brownish . 5<br />

4 Epihym. yellowish to colorless. Sp. 27-45(55) x<br />

1-2 µm, 2-4(8) celled. Ap. light gray to graybrown<br />

or dark red-brown, ± flat -0.8 (1.0) mm,<br />

with same color or lighter margin, when<br />

moistened first the margin, then the disk darker.<br />

Thallus very fine granular (granules 20-40 µm),<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten cracked, greenish, green-gray, above all in<br />

the herbarium also beige, ochre, on limestone.<br />

Frequently with 0.2 mm white, rose-whitish to<br />

(above all in the herbarium) beige to rose-<br />

brownish, hemispherical to bowl shaped pycnidia<br />

with 1-celled, 30-50 x 1-1.5 µm pycnospores<br />

Bacidina arnoldiana<br />

4* Epihym. olive, blue-green or almost colorless.<br />

Ap. gray-brown, dark gray, black-brown, red-<br />

black to black, flat, margined, finally even<br />

convex without margin, -0.6 mm. Sp. 17-40 x<br />

1.5-2 µm, 4(8) celled. Hyp. red- brown to yellow<br />

brown. Thallus thin, fine granular (granules 20-<br />

60(90) µm), greenish, light gray, ochre, or brown.<br />

Exc. exterior blue-green, violet, or olive-brown.<br />

Pycn. like B. arnoldiana, but rarely occurring,<br />

pycnosp. 20-35 x 1 µm, curved to twisted<br />

. Bacidina egenula<br />

5 Usually on from time to time flooded silicate<br />

rock. Ap. -0.6(0.8) mm, rose, pale brownish-red<br />

to brownish, rarely blackish, crowded, flat,<br />

permanently margined. Thallus gray- to whitishgreen,<br />

mostly scurfy to finely warty-uneven,<br />

cracked, <strong>of</strong>ten with light prothallus. Sp. 20-45 x<br />

1.5-2.5 µm, 4-8 celled. Exc. violet-brown to<br />

pale. Hyp. ± colorless, rarely light brown above<br />

. Bacidina inundata<br />

5* On other habitats. Thallus greenish, gray- green,<br />

granular. Ap. -0.2 mm, very numerous, rose, pale<br />

gray-brown, red-brown to dark-brown, with<br />

lighter margin, flat to moderately convex.<br />

Epihym. pale, to dark colored. Ap. brownish<br />

above (and then K+ purple). Hyp. weakly<br />

developed, colorless. Exc. colorless. Sp. 1-4<br />

celled, 20-30(38) x 1.3-1.7 µm .<br />

Bacidina chloroticula<br />

6 Hyp. red- to dark brown 7<br />

6* Hyp. colorless, yellow-brown 8<br />

7 Sp. 11-16(20) x 3-5 µm, 2-4 celled. Ap. black,<br />

flat and margined, then convex without margin, -<br />

0.8 mm. Epihym. green to olive. Esc. and hyp.<br />

dark red-brown. thallus cracked, granular to<br />

indefinite, gray to bluish-green or brownish, on<br />

limestone and mineral-rich silicate rock. Pycn.<br />

0.1-0.3 mm, black, sessile, pycnosp. 3-5 x 1-1.5<br />

µm B. trachona<br />

7* Sp. 18-40 x (4)5-8 µm, 4-8 celled. Ap. red-<br />

brown, dark brown, brown-black to rarely black.<br />

Hyp. <strong>of</strong>ten yellow- to red-brown only in the<br />

upper part. Thallus granular, warty, or scruffy,<br />

whitish to pale greenish, usually only on mosses<br />

overgrowing rock<br />

Mycobilimbia sabuletorum<br />

8 Ap. black, hemispherical, without margin. Exc.<br />

strongly reduced . ↑ Micarea<br />

8* At least the young ap. not black. Exc. clearly<br />

developed . 9<br />

9 Ap., from the first, convex and without margin<br />

↑ Micarea peliocarpa<br />

9* At least the young ap. with margin 10<br />

10 Hyp., in the upper part relatively dark colored,<br />

light in the under part. Sp. 4-8(10) celled, 18-40<br />

x 4-8 µm . Mycobilimbia sabuletorum (7)<br />

10* Hyp. colorless to pale yellowish. Sp. 4(6) celled,<br />

up to 28 x 6 µm 11<br />

11 Ap. -0.4 mm, orange, rose, ochre-brown to dark<br />

red-brown, sometimes margin darker, flat to<br />

convex, with disappearing margin. Sp.<br />

bacillar/narrow fusiform, (2-)4(6) celled, (11)13-<br />

96


25(28) x 2.5-3 µm. Thallus whitish, greenish to<br />

copper colored, finely granular to scruffy.<br />

Pycnosp. 10-19 x 0.8-1.2 µm, strongly curved .<br />

Lecania cuprea<br />

11* Ap. -1mm, rose- to dark brown, flat, soon<br />

convex. Sp. fusiform, 4-celled, 12-19 x 4-5 µm.<br />

Thallus gray to bluish-green, intensive green<br />

when fresh, ± cracked areolate, erupting sorediate<br />

in places, usually sterile. Pycnosp. 16-22 x 6 µm<br />

B. fuscoviridis<br />

Bacidia PT 2: Species on mosses and Soil<br />

(only very rarely on moss overgrowing bark ↑ PT<br />

3)<br />

1 Thallus shining citron- to greenish-yellow<br />

↑ Arthrorhaphis<br />

1* Thallus not shining yellow . 2<br />

2 Sp. needle- to long bacillar, -3.5(4) µm wide (Sp.<br />

a-I) . 3<br />

2* Sp. fusiform to finger-like, not long pointed, over<br />

3.5 µm wide (Sp. j-n) 8<br />

3 On mosses over bark see B. rubella, B. rosella<br />

(PT 3)<br />

3* On soil, soil-mosses, plant detritus, <strong>of</strong> mosses<br />

over rock 4<br />

4 Ap. black, flat, with margin, finally convex<br />

without margin, -1.4 mm. Epihym. bluish- to<br />

green-black, dirty emerald, rarely olive. Sp. 25-<br />

45 x 2-3.5 µm, (4)6-12 celled. Thallus graywhitish<br />

to pale green-gray, warty to finely<br />

granular . B. bagliettoana<br />

4* Ap. pale rose, orange, gray-brown, brown or<br />

brown-red, -0.7 mm, usually remaining flat 5<br />

5 Hyp. yellow-brown at least in the upper part.<br />

Thallus indefinite to granular-warty, light gray,<br />

without pycnidia. Ap. brown-red to dark brown,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten various colored, usually remaining flat, -0.7<br />

mm. Epihym. pale to brownish. Sp. 30-50(60) x<br />

2-3 µm, (4)6-8 celled . B. herbarum<br />

5* Hyp. colorless. Sp. shorter or narrower. Thallus<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten with sunken white pycn., pycnosp. curved<br />

. 6<br />

6 Sp. ca. 1.3-1.8 µm thick . 7<br />

6* Sp. 15-26 x 2.5-3.5 µm, 4(-8) celled. Ap.<br />

-0.7mm, yellow-red, red-brown, dark brown, flat,<br />

thin margin, with age even convex without<br />

margin. Epihym. colorless to (in the case <strong>of</strong><br />

darker apothecia) brow-violet. Thallus whitish to<br />

green-white, warty to granular, granules 40-200<br />

µm. Pycnosp. 30- 35 x 1-1.5 µm<br />

B. subfuscula (11)<br />

7 Ap. -0.2 mm, <strong>of</strong>ten accumulated, rose, pale graybrown,<br />

red-brown to dark brown, with lighter<br />

margin, sp. indefinite 1-4 celled, 20-30(38) µm<br />

long. Pycnosp. 30-43 x 0.5-1 µm. Thallus green,<br />

gray-green, scurfy- granular .<br />

Bacidina chloroticula<br />

7* Ap. -0.7 mm, whitish, orange, rose-orange. Sp.<br />

indefinitely 4-8 celled, (20)25-48 µm. Pycnosp.<br />

21-40 x 1 µm. Thallus pale green to (above all in<br />

the herbarium) brownish, very finely granular,<br />

granules ca. 20-40 µm thick . Bacidina delicata<br />

8 Hym. at least above blue-green, gray-blue,<br />

greenish, or olive. Ap. brown-black to black,<br />

soon or from the first convex and without margin<br />

9<br />

8* Hym. colorless or brown, red-brown above. Ap.<br />

light to brown-black, at least when young with<br />

definitely developed exc., flat and with margin to<br />

quickly marginless and convex. Paraph.<br />

predominantly simple to forked above . 11<br />

9 Hyp. colorless to slightly greenish or weakly<br />

brownish. A;. from the first convex marginless.<br />

Exc. reduced, or paraph.-like hyphae. Paraph.<br />

richly branched and anastomosing, strongly<br />

cemented. On acid substrates ↑ Micarea<br />

9* Hyp. brown, red-brown, purple-brown, or blackbrown<br />

10<br />

10 Sp. 30-45 x (5)6-7(9) µm, (4)6-10 celled. Hym.<br />

over 60 µm high, epihym. emerald- to blackishgreen<br />

or olive. Ap. black-brown to black, soon<br />

convex, with a thin, soon disappearing margin, -<br />

0.7 mm, exc. in younger ap. clearly developed.<br />

Paraph. predominantly simple. Hyp. red- to dark<br />

brown above. Thallus mealy, granular, or warty .<br />

Mycobilimbia accedens<br />

10* Sp. 12-21 x 2.5-3.5 µm, 4(-6) celled. Hym. up to<br />

45 µm high, largely blue-green to gray- blue<br />

(rarely purple). Ap. black, convex marginless, -<br />

0.4 mm. On acid substrates. Exc. reduced.<br />

Paraph. branching and bound. Hyp. purple- to<br />

black-brown . ↑ Micarea melaena<br />

11 Sp. 13-26 x 2.5-3.5 µm, 4(-8) celled, narrow<br />

fusiform to bacillar. Ap. -0.7 mm, yellow- red,<br />

red-brown, or dark brown, flat, thin margined, in<br />

the older ones also convex marginless. Pycnosp.<br />

30-35 x 1-15 µm B. subfuscula<br />

(Nyl.) Th. Fr.<br />

11* Sp. at least 4 µm thick (Mycobilimbia) . 12<br />

12 Exc., hyp. and epihym. colorless or slightly<br />

yellowish. Exc. clearly developed, cartilaginous<br />

13<br />

12* Ap. in section not colorless throughout . 14<br />

13 Thallus green, gray-green, finely granular to<br />

almost mealy-sorediate, granules 25-70 µm. Ap.<br />

rapidly hemispherical, then ± spherical, yellow-<br />

to flesh-reddish, beige, yellow- brown (old also<br />

brown), very rapidly marginless, -0.8 (1.1) mm.<br />

Sp. predominantly 2-, sparsely 4 celled, 10-17 x<br />

3.5-5 µm, broadly fusiform to ellipsoidal.<br />

Zeorine Mycobilimbia sphaeroides<br />

13* Thallus gray, whitish, pale greenish,<br />

granular-warty. Ap. at first flat-cup shaped, with<br />

rather thick margin, later convex marginless to<br />

almost spherical, whitish, yellow- to flesh<br />

reddish, -1.2 mm. Sp. 12-22 x 4-7 µm, (2-)4(6)<br />

celled, fusiform. Close related to M. fusca<br />

97


.Mycobilimbia carneoalbida<br />

14 Thallus gray, yellowish- or greenish-gray, large<br />

surfaces erupting yellow-greenish to yellowish<br />

sorediate, almost always on bark- dwelling<br />

mosses, K-, C-, P-, almost always sterile. Ap.<br />

0.3-0.8(1.3) mm, yellow- to red- brown to<br />

brown-black, mostly sparse and scattered,<br />

convex, with thin margin, sp. 4 celled, 13-28 x 4-<br />

6(7) µm. Epihym. brownish, hyp. light brown<br />

Mycobilimbia epixanthoides<br />

14* With other characteristics. Thallus whitish, gray<br />

to gray-green, usually ± warty to finely granular,<br />

not erupting yellowish to green- yellowish<br />

sorediate. Ap. usually numerous . 15<br />

15 Ap. at first concave to flat, with thick, protruding,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten shiny margin, narrowly sessile (cup-form),<br />

later convex-marginless, dark brown-red, dark<br />

brown, brown-black, 0.5-1.2 mm. Sp. (2-)4<br />

celled, 15-27 x (4.7)5-7.5(8) µm. Hyp. pale to<br />

reddish-brown above. Hym. pale brownish, even<br />

olive above. Paraph. -2 µm thick. Exc. and hyp.<br />

cartilaginous. Thallus finely granular to<br />

wrinkled; above all at the base <strong>of</strong> trees in higher<br />

sites . Mycobilimbia fusca<br />

15* Ap. usually rapidly convex-marginless. Hyp.<br />

usually red-brown above. Epihym. pale brown to<br />

brown-red or olive-brown. Paraph. 2-3 µm thick<br />

(M. sabuletorum s.l.) 16<br />

16 Ap. (yellow-brownish), cinnamon-brown, dark<br />

brown to black, <strong>of</strong>ten somewhat shiny, very<br />

quickly convex marginless, -0.7 mm, relatively<br />

close standing. Epihym. pale brown to brownred,<br />

hyp. brown-reddish to almost colorless. Sp.<br />

(2-)4(6) celled, 16-30 x 5-6 µm .<br />

Mycobilimbia microcarpa<br />

16* Ap. dirty rose-brown, brown to blackish, usually<br />

very rapidly convex-marginless, the young<br />

however also flat and with weakly raised margin,<br />

-1 mm, sometimes slightly pruinose. Epihym.<br />

colorless, yellow-brown, brown, olive-brown.<br />

Hyp. yellow- to red- brown in the upper part,<br />

lighter below. Sp. (4)6-8(12) celled, 18-40 x<br />

(4)5-8 µm. Thallus warty-uneven to granular or<br />

scurfy Mycobilimbia sabuletorum<br />

Bacidia PT 3: Bark-dwelling Species<br />

1 Thallus with conspicuous white to brownish or<br />

hemispherical pycnidia 2<br />

1* Thallus in general without such conspicuous<br />

pycnidia . 6<br />

2 Commonly on thin branches <strong>of</strong> conifers and<br />

dwarf shrubby stems (e.g. Vaccinium). Sp.<br />

ellipsoidal, (2-)4 celled, 10-16 x 2.5-4 µm. With<br />

whitish, <strong>of</strong>ten protruding, -0.2 mm wide pycn.<br />

Ap. whitish, pale (rose) yellowish to pale<br />

brownish (orange in the herbarium), -0.5 mm, at<br />

first flat with thin whitish margin, later convexmarginless.<br />

Thallus gray-greenish<br />

Fellhanera subtilis<br />

2* Not commonly on thin branches <strong>of</strong> conifers and<br />

dwarf shrubs 3<br />

3 Thallus, when well developed, pycn. and hym.<br />

C+ red, pycn ± sunken, with paler to light<br />

greenish, broader, mostly bowl-shaped sunken<br />

mouth region. Hyp. ± colorless. Pycnosp. over<br />

20 µm long . ↑ Micarea peliocarpa/cinerea<br />

3* Thallus and hym. -. C-. Hyp. dark 4<br />

4 Pycn. white to slightly reddish or above all in the<br />

herbarium slightly brownish, ± sunken, 0.1-0.2<br />

mm. Pycnosp. mostly over 20 µm long,<br />

threadlike, curved. Thallus green, green-gray,<br />

above all in the herbarium also beige to ochre,<br />

very finely granular, <strong>of</strong>ten relatively thick. Ap.<br />

gray-brown to rarely red-brown, -0.8 mm, ± flat,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten with somewhat lighter margin, on<br />

moistening first the margin, then the disk darker.<br />

Hyp. dark-brown. Sp. needle-like, indefinitely<br />

septate, 25-35 x 1.2-1.7 µm .<br />

Bacidina arnoldiana<br />

4* Pycn. brown, violet-brown, black, projecting.<br />

Hyp. dark brown to red brown . 5<br />

5 Pycn. violet-brown to brown-black, lighter<br />

around the <strong>of</strong>ten open mouth, -0.2 mm,<br />

hemispherical or vertically elongated. Pycnosp.<br />

23-36 x 1 µm, scarcely curved, 1-4 celled. Sp.<br />

29-35 x 3-4 µm, pointed on one end, 4-8 celled.<br />

Ap. rose-brown to gray- brown , with relatively<br />

thick, same colored margin, -0.4 mm. Epihym.<br />

and hyp. red-brown. Exc. paraplectenchymous.<br />

Paraph. branched and anastomosing. Thallus<br />

green to gray-green, with relatively smooth upper<br />

surface, not granular Fellhanera vezdae<br />

5* Pycn. black, 0.1-0.3 mm. Pycnosp. 3-5 x 1-1.5<br />

µm. Ap. black, -0.8 mm. Sp. 11-16(20) x 3-5<br />

µm, 2-4 celled. Epihym. green to olive. Exc. and<br />

hyp. dark red-brown. Paraph. predominantly<br />

simple. Rare on bark .<br />

B. trachona<br />

6 Sp. strongly curved. S-form or bean-form (Sp.<br />

k, o) . 7<br />

6* Sp. straight to slightly bent . 9<br />

7 Sp. bean-form, with rounded ends, to 8-16, 4(6)<br />

celled, 10-18 X 4-5 µm. Ap. black, flat, with thin<br />

permanent margin, like a small Lecidella<br />

elaeochroma, -0.7 mm. Epihym. olive-brown,<br />

bluish-green to violet. Hyp. colorless to slightly<br />

reddish-brown Arthrosporum populorum<br />

7* Sp. strongly bent, worm-form to spiral, coming to<br />

a point on at least one end, up to 8, 4-8 celled,<br />

over 18 µm long 8<br />

8 Epihym. and exc. red-brown to reddish. Paraph.<br />

simple. Hyp. colorless to pale red-brown. Ap.<br />

black, -0.5 mm, flat to moderately convex, with<br />

thin, finally disappearing margin, sp. 20-43 x 2-<br />

3.5 µm, 4-6(8) celled, needle-form to at least<br />

partially worm-form. Thallus whitish to<br />

indefinite . B. hegetschweileri<br />

98


8* Epihym. blue-green, olive, olive-brown, rarely<br />

brown. Paraph. branching and anastomosing.<br />

Ap. brown, red-brown, brown-black, -0.6(0.8)<br />

mm, convex- marginless . ↑ Scoliciosporum<br />

9 Sp. needle-form, commonly coming to a long<br />

point on one end (Sp. a-g), thread-form or long<br />

bacillar, not over 4 µm thick 10<br />

9* Sp. fusiform to thick finger-form, ends not long<br />

pointed (Sp. h, j-n, p), at the most 40 µm long<br />

. 30<br />

10 Hyp. brown, dark red-brown 11<br />

10* Hyp. colorless, yellowish or pale (red)brownish<br />

. 14<br />

11 Epihym. green, green-blackish to olive, rarely<br />

pale, K-. Hyp. at least above dark (red)brown, K-<br />

or K+ purple. Sp. mostly 6-8 celled, 24-38(40) x<br />

2.5-3.5 µm, bacillar. Ap. black, flat, later<br />

convex, with a finally disappearing thin margin, -<br />

0.7(0.9). Thallus finely granular to almost<br />

isidiate, granules ca. 40-100 µm, when fresh<br />

generally gray- green, lightened in the herbarium<br />

(whitish) . B. subincompta<br />

11* Epihym. yellow-brown, brown, red-brown . 12<br />

12 Sp. 15-30 x 2-3 µm, bacillar, (<strong>of</strong>ten indefinite) 4-<br />

, rarely 6 celled. Epihym., <strong>of</strong>ten also hym.<br />

partially dirty reddish. Hym. and exc. (dark) redbrown,<br />

K+ purple. Ap. flat, finally convex, with<br />

thin, <strong>of</strong>ten permanent margin, dark purple-brown<br />

to black, -0.8 mm. Thallus granular-mealy, graywhite<br />

to -green B. incompta<br />

12* Sp. longer, needle-form, long pointed on one<br />

end, or thread-like. Hyp. not K+ purple. Ap. not<br />

black . 13<br />

13 Thallus <strong>of</strong> close standing, very fine granules,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten very thick, greenish (to gray-green), <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

with whitish pycn. Ap. brown-gray to red-brown.<br />

Hyp. dark red-brown to dark brown. Sp. 27-<br />

45(55) x 1-1.7 µm<br />

Bacidina arnoldiana (PT 1/4)<br />

13* Thallus indefinite to thin scurfy-flat warty,<br />

without pycn. Ap. light brown to black- brown.<br />

Hyp. light brown, yellow-brown. Sp. 30-60 x<br />

1.2-2(2.5) µm ↑ B. arceutina (19)<br />

14 Ap. disk dark brown, dark red-brown,<br />

brown-black, black, gray-black, or lead-gray .15<br />

14* Ap. not so colored, generally lighter 23<br />

15 Epihym. dark greenish to dark olive or blue-<br />

green to verdigris green 16<br />

15* Epihym. colorless, yellowish, brown, red- brown,<br />

or violet 19<br />

16 Sp. needle-like, 30-45(60) x 2-3 µm. Ap.<br />

-0.6(0.8) mm, bluish- to lead-gray, discolored<br />

brown to bluish-black, <strong>of</strong>ten varying on a single<br />

apothecium, fresh disk lighter than the margin,<br />

flat, margined, then convex-marginless. Epihym.<br />

olive, bluish- green to blue-black, hyp. colorless.<br />

Thallus thin, granular-warty to indefinite B. friesiana<br />

16* Sp. bacillar, up to 30(38) µm . 17<br />

17 Epihym. blue-green verdigris green, K-, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

with small blue crystals. Ap. long flat, thin<br />

margined, finally also convex-marginless, black, -<br />

0.7(1) mm. Sp. 18-30(38) x 1.5-2.5 µm, thin<br />

bacillar, 4-8 celled. Paraph. simple to isolated<br />

forked above, above -4 µm thick. Exc. dark<br />

purple-brown, K+ definitely purple .<br />

B. circumspecta<br />

17* Hym. olive, greenish, dark green, or black-green<br />

above, K+ violet. Ap. soon convex-marginless,<br />

gray to black 18<br />

18 Sp. 17-26(29) x 1.5-2.5 µm, 4(-8) celled, thin<br />

bacillar, sometimes slightly curved. Paraph.<br />

simple to sparsely branched. Exc. thin,<br />

paraplectenchymatous. Ap. blue-black, black,<br />

(by pruinosity even) gray, 0.5-1.2(1.5) mm.<br />

Thallus thin B. beckhausii<br />

18* Sp. 10-17(19) x 2.5-3(3.5) µm, 4(5) celled,<br />

narrow fusiform, <strong>of</strong>ten curved. Paraph. branched<br />

and anastomosing. Esc. son strongly reduced.<br />

Ap. black, brown- to gray-black, -0.4 (0.5) mm<br />

. Micarea nitschkeana<br />

19 Sp. very narrow, 30-60 x 1.3-2(2.5) µm. Ap. -<br />

0.6(0l7) mm, center red- dark brown, brownblack,<br />

flat to mostly moderately convex and<br />

(<strong>of</strong>ten darker) margined, later <strong>of</strong>ten high convexmarginless.<br />

Epihym. colorless, yellow-brown,<br />

dirty brown to rarely olive, hyp. pale yellowish to<br />

pale brownish. All the colored part <strong>of</strong> the ap. K-<br />

/+ olive-brown. Thallus thin, scurfy-flat warty<br />

B. arceutina<br />

19* Sp. broader, (2)2.5-3.5(4) µm. Ap. becoming<br />

larger 20<br />

20 Thallus conspicuously fine granular to isidiate to<br />

coralloid (granules 50-100 µm, rounded to<br />

elongated into isidia, like in B. rubella, but <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

somewhat browned), as a rule well developed,<br />

yellow-greenish, (blue) greenish, greenish-gray,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten slightly browned. Ap. mostly very sparse,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten conspicuously narrowly sessile, the young<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten bowl-form, then flat, margined, finally even<br />

convex, disk dark (red)brown to black, shiny,<br />

margin <strong>of</strong>ten definitely lighter. Epihym. brown,<br />

lilac-brown, violet-gray, red-brown, purple-black,<br />

rarely olive, <strong>of</strong>ten (not always!) the colored part<br />

K+ purple- violet. Sp. (42)60-75(88) x 2.5-<br />

3.5(4) µm. ±Atranorin B. biatorina<br />

20* Thallus not fine granular to isidiate, but flat<br />

warty, smooth or cracked. Very rare species. Sp.<br />

8-16 celled, hym. 65-100 µm . 21<br />

21 Epihym pale to (brown)yellowish, exc. and hyp.<br />

above pale brown, yellow or reddish- yellow, all<br />

the strongly colored part <strong>of</strong> the ap. K+<br />

(purple)violet. Paraph. up to 5 µm thick above.<br />

Sp. 45-75 x 2.5-4 µm. Ap. brown, red-brown,<br />

rarely blackish-brown (fresh at first the margin<br />

dark and the disk relatively light, then even this<br />

dark), at first flat, thin margined, later convexmarginless,<br />

-1.5 mm. Thallus whitish- to<br />

greenish-gray, flat warty to almost crustose<br />

squamulose . B. polychroa<br />

99


21* Epihym. mostly strongly colored. Paraph. little<br />

thickened (2 µm) above. Uncertain separation<br />

22<br />

22 Ap. black, purple-black, rarely dark brown, flat,<br />

margined, later convex-marginless, crowded<br />

sessile. Epihym. gray-brown, brown-red, blackbrown,<br />

blue-black, dark olive-violet, K- or K+<br />

purple. Hyp. colorless, yellowish, towards the<br />

exc. <strong>of</strong>ten brown to red-brown. Sp. 35-80 x 2.5-<br />

4 µm. Thallus cracked to scurfy, gray- to graywhitish<br />

B. laurocerasi<br />

22* Ap. chestnut-brown, dark brown to blackish, at<br />

first cup-form, then for a long time flat with<br />

mostly permanent margin, finally convex, when<br />

young narrowed and therefore somewhat raised<br />

sessile. Epihym. blue- violet, lilac-gray, purplebrown,<br />

(likewise the exc.) K+ purple. sp. (42)50-<br />

92 x 2-3,5(4) µm. Thallus <strong>of</strong> scattered, flattened<br />

warts, yellowish- to greenish B. subacerina<br />

23 Sp. up to 2 µm thick, rarely over 50 µm long<br />

(except B. arceutina), up to 8 celled. Ap. mostly<br />

only -0.6 mm wide. Hym. -65 µm high 24<br />

23* Sp. 2.5-3.5(4) µm thick, at least partially over 50<br />

µm long. Ap. as a rule over 0.5 mm wide. Hym.<br />

over 65 µm high . 28<br />

24 Ap. light brown to dark brown, -0.6(0.8) mm,<br />

flat, margined, later <strong>of</strong>ten convex, flat to usually<br />

moderately convex and (<strong>of</strong>ten darker) margined,<br />

later <strong>of</strong>ten high convex marginless. Sp. very<br />

narrow, 30-60 x 1.3-2 (2.5) µm. Epihym.<br />

colorless, yellow-brown, dirty brown to rarely<br />

olive, hyp. pale yellowish to pale brownish. All<br />

colored parts <strong>of</strong> the ap. K-/+ olive-brown.<br />

Thallus thin, scruffy to flat warty . B. arceutina<br />

24* Ap. whitish, yellowish, orange, light red- brown,<br />

brick-red, -0.6 mm. 8 celled . 25<br />

25 Ap. -0.2 mm, <strong>of</strong>ten heaped and coalescing, very<br />

numerous, rose, pale gray-brown, red- brown to<br />

dark brown, with lighter margin, flat to<br />

moderately convex. Epihym. pale in dark<br />

colored ap. brownish above (and then K+<br />

purple). Hyp. weakly developed, colorless. Exc.<br />

colorless. Sp. indefinitely 1-4 celled, 20-30(38)<br />

x 1.3-1.7 µm. Thallus greenish, gray-green,<br />

scruffy-granular, <strong>of</strong>ten relatively thick, with<br />

sunken whitish pycn. Pycnosp. 34-45 x 1 µm,<br />

with indefinite septa, the sp. very similar<br />

Bacidina chloroticula<br />

25* Ap. 0.2-0.6 mm wide . 26<br />

26 Thallus <strong>of</strong> fine granules (20-40(50) µm), greenish<br />

to (above all in the herbarium) brownish. Ap.<br />

flat, margined, whitish, beige, orange, roseyellow.<br />

Exc., hyp. and epihym. colorless. Sp.<br />

indefinitely 4-8 celled, (20)25-48 x 1-1.5(2) µm.<br />

Pycnosp. 21-40 x 1 µm Bacidina delicata<br />

26* Thallus whitish, gray to gray-green, thin to<br />

unevenly warty, not <strong>of</strong> discrete granules. Sp.<br />

4(8) celled . 27<br />

27 Sp. 20-35(45) x 1-2 µm, <strong>of</strong>ten curved Ap.<br />

whitish, beige to light yellow-reddish, almost<br />

colorless when fresh, numerous, very soon<br />

convex marginless, -0.5 mm. Hyp./exc.<br />

colorless. Hym. 35-50 µm, colorless or yellowbrown<br />

above. Thallus warty to mealy<br />

Bacidina phacodes<br />

27* Sp. 34-54 x 1.5-2 µm. Ap. pale yellow- reddish,<br />

pale red-brown, rarely to brick red, for a long<br />

time flat, margined. Exc. ± colorless, hyp. pale<br />

(orange)brown above. Hym. 45-60 µm. Very<br />

close to B. phacodes B. assulata*<br />

28 Hym. with granular outer layer. Ap. rose to light<br />

flesh-color (beige in the herbarium), sometimes<br />

slightly pruinose, depressed sessile, for a long<br />

time flat, with thick lighter margin, finally<br />

convex-marginless, -1.5 mm. Thallus finely<br />

granular to mealy, light gray(green). Sp. 60-<br />

85(100) x 3-4(5) µm B. rosella<br />

28* Hym. without granular outer layer. Ap. not rose,<br />

-1.5 mm 29<br />

29 Thallus flat warty to almost crustose-<br />

squamulose, whitish to greenish-gray. Ap.<br />

brown, red-brown, rarely blackish-brown (when<br />

fresh, at first the margin dark and disk relatively<br />

light, then even these darken), at first flat, thin<br />

margined, later convex marginless. Epihym. pale<br />

to (brown) yellowish, exc. and hyp. pale brown,<br />

yellow or reddish-yellow above, all strongly<br />

colored parts <strong>of</strong> the ap. K+ (purple)violet. Sp.<br />

45-75 x 2.5-4 µm B. polychroa<br />

(B. fraxinea is very similar: Ap. brown to brownred,<br />

K-reaction and structure <strong>of</strong> the ap. (section)<br />

are as in B. rubella, sp. 40-85(109) x 2.5-3.5 µm)<br />

29* Thallus granular-isidiate to finely coraloid, gray-<br />

to yellow-greenish, bluish-green, fading in the<br />

herbarium, granules mostly elongated, 60-120<br />

µm. Ap. yellow-red, brick red to brown-red,<br />

narrowly sessile, at first cup-shaped, thick<br />

margined, then flat, finally even convexmarginless,<br />

sometimes with pruinose margin.<br />

Exc., epihym. and hyp. colorless to yellowish<br />

(pale orange). No region K+ violet. Sp. 45-<br />

75(84) x 2.5-3.5 µm . Bacidia rubella<br />

30 Hyp. dark red-brown to black-brown . 31<br />

30* Hyp. definitely lighter 34<br />

31 S. elongate to fusiform, at best 4 µm thick.<br />

<strong>Lichens</strong> only basally on trees and on decaying<br />

wood . 32<br />

31* Sp. bacillar, 2-3.5 µm wide. Ap. at least at first<br />

flat and margined, -0.9 mm, black, rarely dark<br />

purple-brown. Hyp. at least above dark redbrown<br />

33<br />

32 Sp. 12-22 x 4-5.5 µm, (2-)4(6) celled. Epihym.<br />

mostly blue-green. Ap. convex marginless,<br />

black, -0.4 mm . ↑ Micarea melaena<br />

32* Sp. 18-40 x 5-8 µm, 4-8(10) celled. Epihym.<br />

brown to olive. Young ap. margined, brown, redbrown<br />

to (almost) black. Hyp. red-brown above.<br />

↑ Mycobilimbia sabuletorum (PT 2/16)<br />

33 Epihym. green, green-blackish to olive, rarely<br />

pale. Sp. 24-38(40) x 2.5-3.5 µm, mostly 6-8<br />

100


celled. Thallus finely granular to almost isidiate,<br />

granules ca. 40-100 µm, generally gray-green<br />

when fresh, in the herbarium lightening (whitish)<br />

B. subincompta (11)<br />

33* Epihym, <strong>of</strong>ten partially also the hym, dirty<br />

reddish. Sp. 15-30 x 2.3 µm, (<strong>of</strong>ten indefinite) 4-<br />

, rarely 6-8 celled. Thallus granular-mealy, graywhite<br />

to -green B. incompta (12)<br />

34 Sp. very narrow, -3 µm. Epihym. or upper part<br />

<strong>of</strong> the hym. blue-green, olive, green. Thallus<br />

thin, indefinite to warty, gray to pale greenish.<br />

Sp. 10-17(19) x 2.5-3(3.5) µm, 4(5) celled,<br />

narrow fusiform, <strong>of</strong>ten curved. Paraph. branched<br />

and anastomosing. Exc. soon strongly reduced.<br />

Ap. black, brown- to gray-black, -0.4(0.5) mm<br />

Micarea nitschkeana<br />

34* Sp. broader 35<br />

35 Thallus, ap. and hym. C+ red. Ap. 4- to 8 celled.<br />

Paraph. strongly branched and anastomosing.<br />

Ap. (<strong>of</strong>ten on the same thallus) various colored,<br />

light gray, lead- gray, violet-gray, yellow-gray,<br />

rose-brown to almost black, convex watch-glass<br />

form. Thallus with smooth upper surface,<br />

coherent and uneven to consisting <strong>of</strong> rounded<br />

convex areoles ↑ Micarea peliocarpa/cinerea<br />

35* Thallus, ap. and hym. C- . 36<br />

36 Thallus gray to greenish, coarse granular- warty,<br />

P+ red, on decaying wood, very rarely on acid<br />

bark. Ap. pure black throughout, marginless,<br />

very rapidly convex. Sp. 16-34(38) x 4-6(7) µm,<br />

4-8 celled ↑ Micarea lignaria<br />

36* Thallus R-. Commonly on bark. Ap. (at least in<br />

part) not pure black (with the exception <strong>of</strong><br />

occasionally B. auerswaldii: ap. for a long time<br />

definitely margined) . 37<br />

37 Ap. -0.3 mm, red-brown, brown-red, brown-<br />

black, rapidly convex-marginless, <strong>of</strong>ten shiny.<br />

Thallus gray-green to dark green, irregularly<br />

granular. Sp. 20-40 x 4-5 µm, commonly 8celled,<br />

usually gradually narrowed toward one<br />

end, sometimes curved. Epihym. brown to redbrown,<br />

but even olive to green. Paraph. ranched,<br />

anastomosing. Exc. <strong>of</strong> branched anastomosing<br />

hyphae, soon reduced. On acid substrates .<br />

Scoliciosporum chlorococcum<br />

37* Ap. commonly 0.3 - 0.8 (1.2), <strong>of</strong>ten margined at<br />

least when young. Exc. definite. On base-rich<br />

bark. Hyp. colorless or brown above . 38<br />

38 Hyp. brown above. Sp. 4-8 celled, 18-40 x 5-8<br />

µm. Ap. dirty brown, rose-brown, brown, or<br />

black-brown. Rarely at the base <strong>of</strong> stems<br />

↑ Mycobilimbia sabuletorum<br />

38* Hyp. colorless to slightly yellowish in the upper<br />

region. Sp. up to 26(28) µm, to 4-, rarely 6celled<br />

39<br />

39 Ap. brown to black or lead-gray. Red-brown part<br />

<strong>of</strong> the exc. and epihym. usually K+ (strongly)<br />

purple 40<br />

39* Ap. light colored, whitish, yellowish, rose, rosebrown,<br />

or light brown. Exc., hyp. and epihym.<br />

colorless or slightly yellowish 41<br />

40 Ap. dark brown to black, at first concave, thick<br />

margined, finally flat to moderately convex and ±<br />

marginless, purple-black to black, -0.8(1.2) mm.<br />

Thallus finely granular-isidiate-coralloid. Sp. 20-<br />

26(36) x 4-5(6) µm, elongate fusiform . Epihym.<br />

olive-brown. Lichen very similar to B. biatorina<br />

(↑), but distinguished by the sp. Rh-Mn-T<br />

B. auerswaldii<br />

(Hepp ex Stizenb.) Mig.<br />

40* Ap. very variable in color, lead-gray, blue-gray,<br />

gray-brown, brown, or blackish, sometimes<br />

varying on the same ap., in shade-forms or in<br />

youth even whitish, flat to convex, with lighter<br />

margin to marginless, -0.5(0.8) mm. Sp. 13-<br />

24(28) x 4-5(6) µm, 4(-6) celled, straight or<br />

slightly curved. Epihym. brown, red-brown,<br />

violet-brown (usually K+ intensive purple), pale<br />

greenish, gray-green, blue-green (K+ intensive<br />

green) or colorless. Hym. 50-65 µm. Paraph.<br />

simple or forked, -5 µm thick above. Thallus<br />

thin, ± smooth, pale gray-green . B. naegelii<br />

(Danger <strong>of</strong> confusion with ↑Lecania fuscella,<br />

there paraph. scarcely thickened above)<br />

41 Ap. whitish, individually <strong>of</strong>ten gray, -0.5(0.8)<br />

mm. <strong>Lichens</strong> on branches and stems, scarcely<br />

over mosses or in moss communities. Hym. up to<br />

50-60(65) µm. Compare with shade-forms or<br />

young thalli <strong>of</strong> B. naegelii (39) with paler<br />

epihym.<br />

41* Ap. whitish, yellow- to flesh-reddish, old ones at<br />

times also brown, as a rule over 0.5 mm wide.<br />

Lichen usually on old or moss covered stems or<br />

at the stem base. Hym. 60-80 µm. Very rare<br />

species . 42<br />

42 Thallus green, gray-green, finely granular to<br />

almost mealy-sorediate, granules 25-70 µm. Ap.<br />

rapidly hemispherical, then ± spherical, yellow-<br />

to flesh-reddish, beige, yellow- brown, or brown<br />

(at best brown when old), very rapidly<br />

marginless, -0.8 (1.2) mm. Sp. predominantly 2-,<br />

sparingly 4-celled, 10-17 x 3.5-5 µm, broadly<br />

fusiform to ellipsoidal .<br />

Mycobilimbia sphaeroides<br />

42* Thallus gray, whitish, or pale greenish, granularwarty.<br />

Ap. whitish, beige, yellow- to fleshreddish,<br />

at first flat-cup form, with rather thick<br />

margin, later convex-marginless to almost<br />

spherical, -1.2 mm. Sp. 12-22 x 4-7 µm,<br />

(2-)4(6)celled, fusiform. Closely related to M.<br />

fusca . Mycobilimbia carneoalbida<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Bacidia arceutina (Ach.) Arnold<br />

101


Up into montane sites on subneutral to<br />

moderately acid deciduous tree bark, above all<br />

on ash, willow, common maple, and poplar, on<br />

humid habitats, especially brook bordered<br />

thickets, r.-m.photoph., a-/m.nitroph., weakly<br />

toxitol., e.g. in the Acrocordietum gemm., with<br />

B. rubella – mieur-subatl-med – rare (3); Ne,<br />

Mn, SFW, O, Rh, Sch, HRh, SJu, Bo, Al, Eif, Ts<br />

Bacidia assulata (Körber) Vézda (B. intermedia<br />

(Stizenb.) Arnold)<br />

Up into montane sites above all on deciduous<br />

trees, favoring relatively base-rich bark,<br />

especially on ash, elder, and beech, subneutroph.<br />

-m(r.)acidoph., r.hygroph., <strong>of</strong>ten with other<br />

Bacidias (B. subacerina, B. arceutina) – mieurmed<br />

– rare (2); süHü, süSch, Ne, Ju, O, Saar,<br />

Rh-M-T, ThW<br />

Bacidia bagliettoana (Massal. & De Not.) Jatta<br />

(B. muscorum (Sw.) Mudd)<br />

Above all up into montane sites on mosses and<br />

plant detritus over calcareous soil and in fissures<br />

<strong>of</strong> limestone, in openings <strong>of</strong> dry turf on flat<br />

ground, stony soil, on calcareous dunes, on<br />

gravel pits, also on walls, almost never directly<br />

on soil, commonly on light-rich habitats, basiph.,<br />

xeroph.-mesoph., in numerous moss<br />

communities, also in the Toninion sed. –<br />

bor-med-mo – rather rare (3); above all Ju, SJu,<br />

FrJu, moreover rare (e.g. He, Th, Mn, Rh, Ne,<br />

Hü, Mos, Eif, Saar)<br />

Bacicia beckhausii Körber (B. minuscula (Anzi)<br />

Vézda)<br />

From the sub- up into the high montane zone on<br />

deciduous trees with usually rather base-rich<br />

bark, above all sycamore, ash, old beech, usually<br />

on moderately rain exposed sites on stems, e.g. in<br />

bark cracks, principally on high precipitation<br />

sites in humid forests, subneutroph.-m.acidoph.,<br />

m.photoph.-r.skioph., a-(m.)nitroph. – bor-medmo<br />

– (r.)rare (3); Sch, Vog, süHü, Ne, Ju, SFW,<br />

O, Sp, Rh-Mn-T, Eif, ThW, Erz, Al<br />

Bacidia biatorina (Körber) Vaino<br />

Concentrated in montane, high precipitation sites<br />

in moist mountain forests, e.g. on oak, beech,<br />

spruce, especially in beech-spruce forests,<br />

m.acidoph., v.hygroph., m.photoph., anitroph.,<br />

e.g. in the Lobarietum pulm. – mieur-subatl –<br />

rare (2); Sch, Sb, O, SFW<br />

Bacidia circumspecta (Nyl. ex Vainio) Malme<br />

(B. quercicola (Nyl.) Vainio)<br />

In hilly to montane sites on older deciduous trees<br />

in the interior <strong>of</strong> thinned forests, rare in the open<br />

land, m.acidoph.-subneutroph., <strong>of</strong> similar<br />

ecology as B. subincompta and B. rubella (↑) –<br />

s’bor-smed-mo – rare (1); süHü süSch, SJu, Ne,<br />

O, Eif, We, Th, ThW<br />

Bacidia fraxinea Lönnr. (B fallax (Körber)<br />

Lettau)<br />

Very similar to B. rubella (↑), bur more limited<br />

to warm summer continental region – mieursmed,<br />

(subko) – v. rare (1); SFW, Fr, Th<br />

Bacidia friesiana (Hepp) Körber<br />

Up into the montane sites on subneutral<br />

deciduous tree bark on m.-r.light rich, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

eutrophic habitats, especially on elder, elm,<br />

maple, ash, above all at the base <strong>of</strong> free standing<br />

trees, subneutroph.-neutroph., m.-r.nitroph., e.g.<br />

in the Lecanoretum samb. – (s’bor-)mieur-subatlsmed<br />

– rare (1); Sch, HRh, Bo, O, Ju, Ne, Ml<br />

Bacidia fuscoviridis (Anzi) Lettau<br />

In the climatically mild to warm regions, up into<br />

the montane sites on carbonate rock, especially<br />

limestone, on nutrient rich, <strong>of</strong>ten eutrophic,<br />

rather light poor to moderately light rich and<br />

rather humid habitats, above all on rain exposed,<br />

sometimes also from time to time running water<br />

moistened steep surfaces, frequently also<br />

synanthrop (old native stone walls), basiph., m.r.ombroph.,<br />

e.g. in the Acrocordietum con. –<br />

mieur-smed – r.rare; wide-spread, above all Ju,<br />

SJu, Ne, Eif, Hü, Th, but rare<br />

Bacidia globulosa (Flörke) Haf. & V.Wirth<br />

(Catillaria g. (Flörke) Th.Fr.)<br />

Up into the high montane zone on flat to deeply<br />

cracked bark <strong>of</strong> deciduous trees, rarely conifers<br />

in cut-over forests, at the forest margin, also on<br />

wood, on lower sites above all on the trunk <strong>of</strong><br />

oak, m.-r.acidoph., r.-v.anombroph., r.hygroph.,<br />

(r.skioph.-)m.(r.)photoph., a-/m.nitroph., <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

with only very little attendance in the bark cracks<br />

between other communities, e.g. in contact with<br />

Chrysotrichetalia cand. – bor-med(mo) – in SW-<br />

Germany moderate frequency, in W and N rarer<br />

and at times strongly in regression.<br />

Bacidia hegetschweileri (Hepp) Vaino<br />

In the montane sites on moderately acid bark <strong>of</strong><br />

deciduous trees – bor-mieur-mo – very rare (0);<br />

süSch, O, ThW, He, Mfr<br />

Bacidia herbarum (Stizenb.) Arnold<br />

102


Up into the montane zone on dying mosses and<br />

remains <strong>of</strong> higher plants above all over lime-rich<br />

soil, on subneutral, mineral-rich bark (e.g. aspen)<br />

– bor-mieur – v.rare; Fr(Sugenheim), Th, Saar,<br />

Al<br />

Bacidia incompta (Borrer ex Hooker) Anzi<br />

Up into the montane zone on deciduous trees,<br />

especially on subneutral bark (Norway maple,<br />

common maple, popular, and elm) on m.-r.light<br />

rich habitats, e.g. in the Acrocordietum gemm. –<br />

bor-smed – rare (1); Rh, Bo, Ju, SFW, Ts<br />

Bacidia laurocerasi (Delise ex Duby) Zahlbr.<br />

(B. endoleuca auct., B. atrogrisea (Delise ex<br />

Hepp) Körber)<br />

Up into the montane zone on deciduous tree<br />

bark, above all on ash, willow, beech, and<br />

hornbeam, in humid forests, e.g. oak-hornbeam<br />

forest, m.acidoph., m.photoph., anitroph., in the<br />

community <strong>of</strong> Graphidetalia – mieur-subatl-med<br />

– v.rare (0); süRh, süHü, HRh, Sch, O, Bo, Ju,<br />

Al, Ml<br />

Bacidia naegelii (Hepp) Zahlbr.<br />

Up into the montane zone on deciduous trees<br />

(rarely conifers), above all on subneutral to<br />

weakly acid, mineral-rich bark (e.g. elder,<br />

popular, walnut, ash, maple, and oak), on the<br />

stems as well as the branches, on (m.-)r.light-rich<br />

habitats, subneutroph.-m.(r.)acidoph., e.g. in the<br />

Lecanoretum sambuci, Acrocordietum gemm. –<br />

s’bor-med – r.rare (3), e.g. Hü, Ne, SFW, Ju,<br />

SJu, Rh, HRh, Sch, O, Sp. Saar, Ts, Eif, He, Th,<br />

disappearing beyond south Germany<br />

Bacidia polychroa (Th.Fr. Körber (B.<br />

fuscorubella (Ach.) Bausch, B. acerina (Ach.)<br />

Arnold)<br />

In hilly and submontane, rarely montane sites,<br />

prefers deciduous forests in moist valleys, e.g. in<br />

oak-sycamore forests, on subneutral, <strong>of</strong>ten s<strong>of</strong>t,<br />

water accumulating bark (e.g. ash, maple, elm,<br />

and elder), on climatically mild, humid habitats,<br />

m.photoph., r.-v.hygroph., e.g. in the Lobarion,<br />

in the Acrocordietum gemm., Lecanoretum<br />

sambuci – mieur-subatl-smed(-med) – rare (1);<br />

süSch, HRh, Ju, FrJu, Bo, O<br />

Bacidia rosella (Pers.) De Not.<br />

In the hilly and submontane (rare in the mild<br />

montane) sites on deciduous trees, especially on<br />

smooth and flat cracked bark on the stems and<br />

stem bases, above all on beech, hornbeam, oak,<br />

common maple, in cool oak-hornbeam- and<br />

beech-spruce forests, m.acidoph.-subneutroph.,<br />

anitroph., Char. Pyrenuletum nit. – mieur-subatl-<br />

med-mo – rare (2); Mn, Ne, ?Sp. Ts. MRh, Rh-<br />

Mn-T, He, ThW, nöHü, O, Ju, FrJu, SFW, Mfr,<br />

süSch, Vog<br />

Bacidia rubella (H<strong>of</strong>fm.) Massal. (B. luteola<br />

“(Ach.) Mudd”)<br />

Up into the montane zone in cut-over forests and<br />

on free-standing deciduous trees on mineral-rich,<br />

subneutral, <strong>of</strong>ten cracked to somewhat spongy or<br />

decayed bark, also on overgrowing moss in lower<br />

sites especially in oak-hornbeam forests, above<br />

all on maple, ash, older oak, in fruit orchards on<br />

apple trees and on walnut, in higher (usually<br />

mild) sites especially on oak and sycamore,<br />

subneutroph.(-m.acidoph.), m.-v.hygroph., m.r.photoph.,<br />

a-/m.nitroph., m.toxitol., <strong>of</strong>ten with<br />

Acrocordia gemm., Opegrapha varia,<br />

Aleurodiscus, above all in the Acrocordietum<br />

gemm., Bacidia rub.-Aleurod. community. –<br />

s’bor-med(mo) – r.rare (-m.frequent) (3),<br />

throughout the entire region, up into rather air<br />

polluted regions, here however sterile, above all<br />

JU, SJu, Hü, Ne, in the northwestern and<br />

northern regions (RhSch, HeBgl) rare to<br />

disappearing<br />

Bacidia subacerina Vainio<br />

Above all in the montane sites, rarely lower,<br />

prefers moist mountain forests in high<br />

precipitation regions, e.g. in beech-spruce(-fir)<br />

forests, on conifer and deciduous tree bark, m.r.acidoph.,<br />

m.photoph.(-r.skioph.),<br />

(r.-)v.hygroph., anitroph., e.g. in the<br />

Pseudevenietum – s’bor-mieur-subatl – rare (1);<br />

süSch rare Ju, Ne, Do, Al, ThW<br />

Bacidia subincompta (Nyl.) Arnold (B. affinis<br />

(Stizenb.) Vainio)<br />

Up into the high montane sites on deciduous tree<br />

bark, predominantly on older oak and ash, rather<br />

similar to B. rubella (↑), but rarely on freestanding<br />

trees, m.photoph.-r.skioph., in the<br />

Acrocordietum gemm. – bor-med(mo) – r.rare<br />

(3), isolated in the SW, e.g. Sch, Bo, Ju, SFW,<br />

Mn, Ne, O, Ts, ± lacking in intensive agricultural<br />

regions<br />

Bacidia trachona (Ach.) Lettau (B. coprodes<br />

(Körber) Lettau)Up into high montane sites on<br />

shaded, humid, sheltered places in ravines,<br />

forests, on north exposed, on (<strong>of</strong>ten moist) rocks<br />

on limestone and calcareous or basic silicate<br />

rock, generally on steep to overhanging surfaces,<br />

103


are also on old walls, commonly passing over to<br />

bark – bor-med – rare; Ju, SJu, Al, Mos, Eif<br />

LIT.: FRIES 1874, MIGULA 1929-31, PURVIS ET AL. 1992,<br />

VAINIO 1922.<br />

Bacidina Vézda<br />

(Determination ↑ Bacidia)<br />

Introduction<br />

The genus includes crustose lichens, which are<br />

very similar to Bacidia, but <strong>of</strong>ten have greenish,<br />

finely granular thallus with whitish pycnidia and<br />

filamentous pycnospores. They are usually<br />

dwellers in pioneers or ephemeral habitats, fast<br />

growing and resistant to air pollution.<br />

B. phacodes resides on bark <strong>of</strong> deciduous<br />

trees (e.g. beech), but also on moss over bark,<br />

lime- and silicate rock. Also B. arnoldiana<br />

displays a relatively broad ecological amplitude.<br />

They occur on moist shaded sites on the base <strong>of</strong><br />

trees, on lime- and silicate rocks. B. inundata<br />

lives amphibiously on lime-free to weakly lime-<br />

containing rocks in brooks, B. egenula on shady<br />

habitats on rocks and stones <strong>of</strong> silicate rock.<br />

Most <strong>of</strong> the species are widely distributed in the<br />

region <strong>of</strong> the summer green deciduous forests,<br />

whereby their area extends more or less into the<br />

mediterranean region. B. phacodes occurs up<br />

into the boreal zone, B. inundata up into the high<br />

north.<br />

Genus Characteristics<br />

Differing from Bacidia by whitish pycnidia with<br />

filamentous, <strong>of</strong>ten curved pycnospores. Thallus<br />

finely granular, <strong>of</strong> goniocysts, <strong>of</strong>ten greenish to<br />

green-gray. Spores needle-like, <strong>of</strong>ten indefinitely<br />

cross septate.<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Bacidina arnoldiana (Körber) V.Wirth &<br />

Vézda (Bacidia a. Körber<br />

Above all in the hilly and submontane sites, but<br />

also up into the montane zone on m.light-rich to<br />

r.light-poor, m.-r.humid, also moist substrates on<br />

limestone (above all on steep surfaces), on the<br />

base to the middle <strong>of</strong> the trunk <strong>of</strong> deciduous and<br />

conifer trees, especially in meadow forests, oakhornbeam,<br />

substrate vagrant, r.acidoph.-basiph.,<br />

toxitol., e.g. in the Acrocordion con., in species<br />

poor Graphidion- community, e.g. with Porina<br />

aenea – mieur-med – r.rare-m.frequent,<br />

widespread and spreading in hilly and<br />

submontane sites<br />

Bacidina chloroticula (Nyl.) Vézda & Poelt<br />

(Bacidia ch. (Nyl.) A.L.Sm.)<br />

In hilly and submontane sites on cross-sections <strong>of</strong><br />

wooden fences, on plant detritus, concrete, stones<br />

etc., usually on near the soil on long dew<br />

moistened or sites remaining shaded, very<br />

substrate vagrant, m.acidoph.-basiph.,<br />

m.photoph.-r. photoph., (substrate hygroph.) –<br />

(s’bor-)mieur – overlooked, Lux<br />

Bacidina delicata (Larbal. ex Leighton) V.Wirth<br />

& Vézda (Bacidia d. (Leighton) Coppins)<br />

In the hilly to montane sites, v. substrate vagrant,<br />

on subneutral, <strong>of</strong>ten ± eutrophic bark <strong>of</strong><br />

deciduous trees (apple, willow, Sambucus etc.),<br />

e.g. in fruit orchards, also on plant detritus,<br />

mosses, on calcareous rock, bricks, concrete,<br />

rather like B. chlorot. (↑) – mieur-smed –sterile<br />

presumable not rare; e.g. Ne<br />

Bacidina egenula (Nyl) Vézda (Bacidia e. (Nyl.)<br />

Arnold)<br />

On silicate rock, usually small stones on long<br />

time dew moistened or shaded habitats, on<br />

shaded brook stone walls – mieur –<br />

insufficiently observed, probably O, Sch<br />

Bacidina inundata (Fr.) Vézda (Bacidia i. (Fr.)<br />

Körber)<br />

Up to above the tree line, in lower sites rare and<br />

even to some extent have disappeared<br />

(pollution), above all in clear, cool mountain<br />

brooks on frequently flooded or long time<br />

moistened boulders or cliffs, commonly on limefree<br />

silicate rock, yet also on calcareous rock and<br />

long time moist wood (boards in/on water,<br />

wooden fountains), rare also on (not) secondarily<br />

moistened, very humid or for a long time dew<br />

moistened sites, subneutroph., r.skioph.m.(r.)photoph.,<br />

a-(m.)nitroph., substrate vagrant<br />

– bor-med-mo – rare (3); süSch. Vog, Eif, nöSch,<br />

rare in Sp, O, Bo, Al, Ts, ThW, He<br />

Bacidina phacodes (Körber) Vézda (Bacidia ph.<br />

Körber, B. albescens (Stizenb.) Bausch)<br />

Above all in submontane and montane sites on<br />

deciduous tree bark, also on conifers, on mosses<br />

over bark and silicate rock, very rare directly on<br />

rock, preferably on wood (decaying stumps),<br />

sociology and ecology widely comprehensive,<br />

104


subneutroph.-r.acidoph., m.photoph., anitroph. –<br />

s’bor-mieur(subatl)-med – rare (3); süSch, Ju,<br />

SFW, O, Sp. Eif, Al<br />

LIT.: DIEDERICH 1989, PURVIS et al. 1992, VAINIO 1922,<br />

VÉZDA<br />

Bactrospora Massal.<br />

(Determination ↑ Lecanactis)<br />

Introduction<br />

The 20 species included with the related genus<br />

Lecanactis are recognized by the decomposition<br />

<strong>of</strong> the multicellular, cross septate thin spores into<br />

numerous fragments while in the asci. The<br />

thallus is crustose, simply constructed and<br />

containing Trentepohlia algae, the apothecia are<br />

black, margined to marginless. B. dryina is<br />

found almost exclusively on the trunks <strong>of</strong> oak in<br />

old oak-hornbeam forests. They are, like many<br />

dwellers on old oak, strongly colored. They are<br />

distributed from southern Europe (Black Sea)<br />

over central Europe to south Sweden and are<br />

largely absent in the high atlantic west. There it<br />

is replaced by the closely related B. corticola,<br />

which is established into north Germany.<br />

Genus Characteristics<br />

Thallus crustose, thin scurfy or endophloeic, ±<br />

undifferentiated, with Trentepohlia. Ap. black to<br />

brown-black, with or without definite proper<br />

margin. Exc. definite, exterior dark red-brown,<br />

interior <strong>of</strong>ten lighter. Hyp. colorless. Epihym.<br />

light to dark red-brown. Hym. I- to I+ blue (B.<br />

dryina). Paraphysoids branched and reticulate,<br />

not thickened above, clearly longer than the asci.<br />

Asci narrowly clavate to cylindric, fissitunicate,<br />

with narrow tholus and very short ocular<br />

chamber, which sometimes is surrounded by a<br />

flat ring-like I+ blue structure Sp. needle-like,<br />

multicellular, commonly already in the ascus<br />

disintegrating into short broken pieces. Pycnosp.<br />

short cylindric, bacillar or elongate ellipsoidal.<br />

Ch-.<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Bactrospora dryina (Ach.) Massal. (Lecanactis<br />

dryophila Lettau)<br />

In the hilly to submontane, mild winter sites on<br />

trunks <strong>of</strong> old oaks on rain-sheltered flanks,<br />

similar to Arthonia pruin. (↑), mostly in even<br />

species-poor stands, in the Arthonietum pruinatae<br />

– mieur-med, subatl – rare (2); süRh, süHü-<br />

HRh(-süSch), Bo, Ju, Ne, O, Sp. Rh-Mn-T+,<br />

MRh-Ts, Eif<br />

LIT.: LETTAU 1932-1937, EGEA & TORRENTE 1993.<br />

Baeomyes Pers.:Fr.<br />

(Key incl. Dibaeis)<br />

Introduction<br />

The worldwide distribution <strong>of</strong> the genus includes<br />

three species in Europe. They are characterized<br />

by definitely stalked apothecia with a brown<br />

colored, flat to convex disk and a light gray to<br />

pale greenish or slightly brownish, purely<br />

crustose to squamulose, sometimes lobed at the<br />

margin, leaf-like thallus. The rose fruited species<br />

with spherical apothecial heads have been placed<br />

in the genus Dibaeis.<br />

B. rufus and B. placophyllus live on acid<br />

mineral soils or on silicate rock near the soil. B.<br />

rufus is widely distributed in Europe. B.<br />

placophyllus is largely limited to western Europe<br />

and penetrates up into the arctic. In our region<br />

the species reaches the eastern border <strong>of</strong> the<br />

contiguous area.<br />

Genus Characteristics and Determination<br />

Thallus granular, squamulose to appearing<br />

foliose, upper side with cortex, sometimes<br />

sorediate, with disk-like schizidia, with<br />

Coccomyxa or Elliptochloris. Ap. stalked, at<br />

times almost sessile, brown, marginless, stalk<br />

light or greenish, without cortex or basally to<br />

largely with cortex, interior ± colorless, <strong>of</strong><br />

strongly gelatinized hyphae. Exc. and hyp. ±<br />

colorless. Hym. I-. Paraphyses simple or<br />

sparsely branched above. Asci cylindric, thin<br />

walled, thickened above, I- and K/I-. Sp.<br />

1-celled, fusiform. Pycnosp. short cylindric. Ch:<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten Stictic acid, Norstictic acid.<br />

1 Ap. rose, almost spherical from the first, 1-4 mm<br />

wide, stalk -5 mm high, whitish, rarely pale rose.<br />

Thallus crustose, <strong>of</strong> convex to almost spherical<br />

areoles, whitish to light gray, <strong>of</strong>ten extensive and<br />

sterile, K+ yellow, P+ yellow, C-, Atranorin,<br />

Baeomycic acid, ± Squamatic acid, Barbatic acid<br />

. Dibaeis baeomyces (= B. roseus)<br />

105


1* Ap. light brown, rose-brown, red-brown,<br />

moderately convex, stalk <strong>of</strong>ten covered with<br />

thallus granules/-squamules, thallus gray, graygreen,<br />

brownish gray, light green when moist, P+<br />

orange, K+ yellow, C- 2<br />

2 Thallus rosetted, with definite enlarged, crenate, -5<br />

mm wide lobes at the margin, interior ±<br />

squamulose. Ca. 0.2 mm flat to convex schizidia<br />

are cut <strong>of</strong>f at the upper surface (splitting <strong>of</strong>f parts<br />

<strong>of</strong> the upper cortex), leaving behind concave scars.<br />

Ap. rare, red-brown, -4 mm high, 5 mm wide.<br />

Stictic acid . B. placophyllus<br />

2* Thallus without such marginal lobes, purely<br />

crustose to small squamulose, squamules -1 mm,<br />

not sorediate or with diffuse greenish to whitish<br />

soralia, commonly with small, up to 0.2 mm wide<br />

schizidia. Ap. brown-rose to red-brown, sessile to<br />

clearly stalked, -5 mm high, 2 mm wide. Stictic<br />

acid, ± Norstictic acid, ± Gyrophoric acid<br />

B. rufus<br />

(When ap. ± rose-red, K+ yellow, then red: var.<br />

callianthus (Lettau) Lettau)<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Baeomyces placophyllus Ach.<br />

Up into the high montane (but other places also<br />

alpine) sites, especially in high precipitation or<br />

mild winter regions, on sandy-loam, peat or stony<br />

soils, above all on compacted road borders, in<br />

heath moors, in soil filled fissures on fissured<br />

silicate cliffs and over mosses, also on trickle<br />

moistened sites, mostly on rather to very light<br />

rich, nutrient poor to moderately nutrient rich<br />

habitats, m.-v.acidoph., ± substrate hygroph. –<br />

arct-mieur(subatl) – v.rare (3); nöSch, O, Vog,<br />

Pf, Hu, Ts, Sp, Eif, Th, Erz<br />

Baeomyces rufus (Hudson) Rebent.<br />

Perhaps up to the tree line on acid, mostly cool,<br />

sandy to pure loam soils, mostly on less<br />

compacted road embankments, rarely in lacunae<br />

<strong>of</strong> thin turfs, prefers silicate rock, on soil<br />

impregnated stones, shady-moist cliff surfaces<br />

(pioneer) or near the soil on boulders remaining<br />

moist for a long time, frequent in the interior <strong>of</strong><br />

forests, mostly on rather light poor to moderately<br />

light rich habitats, in high precipitation sites also<br />

on radiation exposed sites, m.-v.acidoph.,<br />

r.skioph.-r.photoph., substrate hygroph., e.g. in<br />

the Lecideetum ulig., Porpidietum crust.,<br />

frequently also dominating and almost without<br />

escort – bor-smed(-med-mo) – rather frequent,<br />

limestone (v.) rare<br />

LIT.: FREY 1932, POELT 1969.<br />

Bellemerea Haf. & Roux<br />

(Determination ↑ Aspicilia)<br />

Introduction<br />

Bellemerea includes alpine rock dwelling<br />

crustose lichens, which with their sunken,<br />

concave to flat apothecia are reminiscent <strong>of</strong><br />

Aspicilia. There are perhaps six known species.<br />

In the high central mountains <strong>of</strong> central Europe<br />

there exists a strongly disjunct relict occurrence,<br />

thus <strong>of</strong> B. alpina in the Harz and Riesengebirge,<br />

<strong>of</strong> B. cinereorufescens in the Black Forest (only<br />

one found), Erz- and Riesengebirge, Bohemian<br />

forest and Thüringer forest. All central mountain<br />

occurrences are protected. Both species, besides<br />

B. sanguinea, occur also in the Baravian Alps, as<br />

well as in the Allgäu/<br />

Genus Characteristics<br />

Thallus crustose, clearly developed, cracked- to<br />

warty areolate, on a black prothallus, medulla I+<br />

blue. Photobiont coccoid green algae. Ap.<br />

sunken, with concave to flat disk, with thalloid<br />

margin, but outwardly usually not recognizable<br />

as a separate margin (cryptolecanorine). Exc.<br />

reduced to lacking. Hyp. colorless. Epihym.<br />

brown to olive. Paraphyses branched and<br />

reticulate, <strong>of</strong>ten with a thin pigmented layer on<br />

the ends. Asci <strong>of</strong> the Porpidia type. Sp. 1celled,<br />

rarely appearing 2-celled, ellipsoidal to<br />

almost spherical, with perispore, wall (epispore)<br />

I+ blue. Pycnosp. short bacillar. Ch: sometimes<br />

with Norstictic acid.<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Bellemerea alpina (Sommerf.) Clauz. & Roux<br />

(Aspicilia a. (Sommerf.) Arnold, Lecanora a.<br />

Sommerf.)<br />

In alpine high precipitation sites on ± lime-free<br />

silicate rock on smaller boulders, on stones and<br />

on base surfaces <strong>of</strong> cliffs on long-time moist, <strong>of</strong><br />

long time snow covered, for alpine relatively<br />

wind protected, cold sites, especially in maritime<br />

boulders, rubble slopes on shaded surfaces, in the<br />

moors, near brooks, m.-r.acidoph., (substrate<br />

hygroph.), m.-r.photoph., anitroph., Char.<br />

106


Rhizocarpetum alp. – arct-alp – Alps (e.g. Al),<br />

Hz<br />

Bellemerea cinereorufescens (Ach.) Clauz. &<br />

Roux (Aspicilia c. (Ach.) Massal., Lecanora c.<br />

(Ach.) Hepp)<br />

Like B. alpina, <strong>of</strong>ten on yet stronger shaded-<br />

moist sites, also on heavy metal rich rock, Char.<br />

Rhizocarpetum alp. – arct-alp – very rare ( R );<br />

süSch (Feldberg), ThW, Erz, BayW, Alps<br />

LIT.: CLAUZADE & ROUX 1984*, 1985, FRIES 1871.<br />

Belonia Körber ex. Nyl.<br />

Introduction<br />

The Belonia species have a uniformly crustose<br />

thallus with perithecia-like, usually rose to<br />

red-brown fruiting body and Trentepohlia algae.<br />

The two (<strong>of</strong> the altogether ca. 12) proven species<br />

in Germany occur above all in north Europe and<br />

in the high mountains <strong>of</strong> central Europe, in the<br />

Alps and the Carpathians. Isolated discovery<br />

points lie in the Riesengebirge, the Black Forest<br />

and the Voges (B. russula) or in the Black<br />

Forest, in the Rothaargebirge and in the Sudenten<br />

(B. incarnata). B. russula lives on from time to<br />

time flooded cliff walls <strong>of</strong> slightly calcareous or<br />

basic silicate rock, B. incarnata on naked, cool<br />

soil in alpine thin turfs.<br />

Genus Characteristics and Determination<br />

Thallus thin or ± sessile in the substrate, light,<br />

mostly rose tinted when fresh, with Trentepohlia.<br />

Ap. perithecia-like (in the indigenous species<br />

with permanent pore-form opening), sunken in<br />

thallus warts, rose, yellow-brown, or brown-red.<br />

Exc. light to yellow-brown. Epihym. colorless.<br />

Hym I+ blue, <strong>of</strong>ten with oil droplets. Paraphyses<br />

thin, simple, permanent, septate. Asci narrowly<br />

cylindric, thin-walled. Sp. to 8 (non-indigenous<br />

species also to 4-6), long needle-form,<br />

multicellular, cross-septate. Ch-.<br />

1 On naked soil and soil mosses. thallus dirty green<br />

to gray, thin, ± gelatinous, with Trebouxia. Per.<br />

half sunken, beige, pale yellowish to pale reddish,<br />

-0.5 mm. Sp. 80-170 x 3-4.5 µm . B. incarnata<br />

1* On silicate rock. Fresh thallus reddish(brown), in<br />

the herbarium pale yellowish to ochre, with<br />

Trentepohlia. Per. in -0.7 mm wide,<br />

hemispherical to almost spherical thallus warts,<br />

red-brown, yellow-rose to yellow-brownish. Sp.<br />

50-110 x 3-5(6) µm B. russula<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Belonia incarnata Th.Fr. & Graewe ex Th.Fr.<br />

Commonly above the tree line on cool, humus,<br />

fine rich soil, ± nutrient rich, <strong>of</strong>ten thoroughly<br />

moistened (melt water, high rainfall) soil in<br />

openings in turf and dwarf shrub communities,<br />

on wind exposed habitats, secondarily on road<br />

margins, directly on soil or overgrowing dead<br />

soil mosses, r.-v.acidoph., m.-v.photoph.,<br />

substrate hygroph., in the Lecidomatetum dem. –<br />

s’bor-mieur-alp – v.rare (1); süSch (Feldberg),<br />

Sauerl, Alps<br />

Belonia russula Körber ex Nyl.<br />

In the high montane to alpine, high precipitation<br />

sites above all on crystalline, slightly calcareous<br />

or basic silicate rock on shaded, sporadically<br />

trickle moistened rocks, <strong>of</strong>ten on vertical<br />

surfaces and slightly overhanging, prefers edges<br />

<strong>of</strong> fissures, subneutroph. (-m.basiph.), r.skioph.,<br />

r.-v.hygroph., anitroph., e.g. with Porina<br />

lectissima, Opegrapha gyrocarpa or Lecanactis<br />

dill. (e.g. in the Porpidietum glaucophaeae, in<br />

contact with Enterographetum zon.) – bor-mieurh’mo<br />

– v.rare (R); süSch. Vog<br />

LIT.: PURVIS ET AL. 1992, VÉZDA 1959<br />

Biatora Fr.<br />

Introduction<br />

The genus includes crustose lichens with<br />

perched, usually light to dark brown (to blackish)<br />

biatorine, ± convex, from the first an outwardly<br />

marginless or at first weakly margined apothecia<br />

with ellipsoidal to narrowly ellipsoidal , one- to<br />

two-celled, cross-septate spores. The Biatora<br />

species live on moss, plant detritus and bark <strong>of</strong><br />

trees in moist mountain forests. B. helvola, B.<br />

fallax, B .epixanthoidiza and sometimes B.<br />

vernalis live on bark, above all the trunk base <strong>of</strong><br />

deciduous trees and spruce. Since most <strong>of</strong> the<br />

species occur especially in small little disturbed<br />

mixed forests, they are threatened, especially B.<br />

fallax. The Biatora species are distributed in the<br />

107


oreal forest zone and in mountainous central<br />

Europe. A few nonindigenous species have an<br />

arctic-alpine area and live on plant detritus,<br />

mosses and raw humus.<br />

Genus Characteristics and Determination<br />

Thallus crustose, usually thin and little<br />

differentiated or in the substrate, rarely very<br />

finely squamulose. Ap. light to dark brown, red-<br />

brown, yellow-brown, with indefinite projecting<br />

margin or mostly marginless, soon moderately to<br />

strongly convex. Exc. clearly developed, <strong>of</strong><br />

radiating hyphae, cartilaginous. Hym. shiny<br />

colorless or yellowish above, without granular<br />

layer above, I+ blue. Hyp. cartilaginous,<br />

colorless to yellowish. Paraphyses simple to<br />

scarcely branched, thickened above. Asci<br />

clavate, Biatora type (with thick I+ and K/I+<br />

blue tholus, in which a cone-like, non amyloid<br />

central plug is inserted from below, which in due<br />

course is surrounded by a thin I+ and K/I+ deep<br />

blue zone. Wall K/I-, with a thin I+ and K/+<br />

blue gelatin outer envelop. Sp. 1-2(4)celled,<br />

ellipsoidal to elongate. Usually Ch-, sometimes<br />

Gyrophoric acid, Argopsin.<br />

1 Thallus <strong>of</strong> very small, sometimes granular<br />

squamules (40x), sometimes split at the margin,<br />

P+ red, section also C+ red. Soralia, if occurring,<br />

widely scattered, usually P-, C+ red. Argopsin,<br />

Gyrophoric acid . B. fallax<br />

1* Thallus not <strong>of</strong> such squamules 2<br />

2 Thallus sorediate, <strong>of</strong>ten sterile 3<br />

2* Thallus not sorediate, at best completely finely<br />

granular, R- . 6<br />

3 Sorediate region yellowish-green to yellowish, C+<br />

red or P+ red, K- . 4<br />

3* Sorediate region yellowish, yellowish-green, graygreen,<br />

R- . 5<br />

4 Soralia P+ red, C-, mostly rounded, bordered, ±<br />

flat, -0.5 mm wide, later also coalescing and<br />

covering the most <strong>of</strong> the thallus. Thallus thin, on<br />

bark. Ap. like B. helvola, brown to light redbrown,<br />

soon convex. Argopsin<br />

B. epixanthoidiza<br />

4* Soralia C+ rose-red, P-, mostly irregular, diffuse,<br />

thick and mostly convex, soon coalescing. Thallus<br />

greenish-gray, thin coherent to granular, <strong>of</strong>ten on<br />

mosses. Soredia ca. 40-80 µm. Ap. -0.8 (1) mm,<br />

soon convex and marginless, pale rose-brown,<br />

light brown, red-brown, epihym. colorless to<br />

brownish. Sp. 10-16 x 4-6 µm, 1-2celled.<br />

Gyrophoric acid . B. chrysantha<br />

5 Thallus greenish-gray, very thin, with granular,<br />

bordered, soon coalescing soralia, finally widely<br />

sorediate, sorediate region pale yellowish to pale<br />

greenish. soredia ca. 40-70 µm. Ch-. Ap. very<br />

rare, rose, rose-brown, brown, dark brown. sp. 4celled<br />

15-18.5 x 4-6 µm<br />

Mycobilimbia epixanthoides<br />

5* Thallus greenish gray, definitely developed, finely<br />

granular to largely erupting sorediate, sorediate<br />

region greenish, gray-green, soredia 30-70 µm.<br />

Ap. (rose-)yellowish to orange, flesh-colored rosebrown<br />

to (above all in the herbarium) ochre, old<br />

ones even reddish-brown, rapidly strongly convex,<br />

-0.9 (1.1) mm, <strong>of</strong>ten clustered. Sp. 2celled, rarely<br />

4celled, 10-17 x 4-5 µm, with definite epispore.<br />

Paraph. 3-4 µm, strongly cemented<br />

Mycobilimbia sphaeroides<br />

6 Sp. largely 1 celled, isolated 2 celled . 7<br />

6* Sp. 2-4 celled (Mycobilimbia) . Bacidia PT2<br />

7 Ap. very small, -0.3 mm, whitish-rose, rose-<br />

yellow, moderately to finally high convex, at first<br />

delicately margined, then marginless. Sp. 7-13 x<br />

(2)2.5-3 µm. Hyp., epihym., exc. colorless. Hym.<br />

35-50 µm. Paraph. in part thickened above.<br />

Thallus whitish, very thin. It is a question whether<br />

it is in the region B. albohyalina<br />

(Nyl.) Bagl. & Car.<br />

(Lecidea a. (Nyl.) Th.Fr.)<br />

7* Ap. larger, sp. wider. Epihym. colorless, hyp. pale<br />

(yellowish) . 8<br />

8 On mosses, plant detritus, decaying wood, rarely<br />

on bark. Ap. C-, -1 mm, <strong>of</strong>ten narrowly sessile,<br />

usually light brown to brown, moderately to very<br />

convex. Sp. (10.5)12.5-20 x 4-6 µm. Thallus<br />

warty to granular, gray- to greenish-white. Hym.<br />

ca. 80 µm. Ch-. – arct-bor-mieur-h’mo/alp – Vog<br />

. B. vernalis (L.)Fr<br />

8* On bark. Ap. in section fleeting C+ orange- rose, -<br />

0.6 (0.7) mm, crowded, commonly moderately<br />

convex, light brown, yellow-brown, rose-brown,<br />

brown, at times coalescing. Sp. (9.5)11-18 x<br />

(3)3.5-4.5 µm, sometimes 2celled. Thallus flat<br />

warty areolate, light gray to gray-greenish.<br />

Epihym. ± colorless. Hyphae <strong>of</strong> the exc. and<br />

paraph. encircled by fine, somewhat granular goldyellow<br />

lines (oil immersion). Gyrophoric acid<br />

. B. helvola<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Biatora chrysantha (Zahlbr.) Printzen (Lecidea<br />

gyrophorica Tonsberg, Biatora epixanthoidiza<br />

auct., non (Nyl.) Räsänen)<br />

On similar habitats as B. helvola (↑), but<br />

predominantly living on bark, rarely on rock<br />

dwelling mosses – bor-atl-mieur-mo – r.rare (3);<br />

Sch, Vog, Ju<br />

108


Biatora epixanthoidiza (Nyl.) Räsänen (Lecidea<br />

e. Nyl., Lecidea efflorescens (Hedl.) Erichsen)<br />

In high precipitation high montane and montane,<br />

rare in submontane sites on trunks (above all<br />

toward the base) <strong>of</strong> deciduous and conifer trees,<br />

like B. helvola (↑), rarely overgrowing moss –<br />

bor-mieur-h’mo – rare (3); Sch, SJu, Vog, O, Ne,<br />

ThW<br />

Biatora fallax Hepp<br />

In montane, high precipitation sites in old,<br />

natural spruce-fir and spruce-beech forests, on<br />

the base <strong>of</strong> older trunks <strong>of</strong> spruce, fir, and beech,<br />

on overgrowing moss, on moderately light rich<br />

(to rather light poor), v.humid, cool sites, m.r.acidoph.,<br />

anitroph., ombroph. – mieur-subatl-<br />

smed-mo – v.rare (0); SFW+, Sch, Vog, Erz,<br />

Alps<br />

Biatora helvola Körber ex Hellbom (Lecidea h.<br />

(Körber ex Hellbom) Hedl.<br />

In high precipitation high montane, more rarely<br />

montane sites on smooth and flat-cracked, ± acid<br />

bark <strong>of</strong> deciduous and conifer trees in forests<br />

(above all beech-spruce forests, Aceri-Fagetum,<br />

spruce-fir forests) and on forest borders , in<br />

avalanche tracks, predominantly on the trunk<br />

base <strong>of</strong> beech, mountain ash, spruce, fir, on cool<br />

humid habitats, <strong>of</strong>ten with B. epixanthoidiza,<br />

tolerating rather long snow cover, (subneutroph.)<br />

m.-r.acidoph., r.skioph.-m.photoph., v.hygroph.,<br />

anitroph., in the Parmeliopsidetum, in the<br />

Biatora helvola community. – bor-mieur-h’mo,<br />

subco – r.rare (2); Sch, Vog. Al, ThW, Erz<br />

LIT.: FRIES 1874, TONSBERG 1992, VAINIO 1934<br />

Biatorella De Not.<br />

(Key incl. Biatoridium, Sarcosagium, Sarea,<br />

Strangospora)<br />

Introduction<br />

The species <strong>of</strong> the genus Biatorella are small and<br />

inconspicuous. On the crustose, usually thin<br />

thallus develop bright colored, yellowish to<br />

orange-reddish, usually convex, marginless<br />

biatorine apothecia, which produce the small<br />

single-celled spores in large numbers in the asci.<br />

They are easy to overlook and are seldom found.<br />

B. hemisphaerica grows on lime-rich soils or<br />

mosses; this widely distributed boreal and<br />

temperate zone ephemeral species, is already for<br />

a long time not to be found in the region.<br />

Genus Characteristics and Determination<br />

Thallus crustose, thin, undifferentiated, with<br />

coccoid green algae. Ap. biatorine, yellow to<br />

orange-red, marginless, ± convex. Exc. very thin<br />

to lacking. Epihym. pale to orange-yellow.<br />

Hym. pale (brown-reddish). Paraphyses simple,<br />

slender, scarcely reticulate, richly branched in the<br />

epihymenial region, producing a thick tissue,<br />

thickened at the ends. Asci ± elongate<br />

cylindrical to clavate, with I+ blue cap in the non<br />

amyloid wall, the young apex with an interior, I+<br />

blue region, <strong>of</strong> I+ blue upper cap-like gelatin<br />

envelope surrounding. A very large number <strong>of</strong><br />

very small 1-celled, elongate ellipsoidal sp. in the<br />

ascus.. Ch-. Biatoridium has, in contrast to<br />

Biatorella spherical spores., a well developed<br />

exc., an I+ blue apical cap on the ascus,<br />

Sarcosagium a definite, outer paraplectenchymous<br />

exc. and amyloid, thin walled, cylindric<br />

asci without tholus, Strangospora ellipsoidal to<br />

spherical sp., broad clavate, I+ blue asci with the<br />

wall strongly thickened above and a definite, I+<br />

blue tholus.<br />

Notice: All species in the key R-<br />

1 On soil, over mosses, dying plants, rarely on<br />

decayed wood. Thallus thin, <strong>of</strong>ten little<br />

developed, whitish-gray to greenish. Sp. elongate,<br />

5-8 x 2-3.5 µm 2<br />

1* On tree bark, wood or resin. Sp. spherical 3<br />

2 Ap. -0.3(0.5) mm, light flesh-reddish to rose-<br />

brown, flat to concave, with whitish, at first clearly<br />

projecting margin, sessile, when moist very light<br />

and translucent, exc. strongly developed .<br />

Sarcosagium campestre<br />

2* Ap. =1(2) mm, brown-yellow, yellow-reddish, red<br />

lead-red, even brown, from the first convex<br />

marginless, sunken to depressed, without exc .<br />

B. hemisphaerica<br />

3 On older resin <strong>of</strong> conifer trees. Ap. flat to<br />

concave, margined. Sp. 2-3 µm. Not lichenized . 4<br />

3* On wood and bark. Sp. 1.7-4 µm, ap. -0.5 mm 5<br />

4 Ap. red-brown to yellow-red, -1.5 mm. Hym. 85-<br />

100 µm high Sarea resinae<br />

4* Ap. black to black-brown, -0.8 mm. Hym. 50-60<br />

µm Sarea difformis<br />

5 Ap. dark red-brown to black . 6<br />

5* Ap. lighter, yellow-brown, rose-brown, yellowish,<br />

or whitish 8<br />

6 Exc. strongly developed, 35-45 µm thick, ±<br />

brown, K+ brownish. Ap. flat and indefinitely<br />

109


margined, later moderately convex, black-brown to<br />

black. Sp. 2-3 µm. Thallus indefinite, whitish.<br />

Epihym. olive, light brown, or red-brown. Pycn.<br />

red-brown to black, <strong>of</strong>ten like pruinose by<br />

pycnospores. Pycnosp. 1.5-2 µm, egg-form to<br />

spherical . Strangospora deplanata<br />

6* Exc. as a rule thin, K-. Ap. from the first convex<br />

marginless. Sp. 3-3.5 µm. Thallus ± gray-brown,<br />

granular to warty-small lumpy or indefinite . 7<br />

7 Hym. yellow- to red-brown above. Ap. dark redbrown<br />

to black-brown. Thallus indefinite to<br />

granular or warty-small lumpy. Hym. -65 µm.<br />

Pycnosp. 3-4 x 1 µm . Strangospora pinicola<br />

7* Hym. olive green, emerald to violet above. Ap.<br />

black to brown-black. Thallus indefinite to<br />

granular. Hym. -110 µm. Pycnosp. 2.5-3.5 x 1-<br />

1.7 µm Strangospora moriformis<br />

8 Thallus light greenish-yellow to green, granular to<br />

granular-scurfy, green when moist. Ap. yellowish<br />

to rose-brown, reddish- yellow, translucent when<br />

moist, at first thin whitish (not projecting) margin<br />

and flat, when young <strong>of</strong>ten with exterior thallus<br />

granules, soon moderately convex, -0.5 mm.<br />

Paraph. ends definitely thickened. Sp. 3.3.5 µm<br />

Biatoridium monasteriense<br />

8* Thallus indefinite, <strong>of</strong>ten in the substrate. Sp. 3-4.5<br />

µm 9<br />

9 Ap. orange, ochre- to cinnamon colored, orange<br />

pruinose, convex, -0.5 mm. Hym. with granular<br />

overlay above and there K+ purple. Paraph. with<br />

thickened ends . Strangospora ochrophora<br />

9* Ap. very pale yellowish, colorless when moist,<br />

marginless, moderately convex, crowded, -0.4 mm.<br />

Epihym. colorless, K-. Paraph. ends not thickened<br />

Biatoridium delitescens<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Biatorella hemisphaerica Anzi (B. fossarum<br />

p.p.)<br />

Up into the alpine zone on lime-rich soil and<br />

calciphilic mosses, on stones, resting flat on the<br />

soil and in soil-filled rock fissures on mostly<br />

moderately light-rich habitats, subneutroph.-<br />

m.basiph., substrate hygroph. – bor-smed – v.rare<br />

(0); Ju, Bo, Al<br />

LIT.: HAFELLNER & CASARES-PORCEL 1992*, MAGNUSSON<br />

1935, POELT & VÉZDA 1977.<br />

Biatoridium Lahm<br />

(Determination ↑ Biatorella)<br />

Introduction<br />

The two Biatoridium species have a crustose<br />

thallus and yellowish to light brown biatorine<br />

apothecia with four-spored asci. They occur on<br />

base-rich bark <strong>of</strong> deciduous trees in the summer<br />

green deciduous zone; they are rare and<br />

endangered region wide.<br />

Genus Characteristics<br />

Thallus crustose, <strong>of</strong> fine granules, or sitting in the<br />

substrate, greenish to gray, with coccoid green<br />

algae. Ap. pale yellowish to brownish, flat to<br />

convex, with a not projecting light proper<br />

margin. Exc. clearly developed. Hyp. colorless<br />

to pale brownish, <strong>of</strong> intertwined hyphae,<br />

fleckwise I+ blue. Epihym. yellowish.<br />

Paraphyses simple, rarely branched, clavate<br />

thickened above. Asci narrowly clavate, fourspored,<br />

thickened above, with internal I+ blue<br />

structure, inner layer I+ intensively blue, outer<br />

layer less intensively blue. Sp. spherical. Ch-.<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Biatoridium delitescens (Arnold) Haf.<br />

(Biatorella d. Arnold)<br />

On subneutral bark, predominantly on Populus,<br />

on light-rich, humid habitats in valleys, like<br />

Lecania cyrtella, r.photoph., a-(m.)nitroph.,<br />

Lecanoretum samb. – mieur – v.rare, ? even<br />

overlooked (1); Ne FrJu, Al<br />

Biatoridium monasteriense Lahm (Biatorella<br />

monasteriense (Lahm) Lahm)<br />

Above all in hilly and submontane, winter mild<br />

sites on usually subneutral deciduous tree bark in<br />

thinned forests and in open places,<br />

predominantly on maple, Norway maple, elm,<br />

ash, also going over to mosses, subneutroph., a-<br />

/m.nitroph., in the Acrocordietum gemm,<br />

Lecanoretum samb, also with Normandina,<br />

r.toxitol. – mieur-subatl – r.rare, probably also<br />

overlooked; HRh, süHü, süSch, Ju, Ne, O<br />

LIT.: HAFELLNER IN PRESS, MAGNUSSON 1935, POELT &<br />

VÉZDA 1977<br />

Brodoa Goward<br />

110


(Determination ↑ Hypogymnia)<br />

Introduction<br />

The Brodoa species are white, gray to dark gray,<br />

sometimes browned foliose lichens with long,<br />

narrow, more or less linear lobes. In contrast to<br />

the similar Hypogymnia species they have<br />

compact, small hollow lobes. They live on<br />

silicate rock and are arctic (-boreal) and alpine<br />

(-high montane) distributed. They grow on open<br />

lighted, usually lower silicate rocks in the high<br />

montane zone <strong>of</strong> the central mountains and in the<br />

Alps.<br />

Genus Characteristics<br />

Thallus foliose, lobes narrow, mostly elongated,<br />

white-gray, brownish, compact and relatively<br />

rigid, underside black, without rhizines. Soralia<br />

lacking. Photobionts coccoid green algae.<br />

Upper cortex paraplectenchymatous, under<br />

cortex a palisade plecthechyma. Ap. brown, with<br />

permanent thalloid margin, with concave to flat<br />

disk. Sp. 1-celled, ellipsoidal. Pycnosp.<br />

narrowed in the center and at the ends. Deviating<br />

from Hypogymnia by the compact medulla and<br />

the lack <strong>of</strong> soralia, by the larger spores and an<br />

otherwise constructed lower cortex. Ch:<br />

Atranorin in the cortex. Fumarprotocetraric acid<br />

or (in the non indigenous alpine species)<br />

Physodic acid, Protocetraric acid.<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Brodoa intestiniformis (Vill.) Goward<br />

(Hypogymnia i. (Vill.) Räsänen, Parmelia i.<br />

(Vill.) Ach., P. encausta (Sm.) Nyl.)<br />

In high montane to alpine sites on usually acid<br />

silicate rock, above all small cliffs, or boulders,<br />

on m.(-r.) long-time snow covered habitats,<br />

rather like Parmelia stygia (↑), in water relations<br />

more completely demanding than most <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Umbilicaria species and <strong>of</strong>ten on habitats<br />

protected for a longer time from direct radiation,<br />

m.-r.acidoph., r. photoph., a-/m.nitroph., in the<br />

Umbilicarion cylindricae –arct-h’mo/alp – rare<br />

(3); süSch, nöSch, Vog, Vgb, Ts, ThW, Erz, Fi,<br />

BayW, Hz<br />

LIT.: KROG 1974, GOWARD 1987<br />

Bryophagus Nitschke ex Arnold<br />

(Determination ↑ Gyalecta)<br />

Introduction<br />

B. gloeocapsa, living on cool acid soils,<br />

especially on dying liverworts, is the single<br />

species <strong>of</strong> the genus in Europe (one additional in<br />

America) and is recognized by a thin greenish<br />

thallus, gelatinous swollen in the moist condition,<br />

apothecia at first only pore-like, later opened<br />

wider with yellowish to red-orange colored<br />

deeply concave disk with proper margin and<br />

cross-septate, needle- to bacillar spores. B.<br />

gloeocapsa is distributed in the boreal and<br />

central European floral region in places with acid<br />

soils and contiguous silicate rocks; it is rare in<br />

central Europe.<br />

Genus Characteristics<br />

Thallus crustose, yellowish, with Gloeocystis like<br />

green algae colonies. Ap. at first sunken, closed,<br />

then somewhat projecting and ± open, with “cuplike”<br />

depth, yellowish to red-orange colored<br />

disks and ± similar colored proper margin. Hym.<br />

and asci I+ blue, then yellow to brown. Exc. at<br />

first closed on all sides, then bowl-form, exterior<br />

<strong>of</strong> thin-walled, ± radial lying hyphae, interior<br />

paraplectenchymatous. Paraphyses simple, thin,<br />

cemented. Asci cylindrical, thin-walled, very<br />

slightly thickened above. Sp. multicellular,<br />

needle-like to long cylindrical, cross-septate.<br />

Pycnosp. short cylindrical. Ch-.<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Bryophagus gloeocapsa Nitschke ex Arnold<br />

(Gloeolecta bryophaga (Körber ex Arnold)<br />

Vézda, Gyalecta g. (Arnold) Zahlbr.<br />

Especially in montane and high montane, high<br />

precipitation sites over liverworts on cool sandy<br />

loam soils, on peat and sandy soils, on open road<br />

fissures on soil boundaries, also directly on soil,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten also over liverworts on silicate rock, e.g. on<br />

maritime boulders, usually on cool-moist, shaded<br />

habitats, m.-v.acidoph., e.g. in ephemeral moss<br />

communities, acid soils – bor-mieur-mo – rare;<br />

Sch, Vog. Ts, Rhön, O, Fr, Erz, BayW<br />

LIT.: VÉZDA 1966a.<br />

111


Bryoria Brodo & D.Hawksw.<br />

(Key includes Pseudephebe)<br />

Introduction<br />

The separation <strong>of</strong> the genus Bryoria from<br />

Alectoria is by the brown and gray beard lichen<br />

characteristic. These commonly produce richly<br />

branched to loose filamentous pendent thallus,<br />

rarely growing short, erect bushy or ray-like, the<br />

thallus more or less adapted to the substrate.<br />

Like the true beard lichens <strong>of</strong> the genus Usnea,<br />

they are in most cases attached to the substrate<br />

only at one place with a short base. In contrast to<br />

Usnea the filamentous thallus does not have a<br />

tough central strand and does not produce Usnic<br />

acid. Propagation is, as a rule, by soredia, which<br />

are produced in rounded, projecting to split-form<br />

soralia, rarely also taken over by isidia. In most<br />

species apothecia are only very rarely produced.<br />

The greatest number <strong>of</strong> the species live<br />

epiphytically on conifer and deciduous trees,<br />

especially on thinned sites; many <strong>of</strong> these lichens<br />

may however also commonly cross over to<br />

silicate rocks. The remaining are inhabitants on<br />

silicate rock; among the indigenous species on B.<br />

chalybeiformis is numbered in this group. The<br />

Bryoria species lay claim to the region<br />

mountainous sites with high precipitation; in low<br />

precipitation regions their occurrence is limited<br />

to humid cool valleys. B. fuscescens exclusively<br />

shows a relatively broad ecological amplitude<br />

and is also to be found in low precipitation<br />

regions even in open habitats. B. bicolor and B.<br />

smithii live on very humid, oceanic influenced<br />

habitats. The epiphytic species avoid<br />

eutrophication. The Bryoria species are<br />

declining. B. fuscescens and B. capillaris are to<br />

a high degree endangered, several are threatened<br />

with extinction.<br />

B. capillaris, b. fuscescens, B. implexa and B.<br />

nadvornikiana are distributed in the boreal<br />

conifer zone and corresponding sites in central<br />

Europe and penetrate into the mountain forests <strong>of</strong><br />

the mediterranean region. B. fremnotii is also a<br />

dweller <strong>of</strong> the boreal conifer zone, however it is<br />

already extremely rare in central Europe. The<br />

area <strong>of</strong> the two oceanic species B. bicolor and<br />

B. smithii reaches from central or southern<br />

Scandinavia over western Europe into the mild,<br />

high precipitation region (especially in the<br />

mountains) <strong>of</strong> central Europe. They are (almost)<br />

entirely lacking in the mediterranean region. B.<br />

chalybeiformis has an arctic-alpine distribution.<br />

Of ca. 45 species occurring predominantly in<br />

the cold and cool regions <strong>of</strong> the earth, ca. 9 are in<br />

Germany and ca. 8 have been proven. B.<br />

subcana is one difficult species not proven from<br />

the region.<br />

Genus Characteristics and Determination<br />

Thallus bushy, richly branching, usually beardlike<br />

pendent, rarely erect to decumbent, <strong>of</strong><br />

filamentous, ± rounded stems, smooth segments,<br />

beige, gray, brown, or black, sometimes with<br />

short branches, frequently with split-form or<br />

warty soralia, with or without psuedocyphellia.<br />

Thallus segments radially symmetrical, with a<br />

cortex <strong>of</strong> periclinal elongate hyphae, medulla<br />

almost always loosely structured. Photobiont<br />

Trebouxia-like. Ap. lateral, rare, with permanent<br />

to soon disappearing thalloid margin. Asci<br />

clavate, thick-walled, Lecanora type. Sp. 1celled,<br />

ellipsoidal. Ch: <strong>of</strong>ten with Atranorin,<br />

Fumarprotocetraric acid, rarely Alectorialic acid,<br />

Psoromic acid, or Norstictic acid.<br />

1 Thallus (medulla) KC+ red, C+ red/C- (reaction<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten very rapidly fleeting; do not add too much<br />

C after K!), K+ yellow or K-. With (<strong>of</strong>ten<br />

indefinite and sparse) pseudocyph. With<br />

Alectorialic acid and ± Barbatolic acid or<br />

Gyrophoric acid . 2<br />

1* Thallus KC-, C-. Without Alectorialic acid,<br />

Barbatolic acid, or Gyrophoric acid . 4<br />

2 Thallus P- (only soralia usually P+ red), K- or<br />

K+ yellowish. Thallus brown to brown- black,<br />

similarly variable like b. fuscescens, sometimes<br />

with short branches and twisting limbs. Limbs<br />

very fragile. Pseudocyph. usually definite,<br />

fusiform, whitish to brownish, <strong>of</strong>ten twisting<br />

around the branches. Branching dichotomously,<br />

branching angle rather obtuse. With Gyrophoric<br />

acid, ± Fumarprotocetraric acid, ± Atranorin (B.<br />

vrangiana”) . B. implexa<br />

2* Thallus P+ intensively yellow, K+ remaining<br />

intensively yellow, soralia P+ orange-red.<br />

Pseudocyph. usually sparse and indefinite.<br />

Alectorialic acid. Fumarprotocetraric acid in the<br />

soralia . 3<br />

3 With ± right angle oriented rigid (“thorny”),<br />

basal somewhat constricted short branches.<br />

Basal thallus segment usually blackish. Thallus<br />

otherwise pale brown, pale olive-brown, pale<br />

gray-greenish, rarely dark brown, <strong>of</strong>ten with rose<br />

or violet tones, in the lower parts isotomicdichotomous<br />

branching, toward the tip more<br />

112


anisotomic- dichotomous ( ). Branching angle<br />

obtuse (at least toward the base). Medulla P+<br />

golden yellow, then orange-red. Barbatolic acid,<br />

± Atranorin. * B. nadvornikiana<br />

3* Without such branching. Basal thallus segment<br />

not darker. Thallus light gray to light brown,<br />

beige, rarely darker brown, in the herbarium with<br />

yellowish to rose tones. Branching pointed<br />

angles, isotomic to anisotomic-dichotomous.<br />

Main filament usually delicate, -0.5 mm, rarely<br />

thicker and uneven to pitted (“B. setacea”).<br />

Pseudocyph. present, fusiform, <strong>of</strong>ten indefinite.<br />

Medulla P+ intensive yellow, soralia orange-red.<br />

± Barbatolic acid, ± Atranorin. * B. capillaris<br />

4 Thallus on rock, rock mosses, decumbentcreeping,<br />

bushy spreading to erect . 5<br />

4* Thallus on bark, bark-mosses and wood, pendent,<br />

± creeping or bushy spreading or erect . 10<br />

5 Thallus shrubby erect or bushy spreading on the<br />

substrate, brown to black-brown, ± shiny, -5 cm<br />

high. without soralia, with numerous short (5 mm<br />

long) branches 6<br />

5* Thallus decumbent, closely to more loosely<br />

attached . 7<br />

6 Thallus segment filamentous, rounded, smooth,<br />

commonly 0.2-0.5 mm thick, in the general basal<br />

region (not only at the attachment site) blackish,<br />

otherwise brown, not conspicuously rigid.<br />

Medulla P+ red . B. bicolor (11)<br />

6* Thallus segment not filamentous (main stem up<br />

to ca. 1 mm thick), round to flattened, smooth to<br />

pitted, rigid and fragile, with looser medulla.<br />

Basal part not darker. Thallus mainly brown to<br />

black-brown, branches <strong>of</strong>ten with short thorny<br />

projections. Medulla P-. Lichesterinic acid,<br />

Protolichesterinic acid ↑ Cetraria aculeata/mur<br />

7 Thallus thick branched, ± crowded on the rock<br />

producing “mats”, <strong>of</strong>ten with short branches,<br />

usually very rigid, -2.5 (rarely -5) cm in diameter,<br />

dark to black-brown. Interval between the<br />

branches short (up to 3 mm). Without soralia.<br />

Medulla R-. Ch-. Alpine species . 8<br />

7* Thallus loosely branched, loosely attached or the<br />

ends ascending, with or without very few short<br />

branches, light brown to almost black, mostly<br />

over 4 cm long. Thallus segment relatively s<strong>of</strong>t<br />

and smooth, elongated, branching interval<br />

usually over 3 mm. Commonly ± isotomicdichotomous<br />

branched. Sometimes with soralia.<br />

Medulla P- or P+ red. Almost always<br />

Fumarprotocetraric acid. (when with Psoromic<br />

acid, medulla P+ yellow see B. implexa) . 9<br />

8 Thallus filaments <strong>of</strong>ten conspicuously flattened<br />

and with nodular thickenings, with numerous<br />

short branches. Branching interval very short<br />

(0.2-0.5mm). Thallus very closely appressed,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten regularly rounded. Apothecia not rare<br />

Pseudephebe minuscula<br />

8* Thallus filaments regularly round and smooth.<br />

Branching interval long (1-3 mm). Thallus only<br />

± tight at the margin, otherwise loosely attached.<br />

Ap. very rare Pseudephebe pubescens<br />

(Caution: when on sporadically trickle moistened<br />

surfaces, black, greenish-black, with blue-green<br />

algae, see Ephebe lanata, Spilonema)<br />

9 Main filament 0.5-2 mm thick, <strong>of</strong>ten compressed.<br />

Thallus usually dark brown to almost black,<br />

commonly shiny, sparsely branched. Soralia rare,<br />

warty (tubercular) projecting, P+ red<br />

(Furmarprotocetraric acid). Thallus and medulla<br />

mostly P-. Alpine B. chalybeiformis<br />

9* Main filament up to 0.5 (0.7) mm thick, rounded,<br />

toward the base and at the branches ±<br />

compressed. Thallus usually light to dark brown<br />

(rarely black-brown), basal part <strong>of</strong>ten lighter.<br />

Soralia frequent, warty projecting (tubercular),<br />

rarely split-form (in the case <strong>of</strong> B. chalybeiformis<br />

resembling var. positiva thallus dark brown,<br />

soralia sparse to lacking). Thallus P+ (slowly)<br />

red or P-, soralia P+ red, rarely P-.<br />

Fumarprotocetraric acid . B. fuscescens<br />

10 Thallus short shrubby, bushy spreading to erect,<br />

brown, in the entire basal region blackish, thickly<br />

branched, with numerous ± right angled short<br />

branches, -3.5 cm high. Rare oceanic species . 11<br />

10* Thallus long beard-form to loosely filamentous,<br />

pendent (only the juvenile short bushy<br />

spreading), rarely decumbent, white-gray to<br />

brown-black, at best the attachment site and a<br />

single sites at the base <strong>of</strong> branches blackened 12<br />

11 Thallus with small inconspicuous soralia, the<br />

thorny-isidiate outgrowths, medulla P-. Short<br />

branches <strong>of</strong>ten very numerous, ± resembling<br />

thorns. Main stems -1 mm thick. Ch-<br />

B. smithii<br />

11* Thallus without that kind <strong>of</strong> soralia. Medulla at<br />

least partially P+ red. Main branches -0.6 mm.<br />

Fumarprotocetraric acid B. bicolor<br />

12 Medulla K+ definitely yellow or red 13<br />

12* Medulla K-, C- KC-. Branching isotomic-<br />

dichotomous with <strong>of</strong>ten obtuse angle 14<br />

13 Thallus/medulla K+ yellow see B. capillaris/<br />

nadvornikiana; carefully test the C/KC- reaction,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten rapidly fleeting<br />

13* Medulla K- red. With Norstictic acid. see (a<br />

chemical race not yet occurring in the region) B.<br />

implexa<br />

14 Thallus and medulla P+ intensive sulfur-yellow.<br />

With Psoromic acid. With (sometimes sparse)<br />

narrow fusiform to linear, flat to slightly concave,<br />

whitish to brownish pseudocyph., which <strong>of</strong>ten are<br />

“twisting” around the filaments. Thallus very<br />

pale brownish to brown, beige, even almost<br />

whitish. Often with blackened places, easily<br />

broken <strong>of</strong>f ends <strong>of</strong> the filaments. With small<br />

tubercular, rarely split-form soralia (soralia <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

lacking). Medulla K- B. implexa<br />

14* Thallus P- or P+ red to orange, without Psoromic<br />

acid (excepting the apothecia) 15<br />

113


15 With (sometimes sparse) narrow fusiform to<br />

linear, flat to slightly concave, whitish to<br />

brownish pseudocyph., which <strong>of</strong>ten “twist”<br />

around the filaments. Thallus <strong>of</strong>ten very pale<br />

brownish, beige, almost whitish, also brown to<br />

dark brown or greenish-brown, P+ red.<br />

Filaments -0.4(0.5) mm, <strong>of</strong>ten with blackened<br />

sites, at which the filaments are easily broken.<br />

With small tuberculate, rarely split-form soralia<br />

(soralia rare). Ap. rather rare, 1.5 mm. Psoromic<br />

acid in the ap.; ± Atranorin, Fumar-protocetraric<br />

acid, ± Protocetraric acid in the thallus or only in<br />

soralia . B. implexa<br />

15* Commonly without, rarely with inconspicuous<br />

pseudocyph. Ap. rare. With or without<br />

Fumarprotocetraric acid 16<br />

16 Soralia and ap. yellowish, lacking in the region.<br />

Thallus middle- to olive brown, usually shiny.<br />

Main filament usually over 0.5 mm, <strong>of</strong>ten 1-4<br />

mm thick, swollen and angular pitted, P-.<br />

Medulla <strong>of</strong> the main filament looser. Vulpinic<br />

acid (only in soralia and ap.). Without Fumarprotocetraric<br />

acid. Very rare boreal species<br />

B. fremontii<br />

16* Soralia and ap. not yellowish. Without Vulpinic<br />

acid, with Fumarprotocetraric acid. Main<br />

filament commonly -0.6 (0.8) mm thick.<br />

Pseudocyph. lacking (Caution: young split-form<br />

soralia appear pseudocyph.-like) . 17<br />

17 Thallus light gray, gray, gray-green, also very<br />

pale brownish, basal part <strong>of</strong>ten somewhat darker<br />

(brownish), commonly without blackened brittle<br />

places. Thallus, medulla, soralia P+ rapidly red.<br />

Soralia always tuberculate, <strong>of</strong>ten thorny, rather<br />

frequent *. Difficult to separate from B.<br />

fuscescens, questionable whether in the region<br />

.B. subcana (Nyl. ex Stizenb.)<br />

Brodo & Hawksw.<br />

17* Thallus light brown to dark brown (black), basal<br />

part not darker (<strong>of</strong>ten lighter) than the remaining<br />

parts. soralia usually occurring, whitish to<br />

slightly brownish, tuberculate, a few split-form<br />

almost always occurring (long splits soon<br />

becoming elliptical and concave). Right angle<br />

occurring branches rare or lacking. Ap. very<br />

rare, brownish. Occasionally with blackened<br />

brittle places. Thallus P+ (slowly) red, rarely<br />

also P-, soralia P+ red. Main filament -0.5 mm.<br />

.* B. fuscescens s.l.<br />

(var. positiva is characterized by sparse<br />

branching, <strong>of</strong>ten relatively thick filaments,<br />

lacking or sparse soralia, (even basal) dark brown<br />

thallus)<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Bryoria bicolor (Ehrh.) Brodo & D.Hawksw.<br />

(Alectoria b. (Ehrh.) Nyl.)<br />

In the high montane and montane zones,<br />

concentrated in the very high precipitation<br />

region, oceanic sites, above all on old mossy<br />

trunks <strong>of</strong> deciduous and conifer trees in near<br />

natural beech-spruce (-fir)-, sycamore-beech<br />

forests and in old beech stands, <strong>of</strong>ten also<br />

(especially in deep sites) on mossy silicate rocks,<br />

on cool oceanic, v.-e.humid, m.-r.light rich<br />

habitats, <strong>of</strong>ten near brooks, susceptible to<br />

forestry intrusion, m.-r.acidoph., anitroph., in the<br />

Lobarion pulm., Usneion, Parmelietum omph.,<br />

Silicate moss community. – s’bor-subatl-mieursubatl<br />

(smed-mo), oc – rare (1); süSch, nöSch,<br />

Vog, v.rare: PfW, Saar, Hu, Rhön, Vgb, Ts, Eif,<br />

ThW, Al<br />

Bryoria capillaris (Ach.) Brodo & D.Hawksw.<br />

(Alectoria c. (Ach.) Crombie, A. cana (Ach.)<br />

Leighton, A. setacea Ach., A. implexa auct.)<br />

In montane and high montane, high precipitation<br />

sites in forests, in corresponding humid sites also<br />

on free-standing trees (in robust forms designated<br />

as B. setacea), usually on conifers, rather like<br />

Usnea fulvoreagens (↑), yet also on r.light poor<br />

places, above all in the Usneetum filip.,<br />

Evernietum div., also Psuedevernietum, M.r.acidoph.,<br />

m.-r.photoph., v.hygroph.,<br />

v.ombroph., anitroph. – bor-med-mo - r.rare (3);<br />

Sch, Vog, Al, otherwise (v.)rare (SFW, Ju, Ne,<br />

Do, Av), 0+, Ts, ThW<br />

Bryoria chalybeiformis auct. (Alectoria ch.<br />

auct., Bryocaulon ch. auct.)<br />

In subalpine and alpine sites on very wind<br />

exposed, open to light, fully rain exposed silicate<br />

rocks, also crossing over on plant detritus on soil,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten on somewhat dunged habitats (with<br />

Candelariella cor., Ramalina cap. ↑), also like<br />

Pseudephebe p.↑, acidoph., m.-r.nitroph. – arctalp<br />

– v.rare (1); süSch (1x), Vog (Hohneck)<br />

Bryoria fremontii (Tuck.) Brodo & D.Hawksw.<br />

(Alectoria f. Tuck.)<br />

In montane, high precipitation sites. Usneionspecies<br />

– bor(-mieur) – v.rare (1), till now only<br />

found one time in Germany; nöSch<br />

(Freudenstadt), on sycamore by a road<br />

Bryoria fuscescens (Gyelnik) Brodo &<br />

D.Hawksw. (Alectoria f. Gyelnik)<br />

Predominately in montane and high montane,<br />

high precipitation regions, but isolated into the<br />

hilly zone, on trees, wood (e.g. fences), more<br />

rarely silicate rock, hygrophytic, at other times<br />

r.euryöke species, embracing the ecological<br />

114


amplitude <strong>of</strong> Pseudevernia f. (↑) and Usnea filip<br />

(↑), above all in the Usneion, Pseudevernietum,<br />

Parmelietum omph.; var. positiva (Gyelnik)<br />

Brodo & D.Hawksw. (Alectoria p. (Gyelnik)<br />

Mot.) above all on r.light rich, relatively open to<br />

the wind sites (free-standing trees, avenues),<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten on silicate rocks, on wood fences, more on<br />

moderately nutrient rich sites; bor-med-mo –<br />

r.rare (3); above all Sch, Vog, Al, additionally<br />

r.rare to rare, almost lacking in dry warm<br />

regions, in recent time once more somewhat<br />

increasing<br />

Bryoria implexa (H<strong>of</strong>fm.) Brodo & D.Hawksw.<br />

(Alectoria i. (H<strong>of</strong>fm.) Nyl., B. osteola (Gyelnik)<br />

Brodo & D.Hawksw., incl. B. vrangiana<br />

(Gyelnik) Brodo & D.Hawksw. (with Gyrophoric<br />

acid), incl. B. pseud<strong>of</strong>uscescens (Gyelnik) Brodo<br />

& Hawksw. (with Norstictic acid)<br />

Like Evernia dev. (↑), rather like B. capillaris<br />

(↑), in cool to cold conifer forests, e.g. in the<br />

Evernietum div. – (s’)bor-mieur-mo(-smed-mo),<br />

low hilly – v.rare (1); nöSch, süSch<br />

(Schramberg, Dunningen), Ju, Do<br />

Bryoria nadvornikiana (Gyelnik) Brodo &<br />

D.Hawksw. (Alectoria n. Gyelnik)<br />

In montane and high montane, high precipitation<br />

sites in the interior above all <strong>of</strong> beech-spruce and<br />

spruce-fir forests on v.humid, foggy habitats, on<br />

conifer, rarely deciduous trees, mostly on twigs,<br />

m-r.(s.)acidoph., anitroph., in the Usneion – bormieur-mo<br />

– rare (2); Sch (over 600m), probably<br />

also Vog. Al<br />

Bryoria smithii (Du Rietz) Brodo & D.Hawksw.<br />

(Alectoria s. Du Rietz)<br />

Like B. bicolor (↑), but almost only on bark and<br />

fastidious in water relations, on very oceanic<br />

sites, above all on spruce, fir, beech, Norway<br />

maple, especially on the branches – mieuratl/subatl-pralp,<br />

oc – v.rare (0); süSch<br />

(Gersbach), BayW, bayer. Av/Alps<br />

LIT.: BRODO & HAWKSWORTH 1977, HAWKSWORTH 1972,<br />

HOLIEN 1989, MOTYKA 1962<br />

Buellia De Not<br />

(Key includes Catolechia, Epilichen et al.)<br />

Introduction<br />

The Buellia species are crustose lichens with<br />

scarcely visible, endolithic to strongly developed,<br />

areolate to isolated squamules, commonly white,<br />

gray , brown or yellowish colored thallus, black<br />

apothecia with ± clearly developed proper<br />

margin as well as brown, two celled, rarely four<br />

celled to muriform divided spores. The genus is<br />

world-wide distributed with several hundred<br />

species, with the high point in warm and<br />

temperate zones. In Germany there about 35<br />

known species. A few species groups are yet<br />

insufficiently known.<br />

Among the indigenous species B. schaereri,<br />

B. disciformis, B. poeltii, B. griseovirens and B.<br />

alboatra live on tree bark, while B. erubesces is<br />

limited to wood. B. thiopoliza, which in central<br />

Europe is still known only from the Vogesen, and<br />

B. insignis, B. geophila and B. papillata which<br />

occur in the arctic-alpine adjacent Allgäu<br />

overgrowing moss and lichens in the high<br />

mountain region. B. asterella is found in<br />

openings in thin calcareous turfs and on soil<br />

covered rock surfaces. B. epipolia, a species<br />

with broader ecological amplitude, resides on<br />

limestone, B. venusta nearly pure lime and B.<br />

porphyrica calcareous or basic silicate rock. B.<br />

venusta occurs on nutrient rich, sunny sites, e.g.<br />

bird roosting sites and occurs also as a young<br />

parasite on Lecanora muralis.<br />

Silicate lichens are B. aethalea, which is<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten also found on anthropogenic habitats, B.<br />

ocellata, which grows sometimes on lichens and<br />

mosses B. badia as well as B. leptocline, B.<br />

spuria, B. uberior and B. miriquidica: the two<br />

latter parasitising the thallus <strong>of</strong> Schaereria<br />

fuscocinerea.<br />

Numerous Buellias are very rare in the<br />

region; their occurrences <strong>of</strong>ten represent outposts<br />

or isolated discovery points in the area, thus in<br />

the case <strong>of</strong> the mediterranean B. spuria, which<br />

here reaches the northern boundary <strong>of</strong> the<br />

distribution, B. thiopoliza, which till now is<br />

known only from the Auvergne, the Vogesen and<br />

in the Black Forest, in the case <strong>of</strong> B. asterella, a<br />

central European (= temperate) species, B.<br />

poeltii, a lichen <strong>of</strong> the mountain forests <strong>of</strong> the<br />

higher mountains <strong>of</strong> central Europe, or B. uberior<br />

very scattered in west Europe from Scandinavia<br />

and Great Britain up into the west<br />

Mediterranean). All these species are strongly<br />

colored, likewise B. leptocline and B.<br />

miriquidica, which occur in north Europe and<br />

rarely in central European mountains. The area<br />

<strong>of</strong> B. alboatra, B. ocellata and B. venusta<br />

stretches over south and central Europe and ends<br />

115


in the north in southern Scandinavia; B.<br />

griseovirens reaches to central Fennoscandia. B.<br />

aethalea, B. badia, B. disciformis and B.<br />

epipolia are very widely distributed from north to<br />

south Europe. B. schaereri is at home in the<br />

boreal and central European region and found<br />

isolated in the mountains <strong>of</strong> the Mediterranean<br />

region.<br />

Genus Characteristics and Determination<br />

Thallus crustose, commonly clearly developed,<br />

rarely living in the substrate, sometimes<br />

appearing squamulose or appearing effigurate,<br />

mostly white, gray, brown, rarely yellowish, with<br />

coccoid green algae. Ap. black, at times<br />

pruinose, proper margin definite to lacking,<br />

without distinct thalloid margin, but sometimes<br />

sunken into the thallus (cryptolecanorine). Exc.<br />

very thin, light or usually strongly developed and<br />

dark. Hyp. usually dark brown, epihym. brown<br />

to olive. Paraphyses simple to mostly sparsely<br />

branched above, thickened above, <strong>of</strong>ten with<br />

brown pigmented cap. Asci clavate, Lecanora<br />

type, with commonly 8, exceptionally also more<br />

or less sp. Sp. 2- up to cross-septate 4-celled or<br />

(weakly) muriform, gray-green to brown, wall<br />

uniformly thick or somewhat thicker around the<br />

septum. Pycnosp. rather polymorphic,<br />

ellipsoidal to filamentous. Ch: mainly Atranorin,<br />

Stictic acid, Norstictic acid, rarely e.g. Xanthone.<br />

Key hint: Spore ornamentation only recognizable<br />

with oil immersion<br />

1 Living on other lichens . 2<br />

1* Not living on other lichens 12<br />

2 Own thallus well developed, brown, gray or ±<br />

yellowish. Apical apparatus I+ intensive blue 3<br />

2* Without own thallus. Parasymbiotic on crustose<br />

lichens, foreign thallus not brown. Ap.<br />

permanently margined, ± flat. Apical apparatus<br />

I- . 8<br />

3 Sp. predominantly bent sickle-like, 2-4 celled.<br />

Young thallus living on crustose-, rarely foliose<br />

lichens on silicate rock, granular to thick warty,<br />

light yellow, yellow, yellow-white, C+ orange,<br />

P-, K-/+ yellowish, UV+ orange. Arthothelin,<br />

arctic-alpine . B. concinna Th.Fr.<br />

3* Sp. ± straight, 2-celled . 4<br />

4 Thallus greenish-yellow to yellow, on Baeomyces<br />

over soil, warty to almost squamulose-areolate.<br />

Ap. usually soon high convex and marginless,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten coalescing. Epihym. olive brown to brown,<br />

K-. Sp. 11-18 x 6-10 µm, without perispore.<br />

Paraph. strongly reticulate branched. Thallus P+<br />

yellow-orange, K-, C-. Pulvinic acid. -<br />

derivatives Epilichen scabrosus<br />

4* Thallus brown to gray, not on Baeomyces, on<br />

silicate rock . 5<br />

5 Island-like on yellowish Pertusaria species. Sp.<br />

18-23 x 9-11 µm. Thallus warty areolate, brown<br />

. ↑ Rhizocarpon epispilum<br />

5* Not island-like on yellowish crustose lichens.<br />

Sp. smaller . 6<br />

6 Thallus appearing squamulose (squamules<br />

usually coalescing), brown, at first living on<br />

brown and green-yellow Parmelia species or on<br />

crustose lichens. Ap. sessile, <strong>of</strong>ten crowded, flat<br />

to moderately convex, permanent margin, -0.8<br />

mm. Sp. 10-16 x 6-8(9) µm. Ch-<br />

Buellia badia<br />

6* Thallus purely crustose, areolate, whit-gray to<br />

brown-gray, <strong>of</strong>ten island-lake, growing on or at<br />

least near the brown-gray thallus <strong>of</strong> Schaereria<br />

fuscocin. Ap. sunken (cryptolecanorine) to<br />

sessile, -0.8(1) mm. Sp. up to 12 x 6.5 µm,<br />

elongate, shrunken at the septum 7<br />

7 Sp. upper surface streaked. Sp. wall usually<br />

under 1.5 µm. Sp. 8.1-9.3-11.7 x 4.7-4.6-6.4 µm.<br />

Ap. commonly remaining sunken. Hyp colorless<br />

to middle brown, epihym. olive to black green,<br />

rarely brown-olive. Thallus light to dark gray or<br />

gray-brown, shiny. Gyrophoric acid, ± Stictic<br />

acid . B. uberior<br />

7* Sp. upper surface without ornamentation. Sp.<br />

wall ca. 1.5 µm thick. Sp. 9.4-10.0-11.2 x<br />

5.3-5.7-6.0 µm. Ap. sunken to siting up and<br />

clearly lecideine. Hyp. middle to dark brown,<br />

epihym. olive-brown, rarely olive to black-green.<br />

Thallus white-gray, areoles flat to convex, dull.<br />

Miriquidic acid . B. miriquidica<br />

8 On the rock dwelling crustose lichens Porpidia<br />

glaucophaea or Diploschistes scruposus. Sp. 2-4<br />

celled. Asci not I+ blue (Karschia) . 9<br />

8* On Pertusaria, Ochrolechia or Baeomyces. Sp. 2<br />

celled, 9-15 µm long. Asci covered above with<br />

gelatin caps, which are colored intensive blue<br />

with I (Dactylospora) . 10<br />

9 On Porphidia glaucophaea (↑). Ap. -0.5 mm.<br />

Sp. 15-20 x 7-9.5 µm, rather long time colorless.<br />

Epihym. and hyp. light brown to brown<br />

. Karschia santessonii Haf.<br />

9* On Diploschistes scruposus (↑). Ap. -0.6 mm.<br />

Sp. 11-17(19) x 6-8(9) µm. Epihym. and hyp.<br />

brown Karschia talcophila<br />

(Ach. ex Flotow) Körber<br />

10 Sp. 2 celled, 4.5-7 µm wide. Hyp. and epihym.<br />

red-brown, K-. Ap. -1mm. On bark dwelling<br />

Pertusaria and Ochrolechia species<br />

Dactylospora parasitica<br />

(Flörke) Zopf<br />

10* Sp. 2 celled, 4.5-7 µm wide. Hyp. light to yellow<br />

brown. Ap. -0.8 mm 11<br />

116


11 On rock dwelling yellow-whitish to yellowish<br />

crustose (Pertusaria, above all amarescens,<br />

flavicans, mostly C+ orange, UV+ yellowish to<br />

orange). Epihym. brown, K- .<br />

Dactylospora saxatilis (Schaerer) Haf.<br />

11* On soil- and rock dwelling Baeomyces rufus.<br />

Epihym. red-brown, K+ giving a purple solution<br />

.Dactylospora athallina (Müll.Arg.) Haf.<br />

12 <strong>Lichens</strong> on soil, mosses, or plant detritus .13<br />

12* <strong>Lichens</strong> on bark, wood, or rock 21<br />

13 Thallus ± citron yellow, ochre yellow. Sp. 2<br />

celled 14<br />

13* Thallus whitish to gray. Sp. 2- or 4 celled 16<br />

14 Thallus ochre, (ochre)yellow, K± yellowish, C+<br />

orange, warty to squamulose, squamules rounded<br />

to elongate, mostly strongly convex, with black<br />

rhizine strands, UV+ yellow to orange. Ap. -<br />

1(1.8) mm, flat to moderately convex, with<br />

receding margin. Sp. 17-22 x 7-8.5 µm.<br />

Arthothelin, Granulosin, (Dichlornorlichexanthone),<br />

(Thiophanic acid) Buellia thiopoliza<br />

14* Thallus citron yellow, C-, with Pulvinic acid<br />

derivatives, UV+ orange 15<br />

15 Ap. -2 mm, flat, narrow margin, later convex<br />

marginless, between the squamules. Thallus<br />

clearly squamulose, squamules <strong>of</strong>ten elongated at<br />

the margin, thick, folded to undulating,<br />

undersides black, with rhizine strands, -3 mm<br />

wide. Sp. 12-18 x 7-10 µm. Epihym. dark olive<br />

green to black. Rhizocarpic acid et al<br />

Catolechia wahlenbergii<br />

15* Ap. -0.6 (0.8) mm, mostly soon high convex<br />

marginless, on the areoles. Thallus granular,<br />

warty areolate to appearing squamulose, thin,<br />

without elongated marginal squamules, parasitic<br />

on Baeomyces. Epihym. brown to olive brown<br />

.Epilichen scabrosus (4)<br />

16 Sp. 4 celled, 23-24 x 9-13 µm. Thallus white,<br />

UV+ orange, KC+ orange. Ap. mostly non<br />

pruinose. Capistraton. On mosses over<br />

calcareous rock; arctic-alpine .B. geophila<br />

(Flörke ex Sommerf.) Lynge<br />

16* Sp. 2 celled 17<br />

17 Thallus brown, occasionally on rock mosses<br />

B. badia (6)<br />

17* Thallus white to gray . 18<br />

18 Sp. to 4 per ascus, 10-17 x 5-8 µm, with almost<br />

smooth (very weakly finely warty) upper surface,<br />

gray to gray-brown. Ap. -0.8 mm, flat to very<br />

convex, young ones also pruinose. Thallus lobed<br />

at the margin, chalk white, up to ca. 4 cm wide,<br />

K+ yellow/K-, P+ orange/P-. Atranorin, ±<br />

Norstictic acid On calcareous soils, gypsum .<br />

B. asterella<br />

18* Sp. to 8, predominantly over 17 µm long.<br />

Thallus not or only appearing lobed 19<br />

19 Thallus K-, on gypsum and calcareous barren<br />

soils, warty-lumpy, up to ca. 1.5 cm wide. Ap. -<br />

1.2 mm, flat, long time pruinose. Sp. 14-26 x<br />

6.12 µm, already the young clearly warty, old<br />

ones coarsely warty. Ch- . B. epigaea<br />

19* Thallus K+ yellow, on mosses and plant detritus<br />

in the high mountains. Ap. up to 1.5 mm, soon<br />

convex marginless, non pruinose . 20<br />

20 Sp. 18-24 x 8/10 µm. Thallus thickish, strongly<br />

unevenly papillose. Capistraton, (Atranorin) –<br />

Arct-alp . B. papillate<br />

(Sommerf.) Tuck.<br />

20* Sp. 22-32 x 9-13 µm. Thallus granular-warty.<br />

C+ yellow, P-/P+ yellowish. Atranorin,<br />

unknown substance B. insignis<br />

21 Thallus sorediate 22<br />

21* Thallus not sorediate . 25<br />

22 Thallus rosetted, with definite ray-like elongated,<br />

compressed coalescing lobes at the margin, the<br />

interior with (coalescing) fleck soralia, bluish<br />

gray-white, K+ yellow. On rock and bark.<br />

Atranorin, Diploicin, Xanthone .<br />

Diploicia canescens<br />

22* Thallus not placoid. As a rule on bark or wood .<br />

23<br />

23 Thallus KC+ red, C+ rose, K-, P+ yellow, mealygranular,<br />

gray-green to dark brown-gray. Ap. -<br />

0.4(0.5) mm, flat to slightly convex. Sp. 12-<br />

14(17) x 6-7(8) µm. Alectorialic acid<br />

B. pulverea<br />

Coppins & P. James<br />

23* Thallus KC- to + yellow(ish), C-, with fleck<br />

soralia, thin, <strong>of</strong>ten in the substrate and then only<br />

the soralia conspicuous 24<br />

24 Soralia gray-greenish, greenish, blue-gray,<br />

yellowish ± round to irregular, -0.3 (0.4) mm, K+<br />

yellow to (brown)red, P+ yellow/ yellow-orange,<br />

ap. rare, -1.2 mm, long-time flat to moderately<br />

convex, with margin, sitting up. Sp. 15-28 x 1-<br />

13 µm, weakly muriform. Thallus ± smooth or <strong>of</strong><br />

thin areoles, sometimes indefinite, light gray.<br />

Atranorin, Norstictic acid B. griseovirens<br />

24* Soralia whitish, bluish, greenish, sometimes<br />

brownish, <strong>of</strong>ten surrounded by a apparent<br />

thalloid collar, flat to concave, round to (on<br />

wood) elliptical or elongate, -0.4 mm, K-/+<br />

yellowish, P-. Ap. very rare. Thallus whitish, <strong>of</strong><br />

thin areoles or usually indefinite. Atranorin,<br />

Placodiolic acid B. arborea<br />

Coppins & Tonsberg<br />

25 Sp. 2-celled 26<br />

25* Sp. 4-celled to muriform 43<br />

26 Thallus on bark or wood. Epihym. brown 27<br />

26* Thallus on rock 31<br />

27 Sp. rarely over 16 µm long and 8 µm wide. Ap. -<br />

0.4(0.5) mm. Thallus R-, Ch-. Hym. always<br />

without oil droplets 28<br />

27* Sp. predominantly longer and wider. Ap. usually<br />

larger. Thallus K-, K+ yellow or red. Hym.<br />

without or with oil droplets 29<br />

28 Sp. 7-10(11) x 2.5-4(4.5) µm. Hym. 45-60 µm.<br />

Ap. flat to ± convex, soon ± marginless, mostly -<br />

0.3 mm. Thallus indefinite . B. schaereri<br />

117


28* Sp. 11-16 x 5-8 µm, rarely somewhat larger,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten slightly curved. Hym. 60-70 µm. Ap. at<br />

first flat, margined, then moderately convex, -<br />

0.5(0.6) mm. Thallus indefinite to definite,<br />

smooth, cracked or granular-warty, gray to dull<br />

gray-green . Amandinea punctata<br />

29 Thallus light gray, R-, definitely developed,<br />

smooth or rugose, coherent to cracked. Ap. -0.8<br />

mm, longtime flat and ± margined. Hym. 80-90<br />

µm, without oil droplets. Exc. symmetrical ± 60<br />

µm thick. Sp. 16-22 x 7-10 µm. Placodiolic acid<br />

et al B. poeltii<br />

29* Thallus whitish to gray, K+ yellow or yellow to<br />

red (reaction <strong>of</strong>ten indefinite in the case <strong>of</strong> thin<br />

thallus), <strong>of</strong>ten with black prothallus. Ap. -1.5<br />

mm, but <strong>of</strong>ten clearly smaller. Hym. 60-90 µm.<br />

Sp. (14)17-25(30) x 6-10 µm, <strong>of</strong>ten apparently 4celled<br />

30<br />

30 Hym. without oil droplets. Thallus thin, smooth<br />

to sturdy, warty areolate to cracked areolate, K+<br />

yellow, then red, P+ yellow-orange, C-. Ap. flat<br />

to convex, margined, (0.4-)0.6-1.5 mm.<br />

Atranorin, Norstictic acid .B. erubescens<br />

30* Hym. with numerous oil droplets. Thallus<br />

usually thin, even almost lacking, smooth to<br />

cracked areolate, whitish to yellowish-gray, K+<br />

yellow, P+ yellowish, C-. Ap. usually flat and<br />

margined, (0.3-)0.5-1.3 mm. Atranorin,<br />

unknown substance . B. disciformis<br />

31 Thallus on limestone, K-. Ap. black to brownblack,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten brown tinted when moist. Sp. with<br />

or without inner wall thickened. Further<br />

described in Rinodina 38<br />

31* On silicate rock 32<br />

32 Thallus greenish-yellow, gray-yellow, or pale<br />

yellow . 33<br />

32* Thallus without yellow tint . 36<br />

33 Thallus areolate, with elongated marginal areoles,<br />

yellowish to yellowish-white, in the region C-,<br />

P+ yellow to red (Fumarprotocetraric acid), also<br />

P-, C+ red. Ap. sunken, margined by the thallus.<br />

Sp. 9-13(15) x 5-8 µm .<br />

Dimelaena oreina<br />

33* Thallus without elongated marginal areoles . 34<br />

34 Asci with thicker, I+ blue gelatin caps. Ap.<br />

-0.5(0.7) mm, on yellowish lichen<br />

↑ Dactylospora saxatilis (11)<br />

34* Asci without thick gelatin caps. With single<br />

thallus. With Xanthones (Arthothelin), UV+<br />

orange, C+ orange . 35<br />

35 Ap. soon sitting up, with permanent proper<br />

margin. Sp. usually sickle form curved, rarely<br />

straight, also 3-4 celled, 13,5-18 x 7-8.5 µm.<br />

Thallus granular to thick warty, when young on<br />

other lichens. Alpine B. concinna (3)<br />

35* Ap sunken into the thallus, bordered by the<br />

thallus (cryptolecanorine), exc. usually weakly<br />

developed. Sp. straight, 2-celled, 13.5-18 x 7-8.5<br />

µm, with very finely wrinkled upper surface.<br />

Epihym. olive, brown, subhym. usually green,<br />

hyp. dark brown. Thallus cracked-areolate.<br />

Pycnosp. 4.5-5.5 µm (if pycnosp. 6-9 µm long,<br />

thallus <strong>of</strong> isolated areoles, on high mountain<br />

ridges: B. jugorum<br />

(Arnold) Arnold<br />

.B. ocellata<br />

36 Ap. sunken into the thallus . 37<br />

36* Ap. sessile . 41<br />

37 Medulla C+ red, K+ yellow-red or K-. Thallus<br />

with Gyrophoric acid, ± Stictic acid. Ap. sunken<br />

into the thallus (Cryptolecanorine to Zeorine).<br />

Sp. 8-12 x 4.5-6.5 µm . B. uberior (7)<br />

37* Medulla K- or K+ yellow . 38<br />

38 Thallus K+ yellow, then (yellow)red (crystals in<br />

the medulla) . 39<br />

38* Thallus K- or K+ yellow 40<br />

39 Ap. -0.40(0.7) mm, cryptolecanorine (by collarlike<br />

surrounding thallus areoles) or with narrow<br />

proper margin. Sp. 12-18 x 6-10.5 µm, weakly<br />

constricted at the septum, very finely warty (oil<br />

immersion ). Thallus cracked-areolate to<br />

areolate, brown, brown- gray to gray or whitish,<br />

usually only -1.2 cm wide, areoles flat to<br />

moderately convex. Medulla I+ blue/I-.<br />

Norstictic acid, rarely also with Stictic acid<br />

. B. aethalea<br />

39* Ap. -1(1.5) mm, <strong>of</strong>ten with irregular outline, with<br />

or without thin margin, disk sunken to sessile,<br />

not with surrounding collar-like areoles, with thin<br />

proper margin. Sp. 9-15 x 5.5-7 µm, with<br />

smooth or finely wrinkled upper surface. Thallus<br />

(cracked-) areolate, light gray to whitish, areoles<br />

conspicuously flat, thin to thick. Medulla I+<br />

blue. Atranorin, Norstictic acid, ± Stictic acid.<br />

Very rare, above all west European sea coast<br />

B. spuria<br />

40 Thallus K-, cracked areolate to areolate, areoles<br />

flat to moderately convex, brown, brown-gray to<br />

gray or whitish, without Atranorin .<br />

B. aethalea (39)<br />

40* Thallus K= light yellow, cracked to flat areolate,<br />

white, gray-white, with Atranorin, 2’-O-Methylpertalotic<br />

acid and Confluentinic acid., ap.<br />

clearly narrow margined, completely sunken, -<br />

0.35 mm. Sp. 9.5-13 x 5-7 µm, with flat<br />

wrinkled upper surface. Medulla I-. mieur-med<br />

B. stellulata<br />

(Taylor) Mudd<br />

41 Thallus R-, medulla I-, Ch-, bark-dwelling, but<br />

occasionally going over onto silicate rock, above<br />

all sandstone, gray-green to gray. Sp. 11-16 x 5-<br />

8 µm ↑ Amandinea punctata (28)<br />

41* Thallus whitish to indefinite, with lichen<br />

substances, at the least the medulla K+ yellow,<br />

orange, red, if thallus indefinite, exc. K+ orange<br />

solution. Medulla I+ blue 42<br />

42 Sp. 12-16 x 7-8.5 µm. Thallus lacking to clearly<br />

developed, cracked, gray, K+ yellow. Ap with<br />

bulging, long time remaining proper margin, flat<br />

to moderately convex, -1.2(1.5) mm. Atranorin<br />

118


B. leptocline<br />

42* Sp. narrower, 9-15 x 4.5-6.5 µm. Thallus<br />

granular to cracked, K+ intensive yellow to<br />

orange (red). Ap. permanent narrow margin, flat<br />

to convex, -0.6(1) mm. Atranorin, Stictic acid, ±<br />

Norstictic acid. <strong>Lichens</strong> <strong>of</strong>ten parasitic on<br />

Lecidella carpathica . B. spuria (39)<br />

43 On bark 44<br />

43* On rock. Completely insufficiently known<br />

species group . 45<br />

44 Sp. 2-, very rarely 4-celled. Hym. with oil<br />

droplets. Ap. nonpruinose, sessile<br />

↑ B. disciformis (30)<br />

44* Sp. 4-celled to commonly weakly muriform when<br />

ripe, 13-23 x 6.5-11 µm. Ap. usually whitish<br />

pruinose, thereby appearing whitish to bluish,<br />

without or above all when young with<br />

(sometimes crenate) thalloid margin, -1.2 mm.<br />

Thallus gray-white, gray, coherent to cracked or<br />

warty areolate, with smooth or rough upper<br />

surface, Ch- B. alboatra<br />

45 Thallus when young parasitic on Caloplaca sp.<br />

and Xanthoria elegans and related thalli,<br />

indefinite to white, areolate to warty areolate.<br />

Ap. ± pruinose, thick margined, eventually<br />

convex marginless. Sp. 16-26 x 6-11 µm<br />

. B. nivalis (Bagl. & Car.)<br />

Hertel (B. margaritacea<br />

(“Sommerf.”) Lynge)<br />

45* Thallus not parasitic 46<br />

46 Sp. 4-celled, very rarely with a single elongate<br />

wall (or parallel -6celled), 14-22(25) x 6-10 µm,<br />

straight to <strong>of</strong>ten curved. Thallus on limestone,<br />

white. Ap. pruinose, -1.5 mm B. epipolia s.l.<br />

46* Sp. 4-celled to commonly sometimes (ripe) with<br />

single elongate wall 47<br />

47 Thallus commonly on basic or slightly calcareous<br />

silicate rock, ro<strong>of</strong> tiles, usually thin, cracked,<br />

“<strong>of</strong>ten thinning out” at the margin, white to white<br />

gray. Medulla usually K+ yellow to partly red,<br />

I+ blue or I-. Ap. disk nonpruinose to weakly<br />

pruinose, flat, sunken to depressed, <strong>of</strong>ten with<br />

“thalloid margin”. Sp. 4-celled to muriform, 15-<br />

20(25) x 7-11 µm ! B. porphyrica<br />

47* Thallus commonly on limestone and mortar,<br />

gray-white, gray, coherent to cracked or warty<br />

areolate, with smooth to rough upper surface.<br />

Medulla K-, I-. Ap. without or above all when<br />

young with (sometimes crenulate) thalloid<br />

margin, -1.2 mm, almost always whitish<br />

pruinose. Sp. 13-23 x 6.5-11 µm . B. alboatra<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Buellia aethalea (Ach.) Th.Fr. (B. aethaleoides<br />

(Nyl.) Oliv., B. sororioides Erichsen, incl. B.<br />

sororia Th.Fr.)<br />

Above all in sub- to high montane sites on limefree,<br />

mostly hard crystalline rock on r.-v.light<br />

rich habitats, pioneer lichen, on rubble and<br />

boulder slopes or frequently on grave stones<br />

(above all on granite) and ro<strong>of</strong> tiles, <strong>of</strong>ten on<br />

m.eutrophic sites, m.-r.acidoph., xeroph., r.v.photoph.,<br />

a-/m.nitroph., above all with<br />

Rhizocarpon geographicum in Buellio-<br />

Rhizocarpetum, Aspicilietum cin., also in the<br />

Umbilicarion cyl., Acarosporetalia sin. – (s’)bormieur-med<br />

– v.rare; süSch and Vog scattered,<br />

RhSch, Eif, Pf, He, ThW, but usually syanthropic<br />

Buellia alboatra (H<strong>of</strong>fm.) Th.Fr. (Diplotomma<br />

alboatrum (H<strong>of</strong>fm.) Flotow, ?B. pharcidia (Ach.)<br />

Malme)<br />

In hilly and submontane (to montane), mostly<br />

rather low precipitation sites on deeply cracked<br />

dust impregnated bark on the middle trunk and at<br />

the base <strong>of</strong> old, free-standing deciduous trees,<br />

above all linden, oak, predominantly on little<br />

traveled main roads and paths in calcareous<br />

regions, especially on rather rain sheltered sites,<br />

this species ? in addition on limestone (vertical<br />

surfaces), on walls, basiph.-m.acidoph.,<br />

r.photoph., xeroph., r.nitroph., in the Physcietum<br />

adsc. and related communities. – mieur-med –<br />

rare, strongly regressed on bark (2); Ne, Ju, SJu,<br />

FrJu, Bo, süHü-HRh, nöHü, Rh-Mn-T, RhSch,<br />

Th<br />

Buellia asterella Poelt & Sulzer<br />

In hilly to montane, mostly rather low<br />

precipitation sites on dry, stony to sandy,<br />

calcareous soils, <strong>of</strong>ten in voids in dry turfs over<br />

sandy dolomite, limestone, even gypsum, also<br />

over river gravel, gravel pits, on thin soil<br />

outcrops between boulders, commonly on sunny,<br />

± dry warm habitats, subneutroph., (-m.basiph.),<br />

v.xeroph., v.photoph., thermoph., anitroph., in<br />

the Toninion sed. – mieur – v.rare (0); Ne<br />

(Ludwigsburg+, Ju (Pfronstetter), FrJu, Eif<br />

(Iversheim), He<br />

Buellia badia (Fr.) Massal.<br />

Above all in montane and submontane sites on<br />

lime-free silicate rock on sunny, usually rather<br />

warm, wind sheltered habitats, usually over<br />

mosses (especially Grimmia spp., Rhacomitrium<br />

heterostichum) and directly on rock, commonly<br />

over lichens, usually on somewhat nutrient<br />

enriched, e.g. sporadically irrigated or slightly<br />

dust impregnated sites, m.-r.acidoph., r.v.photoph.,<br />

m.nitroph., in the Parmelion consp.,<br />

Umbilication hirs., Polychidio-Massalongietum –<br />

119


(s’)bor-med-mo – rare (3); süSch v.rare. nöSch,<br />

Vog, Pf, O, Sp, RhSch, He<br />

Buellia disciformis (Fr.) Mudd<br />

Up into the high montane sites on mostly smooth,<br />

moderately acid, non eutrophic bark <strong>of</strong> deciduous<br />

trees (above all hornbeam, beech, rarer e.g. oak),<br />

rarely on spruce, commonly in the interior <strong>of</strong><br />

cool oak-hornbeam and spruce-fir forests, like<br />

Graphis scripta, Pertusaria leiopl. (↑),<br />

m.(r.)acidoph., r.hygroph., r.skioph.m.(r.)photoph.,<br />

in the Graphidion – bor-med-mo<br />

– r.rare (3); in regression because <strong>of</strong> eutrification<br />

<strong>of</strong> the bark in the lower sites<br />

Buellia epigaea (Pers.) Tuck.<br />

Like B. asterella (↑), but the mainly on gypsum<br />

or gypsum soils and <strong>of</strong>ten over growing mosses,<br />

usually on Fulgensia bract in the Gips-Varianten<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Toninio-Psoretum – mieur-med – He, Hzfoothills,<br />

Westf<br />

Buellia epipolia (Ach.) Mong. (Diplotomma<br />

epipolium (Ach.) Arnold)<br />

Above all up into (high) montane zone <strong>of</strong> the<br />

carbonate rock, prefers stones and smaller<br />

boulders in dry turfs, also on walls and on lime<br />

impregnated silicate rock (e.g. sandstone), on m.v.light<br />

rich, dry-warm habitats, basiph., xeroph.,<br />

m.(-r.)nitroph., e.g. in the Aspicilion calc. – bormed<br />

– r.rare; Ju, Mn and Ne moderately frequent<br />

to rather rare, also e.g. süHü, O, Eif, Pf<br />

Buellia erubescens (Arnold (B. zahlbruckneri J.<br />

Steiner)<br />

In high montane, rarely lower sites on hard,<br />

tough wood, on bark-free stumps, on fences etc.,<br />

commonly also on acid bark above all on<br />

conifers, like Xylographa parall. (↑), Char.<br />

Xylographetum vit. – bor-med-h’mo – rare;<br />

süSch, s129Hü-HRh, SJu, Av, Al<br />

Buellia griseovirens (Turner & Borrer ex Sm.)<br />

Almb. (B. betulina (Hepp) Th.Fr.)<br />

Up into the high montane zone, on smooth to<br />

flat-cracked bark <strong>of</strong> deciduous trees and spruce,<br />

in the loser sites especially on hornbeam in cool<br />

oak-hornbeam forests and ash, in higher sites<br />

above all on beech and sycamore in beech-spruce<br />

and sycamore-beech forests, likes cool valleys,<br />

also a synathrop on wood (especially on round<br />

wood fences), also decreasing in air-polluted<br />

regions, m.acidoph., m.photoph., -r.skioph., r.v.hygroph.,<br />

anitroph., above all in the community<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Graphidion – s’bor-mieur-subatl-med –<br />

moderately frequent, spreading<br />

Buellia insignis (Naeg. ex Hepp) Th.Fr.<br />

From the high montane up into the alpine zone<br />

on mosses and plant detritus (dying base <strong>of</strong><br />

Carex-nests, saxifrage cushions) usually over<br />

calcareous rocky soil, over thin soil layer on<br />

rock, rarely going over to bark, m.acidoph.m.basiph.,<br />

in the Megasporion verr. – arct-alp –<br />

Al, possibly also süSch<br />

Buellia leptocline (Flotow) Massal.<br />

In the high montane, rarely montane zone on<br />

high precipitation , cool, r.light rich, m.-r.<br />

exposed habitats on rainy vertical surfaces <strong>of</strong><br />

silicate rock, r.acidoph., anitroph., e.g. in the<br />

Pertusario-Ophioparmetum -- bor-mieur-‘mo/alp<br />

– v.rare (2); süSch, Vog, ?Bo, ?Eif<br />

Buellia miriquidica Scheideg.<br />

In the montane and high montane sites usually on<br />

hard silicate rock parasitic on Schaereria<br />

fuscocin. (↑) on light rich habitats, m.-r.acidoph.,<br />

r.-v.photoph., anitroph. – bor-mieur – v.rare (1);<br />

süSch<br />

Buellia ocellata (Flotow) Körber (B. verruculosa<br />

auct.)<br />

In the montane and submontane sites on acid and<br />

basic silicate rock, e.g. on boulders <strong>of</strong> rubble<br />

heaps and on cool, little weathered rock surfaces,<br />

pioneer lichen on sloping and rainy vertical<br />

surfaces on r.-v. light rich, <strong>of</strong>ten rather warm<br />

habitats, m.-r.acidoph., a-/m.nitroph., e.g. with B.<br />

aethalea in the Buellio-Rhizocarpetum, also in<br />

the Pertusarietum asperg. -flav. – mieur-med –<br />

rare; Sch, Vog, Mos, SFW, Ne, Al, ThW<br />

Buellia poeltii Schauer<br />

In the montane and high montane, high<br />

precipitation, oceanic sites in moist mountain<br />

forests on the bark <strong>of</strong> deciduous, rarer on<br />

conifers, in the region above all on sycamore, m.r.acidoph.,<br />

v.hygroph., m.photoph.-r.skioph.,<br />

anitroph. – mieur-(paralp?) – v.rare (2); süSch<br />

(Feldberg), also north Alps<br />

Buellia porphyrica (Arnold) Mong. (?B.<br />

chlorophaea (Hepp ex Leighton) Lettau,<br />

Diplotomma chlorophaeum (Hepp ex Leighton)<br />

Szat.)<br />

Up into the montane sites on basic (e.g. basalt)<br />

and neutral or calcareous or lime impregnated<br />

silicate rock as well as on tiles, <strong>of</strong>ten on vertical<br />

120


surfaces, subneutroph.-neutroph., m.-r.photoph.,<br />

e.g. in the Xanthorion fall., Caloplacetum obl. –<br />

rare; Sch, Bo, RhSch, He, Th etc.<br />

Buellia schaereri De. Not.<br />

Especially in the submontane to sub alpine sites<br />

on the bark and tough decayed wood <strong>of</strong> conifers,<br />

rarely on acid bark <strong>of</strong> deciduous trees (above all<br />

oak), mostly in open forests and on free-standing<br />

trees, on wooden fences and posts, <strong>of</strong>ten on<br />

rather rain sheltered tree flanks or on after a rain<br />

quickly drying substrates, r.-v.acidoph., m.r.photoph.,<br />

m.ombroph.-r.anombroph., a-<br />

/m.nitroph., above all in the Calicietum vir. and<br />

related communities -- bor-mieur-(smed-mo) –<br />

rare (-r.rare); e.g. Sch, Vog, süHü-HRh, SJu, Al,<br />

Th<br />

Buellia spuria (Schaerer) Anzi (B. lactea<br />

(Massal.) Körber, B. italica Massal.)<br />

In the hilly sites on silicate rock on well lighted<br />

habitats, in the region on anthropogenic<br />

substrates (Wall crowns on sandstone), like<br />

Lecidella carp. (↑), in the Lecidelletum carp. –<br />

mieur-subatl-med – v.rare (1), probably however<br />

also overlooked; Ne<br />

Buellia thiopoliza (Nyl.) Boistel<br />

In the high montane, very high precipitation sites<br />

on mosses (above all Grimmia spp,<br />

Rhacomitrium heterost.) over mineral rich<br />

silicate rock on ± sunny, occasionally seep<br />

irrigated, very nutrient rich, soil encrusted<br />

surfaces, e.g. with Toninia squalida, m.acidoph.<br />

(-subneutroph.), local. Char. Polychidio-<br />

Massalongietum – mieur-paralp-smed-paralp/alp<br />

– v.rare (1); süSch (Belchen), Vog<br />

(Rosskopf/Thann)<br />

Buellia uberior Anzi<br />

In the montane and high montane sites on ± hard<br />

silicate rock, usually parasitic on Schaereria<br />

fuscocin., like B. miriquidica (↑) -- bor-med-mo<br />

– v.rare (2); süSch<br />

Buellia venusta (Körber) Lettau (B. suevica<br />

Bertsch, Diplotomma venustum Körber)<br />

Above all in the hilly to montane, mostly low<br />

precipitation sites on carbonate rock, usually on<br />

m.-r.eutrophic summits and sloping surfaces <strong>of</strong><br />

lower rocks on sunny habitats, e.g. in the region<br />

<strong>of</strong> dry and semi-dry trufs, basiph., xeroph.,<br />

v.photoph., in the Placocarpetum monstrosi --<br />

mieur-med(mo) – r.rare; above all u, SJu, FrJu,<br />

Mn, Th, rare Ne, süHü, Eif<br />

LIT.: HAFELLNER 1979, MIGULA 1929-31, POELT 1969,<br />

SCHAUER 1965, SCHEIDEGGER 1987, 1988, 1993.<br />

Byssoloma Trevisan<br />

Introduction<br />

The essentially tropically distributed genus<br />

numbering ca. 20 species contains crustose<br />

lichens with simple thallus with coccoid green<br />

algae and sessile, gray-brown to black lecideine<br />

apothecia, which in a few species appear<br />

margined because <strong>of</strong> the white hyphae growing<br />

out <strong>of</strong> the excipulum. B. subdiscordans is the<br />

species penetrating furthest out <strong>of</strong> the tropical<br />

region and reaches (thus in the region ) the<br />

boundary <strong>of</strong> its area in southern central Europe.<br />

Here it grows in cool, foggy sites on thin<br />

branches <strong>of</strong> conifers. The lichen has been<br />

missing in central Europe for a long time.<br />

Genus Characteristics<br />

Thallus crustose, undifferentiated (in the case <strong>of</strong><br />

the indigenous species white to light gray), with<br />

coccoid green algae. Ap. orange-brown to (in<br />

the case <strong>of</strong> the indigenous species) black, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

lighter margin, in a few (so well as European)<br />

species surrounded by a cob-webby tomentum<br />

white margin caused by hyphae extending out<br />

from the excipulum. Exc. <strong>of</strong> loosely intertwined<br />

hyphae. Hyp. dark red-brown. Paraphyses<br />

simple to sparsely branched. Asci clavate, with<br />

K/I+ blue tholus with ring structure, exterior with<br />

thick amyloid gelatin envelop. Sp. 2- to 4-celled,<br />

in the case <strong>of</strong> exotic species also 4-celled.<br />

Pycnosp. pear-shaped to flask-form. Ch-.<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Byssoloma subdiscordans (Nyl.) P.James (B.<br />

rotuliforme (Müll.Arg.)R.Sant., B. tricholomum<br />

auct.)<br />

In montane, mostly rather high precipitation sites<br />

on thin branches <strong>of</strong> fir, rarely spruce, in ± pure<br />

conifer forests, also in spruce forests, <strong>of</strong>ten even<br />

121


on young trees, on very humid cool in part also<br />

late occurring frost occurring habitats, oceanic in<br />

reference to the moisture conditions, r.acidoph.,<br />

m.photoph., anitroph., usually only with<br />

Hypogymnia phys. – mieur-subatl-med, oc –<br />

v.rare (0); süSch (Schramberg), Ju (Schörzingen,<br />

Ehingen), Ne (Trillfingen), Do-Av (repeatedly)<br />

LIT.: PURVIS ET AL. 1992, SANTESSON 1952<br />

Calicium Pers.<br />

Introduction<br />

The genus Calicium numbers only the group <strong>of</strong><br />

coniocarpic or dust fruited lichens (goblet<br />

lichens). As fir the characterization <strong>of</strong> this<br />

group, disintegration <strong>of</strong> the asci when ripe into<br />

fragments and producing together with the spores<br />

a dust-like mass covering the upper side <strong>of</strong> the<br />

apothecium (Mazaedium). The fruiting bodies<br />

are, as a rule, clearly stalked and end with a<br />

clavate to egg-form “capitulum” and have<br />

thereby a certain similarity to a short needle.<br />

The thallus <strong>of</strong> the Calicium species is found in<br />

the interior <strong>of</strong> the substrate or is developed as a<br />

definite crust and is colored gray to green or pale<br />

yellowish, the mazaedium is black, the capitulum<br />

is <strong>of</strong>ten brown on the exterior and white or<br />

yellow-green pruinose. The spores are twocelled,<br />

dark brown.<br />

Of the 25 species distributed mainly in the<br />

cool-temperate zones <strong>of</strong> the earth, 10 occur in<br />

Germany. They occur on rain-sheltered, humid<br />

habitats, above all on bark (in bark cracks) <strong>of</strong><br />

older deciduous and conifers and on wood, only<br />

one species (C. corynellum) lives on overhanging<br />

silicate rocks. C. adspersum is found<br />

almost exclusively on old oaks in oak-hornbeam<br />

forests in slightly continental influenced sites, C.<br />

viride occurs mainly on conifers in the<br />

mountains. C. abietinum, C. adspersum, C.<br />

quercinum and C. corynellum are species <strong>of</strong> the<br />

central European summer-green deciduous<br />

forested region; reaching in the north<br />

approximately to the distribution boundary <strong>of</strong><br />

Quercus robur or extending only a trifle farther.<br />

C. lichenoides, C. viride, C. trabinellum and C.<br />

glaucellum are distributed in the boreal conifer<br />

forest region and in central Europe (here<br />

occurring in the mountains). The most <strong>of</strong> the<br />

indigenous Calicium species also occur in the<br />

mediterranean region, <strong>of</strong>ten – above all the<br />

boreal species – more in the mountains. Often<br />

avoiding the atlantic regions.<br />

Genus Characteristics and Determination<br />

Thallus crustose, in the substrate or clearly<br />

developed, granular, warty to appearing<br />

squamulose, gray, gray-green, yellowish, or<br />

green, with Trebouxia. Ap. definitely stalked,<br />

rarely short stalked to sessile, with ± spherical to<br />

lens-form capitula, margined, black, but on the<br />

capitulum underside and the margin sometimes<br />

whitish, brown or yellowish pruinose, with black,<br />

sometimes pruinose mazaedium. Exc. clearly<br />

developed. Paraphyses branched. Asci cylindric<br />

to clavate, early disintegrating and with the<br />

spores producing a mazaedium. Sp. 2-celled,<br />

dark brown, thick walled, <strong>of</strong>ten with<br />

characteristic ornamentation. Pycnosp. short<br />

cylindric to broadly ellipsoidal. Ch: above all<br />

Pulvinic acid derivatives, Norstictic acid etc.<br />

Keying caution: The ap. height is measured excluding the<br />

stalk. Sp. measurement is on ripe spores. Unripe spores are<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten smaller. Ornamentation is only clearly recognized at<br />

higher magnification (oil immersion); treatment with K<br />

facilitates the study <strong>of</strong> structure.<br />

1 On silicate rock. Thallus light yellow to<br />

greenish, finely mealy, parasitising whitish to<br />

beige crusts (Haematomma ochr.). Ap. short<br />

stalked to almost sessile, capitulum -0.7 (1.5) mm<br />

wide. Sp. dark brown, 12-16 x 4-6 µm. R-,<br />

Rhizocarpic acid . C. corynellum<br />

(if ap. stalked, sp. 6.5-8 x 2.3-3 µm, spiral ribbed:<br />

. Microcalicium arenarium)<br />

1* On bark and wood 2<br />

2 Ap. sessile . 3<br />

2* Ap. clearly stalked . 4<br />

3 Ap. yellow to greenish-yellow pruinose. Sp. 5.5-<br />

6.5 µm thick . C. adspersum (5)<br />

3* Ap. not yellow pruinose. Sp. 3-4 µm thick .<br />

Microcalicium subpedicellatum<br />

4 Ap. capitulum yellow (-greenish) pruinose<br />

(contains Vulpinic acid when ripe). Ap. -1 mm<br />

high . 5<br />

4* Ap. capitulum not yellow (-greenish) pruinose . 6<br />

5 Thallus usually clearly developed, warty to<br />

almost squamulose-scurfy, gray to<br />

yellowish-gray, K+ red, P+ yellow, then red. Ap.<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten only short stalked, even almost sessile.<br />

Capitulum broad, -0.8 (1.1) mm, yellowish<br />

pruinose at the margin and on the mazaedium<br />

(“disk”). Sp. 13-16 x 5.5-6.5 µm, clearly<br />

122


ornamented (spirally ordered ribs). Norstictic<br />

acid .. C. adspersum<br />

5* Thallus indefinite (mostly in the substrate). Ap.<br />

clearly stalked, capitulum underside and the<br />

margin pruinose, -0.4 mm wide. Mazaedium<br />

commonly nonpruinose (black). Sp. 10-11.5 x 5-<br />

6 µm, irregularly ornamented, in the half-ripe<br />

condition spirally ribbed . C. trabinellum<br />

6 Capitulum underside and margin brown, upper<br />

side (mazaedium) and stalk (at least the<br />

underside) black 7<br />

6* Capitulum underside whitish pruinose or black<br />

8<br />

7 Thallus usually clearly developed, warty to<br />

granular, yellow-green to green. Ap. -3(4) mm<br />

high. Sp. 11-13.5 x 6-7 µm, irregularly<br />

ornamented (cracks). Asci narrowly clavate.<br />

Rhizocarpic acid, Epanorin C. viride<br />

7* Thallus thin, light gray (mostly in the substrate),<br />

K- or K+ yellow, then ± red. Ap. -2 mm high.<br />

Sp. 8-11 x 4-5 µm, with regular ornamentation in<br />

the form <strong>of</strong> spirally ordered ridges. Asci<br />

cylindrical. ± Norstictic acid . C. salicinum<br />

8 Stalk and exc. (section) I+ dark blue. Capitulum<br />

underside and margin pruinose or nonpruinose,<br />

like C. glaucellum, -0.6 mm wide. Stalk black to<br />

red-brown. Ap. -1.3 mm high. Sp. 9-13 x 4.5-<br />

7.5 µm. Thallus finely granular, bluish-green,<br />

even yellow- green to whitish, Ch-<br />

C. lenticulare<br />

8* Stalk and exc. I- . 9<br />

9 Ap. capitulum underside or/and margin whitish<br />

pruinose 10<br />

9* Ap. capitulum not pruinose . 12<br />

10 Ripe asci clavate. Ap. weakly white pruinose.<br />

Sp. 8-11 x 3.5-5 µm, shrunken at the septum, not<br />

single series in the ascus. Thallus gray to<br />

greenish-gray, <strong>of</strong>ten with pycnidia, K+ dark<br />

yellowish, P+ pale yellow, C-. Diffractic acid. . .<br />

C. parvum (13)<br />

10* Ripe asci cylindric. Ap. usually clearly pruinose,<br />

-1 mm high. Half ripe sp. with regular spiral<br />

pattern or fine streaks, single series in the ascus.<br />

Relative height <strong>of</strong> the ap. to diameter <strong>of</strong> the stalk<br />

(middle) = 4-8:1 11<br />

11 Thallus definite, warty, gray, K+ yellow-red, P+<br />

yellow. Ripe sp. clearly constricted at the<br />

septum, 9-11 x 4-5 µm, perhaps 2.2 times as long<br />

as wide, with regular spiral pattern. Ap.<br />

capitulum -0.6 mm wide . C. quercinum<br />

11* Thallus indefinite, in the substratum. Ripe sp.<br />

weakly constricted at the septum, irregularly<br />

ornamented, 9-13 x 5.56 µm, ca. 2.0 times as<br />

long as wide. Capitulum -0.35 mm wide.<br />

Unknown substances C. glaucellum<br />

12 Ripe asci clavate, sp. not order in one series.<br />

Thallus usually definite 13<br />

12* Ripe asci cylindric, sp. single series. Thallus<br />

lacking or indefinite. Ap. stalk and capitulum<br />

margin indefinite . 14<br />

13 Thallus gray to greenish-gray, warty to indefinite,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten with black punctiform pycnidia. sp. 8-11 x<br />

3.5-5 µm. Ap. -0.8 mm high. Relative ap. height<br />

to stalk thickness (center) = 6-8: 1. Pycnosp. 2-3<br />

x 1-1.5 µm. Diffractic acid – s’bor-mieur .<br />

C. parvum Tibell<br />

13* Thallus green, warty to granular, pycn. rather<br />

rare. Sp. (11)12-13.5 x (5)6-7 µm. Ap. 1.1-1.9<br />

mm high, relative ap height to stalk thickness =<br />

9-16 : 1 C. viride (7)<br />

14 Ap. black to brown-black, -0.9 mm high, relative<br />

ap. height to stalk thickness (center) = 6-11 : 1.<br />

Sp. 11.5-15 x 5-7 µm, 2.0-2.4 times as long as<br />

wide, finely warty, as punctations. Ch- .<br />

C. abietinum<br />

14* Ap. black, -1.3 mm high. Relative ap. height to<br />

stalk thickness = 10-14 : 1. sp. 11-13.5 x 6-7.5<br />

µm, ca. 1.-1.9 times as long as wide, coarsely and<br />

irregularly areolate – bor-mieur-h’mo C.<br />

denigratum (Vainio) Tibell<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Calicium abietinum Pers. (C. curtum Turner &<br />

Borrer ex Sm.)<br />

Up into the montane zone on tough decayed<br />

wood <strong>of</strong> conifer, rarely deciduous trees, on bark<br />

free trunks and stumps (flanks) as well as old<br />

fence posts and similar material, on moderately<br />

to rather light rich habitats, avoiding cold sites,<br />

r.-v.acidoph., r.-v.hygroph., anitroph., e.g. in the<br />

Calicietum glauc. – (s’bor-)mieur-med-mo –<br />

rare-v.rare, threatened; Saar, Mos, Ts-Lahn, He<br />

Calicium adspersum Pers. (C. lenticulare auct.)<br />

In hilly and submontane, mostly rather warm in<br />

the summer, low precipitation to moderately high<br />

precipitation sites on moderately old trunks and<br />

old deciduous trees with deeply cracked hard<br />

bark, strongly preferring oak (above all Q.<br />

robur), common in cut-over oak-hornbeam<br />

forests and at forest margins on scarcely rained<br />

on trunk surfaces or in bark cracks on wind<br />

protected, moderately lighted habitats,<br />

r.acidoph., r.-v.hygroph., anitroph., in regression<br />

because <strong>of</strong> eutrophication (green algae<br />

occurrence) as well as removal <strong>of</strong> forests, char.<br />

Chrysotrichetum cand. – mieur(-med-mo) –<br />

r.rare-rare (3); above all Fr, Mn, Sp, rare O, Ne<br />

(northern region), Hü, Pf, Saar, nöRh+?, RhSch,<br />

He, ThW<br />

Calicium corynellum (Ach.) Ach. (C. paroicum<br />

Ach., C. chlorinum auct.)<br />

123


In submontane and montane, usually rather high<br />

precipitation, oceanic sites on rain protected<br />

over-hanging surfaces on (<strong>of</strong>ten hard) silicate<br />

rock on (r.-)v.humid, m.(-r) lighted habitats,<br />

usually in m.cool, foggy valleys, parasitic on<br />

crustose lichens, above all Haematomma ochr.,<br />

m.-r.acidoph., anombroph., m.thermoph.,<br />

anitroph., char. Lecanoretum orosth. – s’bormed-mo,<br />

oc – v.rare (R); süSch, O (Heidelb.),<br />

PfW, Ts, ? Vgb, Sp<br />

Calicium glaucellum Ach.<br />

Up into the high montane zone on rain protected<br />

trunk surfaces <strong>of</strong> older deciduous and conifer<br />

trees, on r.-v.acid bark (usually in bark cracks <strong>of</strong><br />

oak and conifer tree bark), also on ± hard, tough<br />

decayed to rather decayed wood <strong>of</strong> debarked tree<br />

trunks on, in lower sites usually on old oak in<br />

humid valleys and forests (oak-hornbeam and<br />

oak-beech forests), on higher sites also on windy<br />

habitats, r.-v.acidoph., r.skioph. -r.photoph.,<br />

anombroph. -r.anombroph., anitroph., char.<br />

Calicion vir., in lower sites usually with C.<br />

salicinum, on higher sites <strong>of</strong>ten with C.<br />

trabinellum, above all in the Calicietum glauc.,<br />

Xylographetum vit. – bor-med-mo – r.rare (3);<br />

above all in the mountains, in the hilly zone<br />

v.rare to lacking and regressing because <strong>of</strong><br />

eutrophication <strong>of</strong> the habitats<br />

Calicium lenticulare Ach. (C. subquercinum<br />

Asah., C. amylocaule Lettau, C. schaereri auct.)<br />

In the montane and high montane, high<br />

precipitation sites on rather decayed, rotting<br />

wood <strong>of</strong> debarked stumps and trunks (usually<br />

basal) above all <strong>of</strong> conifers, rare on conifer bark,<br />

on usually rather shady, very humid, rain<br />

sheltered small habitats, r.-v.acidoph.,<br />

m.substarthygroph., anitroph., e.g. with C.<br />

trabinellum – bor-mieur(mo) – v.rare (1); süSch,<br />

ThW, O+, Ju, SJu<br />

Calicium quercinum Pers.<br />

Rather like C. adspersum (↑), Chaenotheca<br />

phaeoc. (↑) – (s’bor-)mieur(-med-mo) – v.rare<br />

(0); nöRh, Ts, Ju<br />

Calicium salicinum Pers. (C. sphaerocephalum<br />

auct.)<br />

Up into the montane, rarely high montane zone,<br />

like C. glaucellum (↑), in higher sites above all<br />

on hard, tough decayed wood <strong>of</strong> deciduous and<br />

conifer trees, char. Calicion hyp. – bor-med-mo –<br />

r.rare (-m.frequent) (3); most frequent species <strong>of</strong><br />

the genus, throughout the entire region, above all<br />

Sch. Vog, PfW, RhSch, Sp, Ne (northeast), v.rare<br />

in dry-warm hilly sites<br />

Calicium trabinellum (Ach.) Ach.<br />

In the high montane, rarely montane, high<br />

precipitation sites on tough decayed (rarely<br />

rather rotted) wood, on debarked conifer trunks<br />

and stumps as well as on fence posts, boards or<br />

sheds, rarely on the bark <strong>of</strong> conifers, in fir and<br />

fir-spruce forests as well as on free-standing,<br />

rather windy trunks, on moderately rainy to rain<br />

protected, cool to cold habitats, r.-v.acidoph.,<br />

r.phtotindiff., r.hygroph., anitroph., above all in<br />

the Calicietum glauc., Xylographetum vit., in the<br />

montane forms <strong>of</strong> the Chaenothecetum ferr. –<br />

bor-mieur-h’mo – rare (3); süSch, nöSch, Al,<br />

SFW, Ju, O, PfW, ThW<br />

Calicium viride Pers. (C. hyperellum (Ach.)<br />

Ach.)<br />

In the high montane, rarely montane, high<br />

precipitation sites (only occasionally lower), on<br />

trunks <strong>of</strong> conifer, rarely deciduous trees with acid<br />

bark (thick barked oaks), preferably on spruce<br />

and fir, also on wood, on rain protected flanks,<br />

on cool to cold, v.humid, foggy habitats usually<br />

in the interior <strong>of</strong> fir, fir-spruce and spruce-beech<br />

forests and on the forest margins, r-v.acidoph.,<br />

anombroph., r.photoindiff., anitroph., char.<br />

Calicion vir. – bor-mieur-mo-med-mo, subco –<br />

rare; Sch, Vog, BayW, Al, additionally (v.)rare<br />

(Ju, Ne, Bo, Rh-Mn-T, Bit, RhSch, ThW, Erz)<br />

LIT.: TIBELL 1975, 1977, 1984*, TIBELL IN POELT & VÉZDA<br />

1981, VAINIO 1927<br />

Caloplaca Th.Fr.<br />

Introduction<br />

The species rich genus worldwide numbering<br />

about 500 species includes crustose lichens with<br />

simple structure (sometimes endolithic) to highly<br />

differentiated, marginally lobed, whitish, gray,<br />

yellow to orange-red or almost black thallus and<br />

usually yellow to red, rarely blackish apothecia<br />

with thalloid or proper margins. Very<br />

characteristic is the structure <strong>of</strong> the two- to very<br />

rarely four-celled, ellipsoidal to elongate spores.<br />

They commonly exhibit a thick dividing wall<br />

bored through by a fine canal. The anthra-<br />

124


quinone containing yellow to red colored part <strong>of</strong><br />

the Caloplaca species react blue-red with KOH.<br />

The genus in certain groups still<br />

taxonomically unclear is represented in central<br />

Europe by perhaps 50, in Germany with ca. 75<br />

species, <strong>of</strong> which however not a few are<br />

insufficiently known. The individual species<br />

reside on truly variable substrate, which mostly<br />

are however dependent on basic, subneutral or<br />

weakly acid conditions. Many are found on<br />

distinctly nutrient rich habitats, such as the<br />

calciphytic rock lichens C. citrina, C. decipiens,<br />

C. coronata, and C. ruderum. In addition C.<br />

alociza, C. arnoldii, c. aurantica, C. chalybaea,<br />

C. cirrochroa, c. dolomitica, C. flavescens, C.<br />

granulosa, C. holocarpa, C. lactea, C. ochracea,<br />

C. polycarpa, C. saxicola, C. variabilis and<br />

identified from the Allgäu C. nubigena and C.<br />

percrocata reside on calcareous rock, commonly<br />

in well lighted habitats. C. proteus is found<br />

predominantly on dolomite. The species C.<br />

teicholyta and C. flavovirescens are typically<br />

limited to calcareous rock. Such substrates are<br />

scarce in the region, however tomb stones, wall<br />

crowns and similar substrates have been used.<br />

On them, new habitats have been found by these<br />

and ecologically related species. C. teicholyta<br />

and C. crenulatella occur almost only on this<br />

kind <strong>of</strong> anthropogenic habitats.<br />

A greater part <strong>of</strong> the epilithic Caloplaca<br />

species tolerate dryness and live on relatively<br />

rain protected, <strong>of</strong>ten warm vertical surfaces and<br />

overhangs. Many species bargain for an<br />

“alternative habitat” a nutrient rich, eutrophic,<br />

rainy habitat (bird roosts, wall crowns etc.), as in<br />

the case <strong>of</strong> C. decipiens, C. saxicola and ( less<br />

pronounced) C. flavescens, in the case <strong>of</strong> others<br />

almost never abandoning the typical niche, such<br />

as C. cirrochroa, C. obliterans, C. proteus, C.<br />

chrysodeta and C. xantholyta.<br />

Silicate rock “favoring” C. arenaria, C.<br />

atr<strong>of</strong>lava, C. crenularia, the C. grimmiae living<br />

as a parasite on Candelariella vitellina as well as<br />

C. irrubescens, C. obliterans, C. scotoplaca, and<br />

C. subpallida: frequently occurring on relatively<br />

SiO2-poor, so called intermediary (“neutral”) or<br />

slightly calcareous or at best “mineral-rich”<br />

silicate rock. C. atr<strong>of</strong>lava lives also<br />

amphibiously on silicate boulders in cool brooks.<br />

C. cerina resides on base-rich barks, where<br />

closely related C. haematites, C. cerinella, C.<br />

cerinelloides, C. holocarpa, C. obscurella, and<br />

the threatened with extinction C. ferruginea, c.<br />

lobulata, C. hungarica and C. herbidella were<br />

earlier found in Heidelberg. C. lucifuga almost<br />

always occurs in rain sheltered bark crevices <strong>of</strong><br />

old oaks.<br />

C. tiroliensis (Black Forest), C. sinapisperma<br />

(E.g, Schwäbisch-Fränkischer Jura) and C.<br />

ammiospila (Sudeten) occur residing on moss<br />

and plant detritus in boulder fields sheltered cliff<br />

fissures distributed in the arctic-alpine, very<br />

isolated in the central European mediterranean<br />

region. Growing over mosses and plant detritus<br />

in the dry turfs and on calcareous rocks, C.<br />

cerina var. chloroleuca, is significantly more<br />

widely distributed, <strong>of</strong>ten in the montane zone and<br />

penetrating more deeply. The arctic-alpine moss<br />

dwelling C. jungermanniae, C. epiphyta and C.<br />

tetraspora, as well as C. aurea occurring on soil<br />

in rock fissures in the alpine regions <strong>of</strong> central<br />

and south Europe, are known in Germany only<br />

from the alpine (e.g. Allgäu).<br />

Many Caloplaca species are indigenous in<br />

south Europe and reach the north boundary <strong>of</strong> the<br />

area in central Europe, thus in southern central<br />

Europe C. aurantica, C. conversa, C. granulosa,<br />

C. irrubescens, C. ochracea, C. polycarpa, C.<br />

xantholyta and C. haematites in southern<br />

Scandinavia (in part only with isolated outposts)<br />

C. biatorina, C. chalybaea, C. cirrochroa, C.<br />

coronata, C. decipiens, C. dolomiticola, C.<br />

erythrocarpa, C. flavescens, C. lactea, C.<br />

teicholyta, C. variabilis, C. lobulata, C. lucifuga,<br />

C. obscurella and C. chrysophthalma. Perhaps<br />

thrusting further toward the north C. subpallida<br />

and C. cerinella. C obliterans occurs in north<br />

and central Europe. C. proteus and C. arnoldii<br />

have their high point in the calcareous mountains<br />

<strong>of</strong> southern central Europe and the mediterranean<br />

region. C. ferruginea and C. herbidella are<br />

predominantly westward distributed and limited<br />

in continental Europe to oceanic influenced<br />

mountain sites. C. hungarica is known from<br />

south Sweden, in the Alps and their environs. C.<br />

grimmiae is widely distributed in the drier<br />

regions. The area <strong>of</strong> C. cerina, c. citrina, C.<br />

flavovirescens, C. chrysodeta, C. crenularia, c.<br />

holocarpa and C. saxicola includes the greater<br />

part <strong>of</strong> Europe.<br />

Genus Characteristics and Determination<br />

Thallus very variable, crustose, mostly clearly<br />

developed, but also in the substrate, also rosette<br />

lobed (placoid), rarely squamulose (in the case <strong>of</strong><br />

exotic species even almost shrubby), yellow to<br />

red-orange, rarely whitish to dark gray or black,<br />

125


sometimes with soralia or isidia. Upper side in<br />

the case <strong>of</strong> the species with strongly developed<br />

thallus ± paraplectenchymatous cortex.<br />

Photobiont Trebouxia like. Ap. yellow to<br />

orange-red, orange-brown or rarely black, either<br />

with thalloid margin or with proper margin,<br />

rarely with proper- and thalloid-margin. Exc.<br />

proprium, when thallinum developed next to a<br />

definite exc. it is usually thin and developed<br />

toward the top, <strong>of</strong> parallel hyphae, but also very<br />

strongly developed , colorless, colored exterior.<br />

Hyp. colorless. Epihym. generally thick covered<br />

with yellow-brown to orange-brown crystals, K+<br />

violet-red. Paraphyses simple to branching,<br />

septate, usually thickened above. Asci clavate,<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Teloschistes type. Sp. ellipsoidal, with 2,<br />

rarely 4 bored-through septa bound cells (in one<br />

nonindigenous species 1-celled). Pycnosp.<br />

ellipsoidal. Ch: Species with yellow to orange-<br />

red thalli/ap. with anthraquinones (above all<br />

Parietin = Physcione) and K+ violet-red.<br />

The greater part <strong>of</strong> the Caloplaca species are by<br />

reason <strong>of</strong> their want <strong>of</strong> diagnostically easily<br />

comprehensible characters still insufficiently<br />

known. This affects, for the most part, the<br />

species with pure crustose thallus on rock. Many<br />

species occurring in the region are at this time<br />

not definable and are not presented here.<br />

Overview <strong>of</strong> the Key<br />

Key Pt 1: On soil and rock mosses, plant<br />

detritus, soil<br />

Key Pt 2: On bark and wood<br />

Key Pt 3: On rock<br />

Pt 1: On soil and rock mosses, plant<br />

detritus, soil<br />

1 Thallus crustose (to finely squamulose), citron- to<br />

gold-yellow, soon erupting into similar colored<br />

soralia, later uniformly granular-sorediate to<br />

sorediate-isidiate. Ap. very rare, gold-yellow to<br />

orange, narrowly sessile. Above all in rock<br />

fissures <strong>of</strong> calcareous rock. Alpine – Al<br />

C. epiphyta<br />

Lynge (C. bryochrysion Poelt)<br />

1* Thallus not sorediate 2<br />

2 Sp. with very thin (1-2 µm) septum, narrowly<br />

ellipsoidal to fusiform. Thallus ± yellow, K+ red<br />

. 3<br />

2* Sp. with thicker septum. Thallus K- 4<br />

3 Thallus lobed to areolate, like the ap. orangeyellow.<br />

Sp. 12-20 x 4-6 µm, not shrunken at the<br />

septum. In calcareous rock fissures, alpine – Al<br />

.C. aurea (Schaerer) Zahlbr.<br />

3* <strong>Lichens</strong> with other characteristics see Fulgensia<br />

4 Ap. margin white-gray to blackish, definitely<br />

other color than the disk, K-. Thallus whitish,<br />

gray, rarely gray- to blue-black (when thallus<br />

pale brown, ap. disks cinnabar red to brown-red,<br />

see C. congrediens) . 5<br />

4* Ap. margin not whit-gray to blackish, disk color<br />

relatively little different, K+ red . 7<br />

5 Ap. rust red, the young with thick, <strong>of</strong>ten partially<br />

thallus colored margin see C. ammiospila<br />

5* Ap. light yellow, orange, orange-red, red-brown,<br />

even dirty olive, remaining flat with raised<br />

margin, -1.5 mm. sp. 10-16 x 6-8.5 µm (C.<br />

cerina) . 6<br />

6 Disk ± pruinose (<strong>of</strong>ten weak), under the<br />

pruinosity light yellow, greenish yellow, dirty<br />

olive to olive-blackish, rarely orange-yellow.<br />

Thallus whitish to gray, rarely gray- or blue-black<br />

C. cerina var. chloroleuca<br />

6* Disk not pruinose or orange pruinose, orange to<br />

red(brown). Thallus gray, gray- to blue-black<br />

C. cerina var. muscorum<br />

7 Ap. rust red, rust-brown, brown-orange, older<br />

ones also blackish-red to dirty olive black . 8<br />

7* Ap. light yellow, yellow- to red-orange, with age<br />

also olive-black, flat, with thin margin . 9<br />

8 Ap. from the first convex and marginless, -0.8<br />

mm. sp. 12-22 x 6-12 µm. Thallus granular to<br />

unevenly membranous, gray-white to dark gray .<br />

C. sinapisperma<br />

8* Ap. for a long time flat to slightly convex,<br />

margined, finally with age <strong>of</strong>ten marginless,<br />

usually crowded, -1.5 mm. Margin <strong>of</strong>ten lighter<br />

than the disk, <strong>of</strong>ten partially thallus colored,<br />

finally disappearing. Sp. 13-17.5 x 6.5-8 µm.<br />

Thallus white-gray, thin, uneven to granular<br />

C. ammiospila<br />

9 Ap. yellow-orange, -0.7 mm. Sp. 10.5-13 x 3.5-8<br />

µm. Thallus whitish, on dying saxifrage cushions<br />

in the alpine zone – alp – Al<br />

C. saxifragarum Poelt<br />

9* Ap. light yellow, yellow-orange to olive black, -<br />

0.7(1) mm. Sp. 11-16 x 6-9 µm. Thallus gray,<br />

thin . C. tiroliensis<br />

Pt 2: On Bark and Wood<br />

1 Thallus with soralia or entirely erupting sorediate<br />

or thickly covered with isidia 2<br />

1* Thallus without soredia or isidia 9<br />

2 Thallus ± granular or areolate and then ± thickly<br />

covered with short warty to cylindric, simple to<br />

branched (coralloid) isidia (isidia usually 40-<br />

120(150) µm thick), gray-white to greenish-gray,<br />

126


K-, also partially yellowish-gray to ochre and K+<br />

red. Thallus customarily reminiscent <strong>of</strong> bleached<br />

Bacidia rubella. Ap. disk rust red, flat, with<br />

definite, ± same colored, <strong>of</strong>ten undulating<br />

distorted margin, -0.8(1.4) mm, <strong>of</strong>ten sparse. Sp.<br />

10-15 x 6-8.5 µm . Caloplaca herbidella<br />

(C. furfuracea H.Magn. is similar, on wood,<br />

thallus dark gray, dark gray-green, scruffygranular<br />

to finely isidiate, Alps)<br />

2* thallus sorediate . 3<br />

3 Thallus and soralia gray-white, gray, greenishgray,<br />

greenish to blackish-gray, K- . 4<br />

3* Thallus or soralia yellow, ochre-yellow, orange,<br />

at least the soralia K+ red . 6<br />

4 Thallus areolate, areole margins erupting<br />

sorediate, without rounded soralia, greenish-<br />

gray, gray, blue-gray, see C. chlorina (13).<br />

Unclearly separated from C. virescens (Sm.)<br />

Coppins: Thallus areoles unevenly granular,<br />

usually the surface soon sorediate. Ap. very<br />

scattered and usually only a few occurring,<br />

-0.8(1) mm, light orange, with granular, later ±<br />

disappearing thalloid margin. Sp. 11-13 x 4-5<br />

µm, septum 1-3 µm, -1/4 <strong>of</strong> the spores reaching<br />

the length. On the ± eutrophic base <strong>of</strong> deciduous<br />

trees, above all ash and hornbeam, e.g. Sch, Ju<br />

4* Thallus with ± rounded, sharply bordered,<br />

concave (“crater form”) gray-green or whitish<br />

soralia, gray-white to gray. Ap. rather rare, when<br />

occurring, then usually sparsely developed 5<br />

5 Thallus whitish, thin, varnish-like. Soralia<br />

scattered, pale yellow-green to greenish-white<br />

(not blue-gray), breaking up into smaller thallus<br />

pustules, -0.3 mm. Ap. -0.5 mm, soon flat to<br />

convex, orange or orange- red, like C.<br />

holocarpa, K+ red, proper margin soon the same<br />

height as the disk, later disappearing, (Thalloid<br />

margin only visible in the young first appearing<br />

ap.). sp. 8-12 x 4-6 µm. Hym. 55-60 µm. On<br />

deciduous tree bark, ecologically similar to C.<br />

cerina . C. ulcerosa Coppins & P. James<br />

5* Thallus light to dark gray, green when moist.<br />

Soralia pale to bluish-gray, rounded, <strong>of</strong>ten crater<br />

form or with protruding, irregular, lighter margin,<br />

consisting <strong>of</strong> tiny torn pustules, -0.3 mm, in the<br />

older thalli <strong>of</strong>ten eroded marginless coalescing.<br />

Ap. reddish- brown, brown, blackish-brown, at<br />

first with thalloid margin, soon marginless, -0.8<br />

mm, K-. Sp. 10-13 x 5-7 µm . C. obscurella<br />

6 Thallus becoming sorediate, soredia ca. 30-50<br />

µm thick. ap. yellow-orange, with thin thalloid<br />

margin . C. citrina<br />

6* Thallus with bordered soralia 7<br />

7 Thallus indefinitely under the bark, K-, soralia<br />

ochre, orange-brown to gold-yellow, K+ violetred,<br />

generally not coalescing, erupting from the<br />

tree bark flat to convex. Soredia 17-25 µm.<br />

Usually on old oaks. Sterile. Parietin, Fallacinal<br />

. C. lucifuga<br />

7* Thallus ± clearly developed, light yellow, yellowgray,<br />

yellow-green, orange. Ap. <strong>of</strong>ten lacking . 8<br />

8 Thallus thin, pale yellow to gray, ± under the<br />

bark, K- (to weakly reddish), flat warty to flecked<br />

coherent, with flatter upper surface, with well<br />

separated (later even coalescing), rounded to<br />

elongate at the margin <strong>of</strong> the areoles, erupting,<br />

gold- to green-yellow, K+ violet-red soralia<br />

(soredia ca. 25-50 µm). Ap. very rare, goldyellow<br />

to dark orange. Sp. 10-10 x 7-10 µm.<br />

Parietin, Emodin, Fragilin.<br />

C. chrysophthalma*<br />

8* Thallus yellow to orange, <strong>of</strong> small areoles or<br />

squamules, which erupt into marginal or ±<br />

irregularly sorediate, or entirely granular, K+<br />

violet-red. sp. 10-16 x 5-7 µm. Parietin, Emodin<br />

. C. citrina<br />

9 Ap. with clearly developed, long remaining<br />

whitish, gray to almost black thalloid margin . 10<br />

9* Ap. margin yellow, orange, orange-red, K+ red 14<br />

10 Ap. -0.5 mm, yellowish, then brown to blackish,<br />

closely crowded and heaped, with later<br />

disappearing whitish thalloid margin. Thallus<br />

yellowish to gray, K+ yellow. Sp. 9-12(14) x<br />

4.5-6(7) µm. Very rare . C. assigena<br />

10* Ap. commonly larger, with long lasting or<br />

permanent elevated, light gray to blackish<br />

thalloid margin. Thallus light to dark gray, even<br />

almost blackish or blue tinted, K-. Disk usually<br />

flat, somewhat concave when young. sp. 10-15 x<br />

5-8 µm, with thick dividing wall (1/4 to ½ <strong>of</strong> the<br />

spore length) . 11<br />

11 Disk ± pruinose, light yellow, <strong>of</strong>ten olive tinged,<br />

rarely orange-yellow. On mosses, very rarely<br />

crossing over to decaying bark and wood.<br />

Thallus usually white-gray to gray C. cerina<br />

var. Chloroleuca<br />

11* Dish not pruinose, not olive tinged . 12<br />

12 Disk brown-red, concave to flat. Thallus dark<br />

gray to blue-gray, ± warty areolate to almost<br />

granular. Ap. -1 mm, crowded. Sp. 11-14 x 5-8<br />

µm. Very rare mediterranean species .<br />

C. haematites<br />

12* Disk yellow, orange, red-orange, red-brown.<br />

Thallus light to dark gray, gray-black, green- gray<br />

13<br />

13 Thallus thin, smooth to warty, light to dark gray<br />

or gray-black, even blue tinged, rarely indefinite.<br />

Disk yellow, orange, orange-red. Ap. -1.5(2) mm<br />

. C. cerina var. cerina<br />

13* Thallus relatively thick, cracked areolate to<br />

lumpy, <strong>of</strong>ten raised somewhat at the areole<br />

margin and there warty to erupting sorediate, lead<br />

gray, greenish-gray, bluish-gray, black- gray,<br />

usually greenish when moist. Disk (yellow)<br />

orange, brown-orange, ochre. Ap. usually -1mm,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten rather sparse C. chlorina<br />

(Similar to C. isidiigera Vèzda: Thallus areoles<br />

with uneven granular upper surface because <strong>of</strong><br />

127


numerous close standing very small isidia,<br />

thereby appearing rough, bluish gray)<br />

14 Thallus yellow, green-yellow, (yellow) whitish,<br />

K+ violet red, coherent, smooth to warty, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

extensive, <strong>of</strong>ten with gray prothallus. Ap. usually<br />

1-2 mm, orange, with orange margin and<br />

occasionally (young) in addition a recognizable<br />

thin, pale yellowish thalloid margin. Hym. below<br />

and the hyp. conspicuous turbid because <strong>of</strong><br />

numerous oil droplets. Sp. 15-18 x 6-10 µm,<br />

septa 1/3 to ½ the length <strong>of</strong> the spores. Very rare<br />

C. flavorubescens<br />

(When thallus small, -1.5 cm, <strong>of</strong> 0.5-2 mm lobes,<br />

very thickly covered with ap. ap. -0.5 mm,<br />

lichens uniformly colored yellow to yelloworange:<br />

C. lobulata)<br />

14* Thallus not yellow to green-yellow, K- (Beware<br />

<strong>of</strong> false judgment: ap. slowly reacting K+ red).<br />

If ap. over 1mm, then hym. under/hyp. not<br />

conspicuously turbid because <strong>of</strong> oil droplets 15<br />

15 Ap. margin yellow 16<br />

15* Ap. margin orange, brown-orange, orange-<br />

brown, rust red . 18<br />

16 Sp. septum very thin, -1(1.5) µm, sp. 8-12(14) x<br />

3-6.5 µm. Ap. 0.6(0.8)mm, sunken to depressed<br />

sessile, flat to slightly convex, light orange,<br />

young ± sunken and sometimes whitish at the<br />

outside <strong>of</strong> the margin, later ± sessile, numerous,<br />

crowded. Thallus whitish to gray, thin to<br />

indefinite, in the herbarium because <strong>of</strong> very fine<br />

crystals growing pruinose. On subneutral bark<br />

on older trunks. Very rare . C. luteoalba<br />

16* Sp. septum clearly thicker, ¼ to ½ <strong>of</strong> the sp.<br />

length. Ap. -0.3(0.5) mm, yellow to orangeyellow,<br />

flat, usually very numerous, and <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

closely crowded, with usually somewhat lighter,<br />

only at first little raised, later the same height as<br />

the margin. Thallus small, indefinite, whitish to<br />

light gray . 17<br />

17 Sp. to (8)12-16 in the ascus, 9-13 x 5-7 µm.<br />

Septum 3-5 µm. Exc. cortex rarely clearly set<br />

<strong>of</strong>f, thin -12 µm C. cerinella<br />

17*Sp. to 8 per ascus, 9-13 x 5-7 µm. Septum 3-4<br />

µm, always completely closed. Exc. cortex<br />

clearly set <strong>of</strong>f, 15-25 µ thick. Like C. cerinella<br />

C. cerinelloides<br />

18 Ap. 0.8-1.5 mm, rust red to red-brown, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

thick standing, long time flat, rounded to usually<br />

wavy in outline, clearly and <strong>of</strong>ten irregularly<br />

margined. Sp. 12-17(20) x 6-9(11) µm, septum<br />

usually 5-6 µm. Paraph. ends little thickened, -<br />

3.5 µm. Thallus light gray, smooth to warty, thin<br />

to indefinite C. ferruginea<br />

18* Ap. smaller, rounded . 19<br />

19 Ap. rust red, red-brown, -0.6 mm, usually<br />

scattered. Sp. 11-14 x 6-7 µm, septum -4.5 µm.<br />

Paraph. ends clavate swollen, -3.5 µm. Exc.<br />

weakly I+ blue. Thallus small, usually indefinite,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten on twigs. Rare C. hungarica<br />

19* Ap. orange, orange-brown, -0.5(0.7) mm, with<br />

orange colored, <strong>of</strong>ten somewhat shiny margin<br />

(exterior sometimes with apparent gray thalloid<br />

margin), flat to convex and finally marginless,<br />

numerous, close standing. Sp. elongate. Paraph.<br />

ends thickened, 4-5 µm. Hym. 60-75µm.<br />

Thallus very thin or indefinite, ± gray, rarely<br />

blackish. Frequent C. holocarpa<br />

Pt 3: On Rock<br />

1 Ap. black, sometimes pruinose, then whitish to<br />

light bluish. Thallus white, gray, blackish.<br />

Thallus and ap. K- or slightly violet tinged.<br />

Epihym. K+ violet or K- 2<br />

1* Ap. yellow, orange, rust red, brown (or lacking),<br />

K+ intensively (violet) red . 5<br />

2 Thallus ± in the rock (endolithic), indefinite. Ap.<br />

flat to moderately convex, without thalloid<br />

margin, with or without thin proper margin,<br />

sunken in the rock or more rarely ± sitting up,<br />

pruinose or nonpruinose. Epihym. K+ violet.<br />

Sp. 11-21 x 6-11 µm, septum thin, -3 µm<br />

. C. alociza<br />

2* Thallus not endolithic, usually clearly developed.<br />

Ap. not sunken into the rock 3<br />

3 Hym. with a thin layer <strong>of</strong> gold-yellow to orangebrown<br />

granules (crystals) above, K+ red. Ap.<br />

blackish-brown to black, sometimes ochre<br />

colored “pruinose”, mostly brown when moist, ±<br />

flat, usually with black proper margin, sitting up<br />

to sunken, -0.4 mm. Sp. 8.5-15.5 x 5-8 µm.<br />

Thallus coherent to areolate, gray, brownish,<br />

black- brown C. conversa<br />

3* Hym. without granular layer, epihym. commonly<br />

K+ reddish, then violet. Ap. whitish to blue-gray<br />

pruinose on nonpruinose . 4<br />

4 Ap. sunken into the thallus to half sunken, with<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten rather indefinite thalloid margin, -0.6(0.9)<br />

mm. Thallus white-gray to gray, sometimes blue<br />

tinted, rather thick, even, cracked areolate (cracks<br />

between the areoles narrow, upper surface<br />

smooth), clearly bordered, mostly rounded, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

with dark prothallus border, reminiscent <strong>of</strong><br />

Aspicilia. Sp. 9-15 x 5-8 µm .<br />

C. chalybaea<br />

4* Ap. usually ± sessile, black (-black-brown), flat<br />

to convex, with definite light thalloid margin, -<br />

1(1.2) mm. Thallus light gray to blackish or ±<br />

brownish, egg-shaped crustose to areolate, upper<br />

surface not smooth. Sp. (12)14-18(20) x 6-10<br />

µm C. variabilis<br />

5 Living on other lichens 6<br />

5* Not living on other lichens 11<br />

6 On silicate lichens. Without its own definite<br />

thallus . 7<br />

6* On calcareous lichens. (C. dolomiticola group) 9<br />

7 On yellow crustose lichens (Candelariella<br />

vitellina/coralliza) on sunny habitats. Ap. disk<br />

128


cinnabar- to dark red or brownish-red, usually<br />

flat, ap. margin lecanorine, light to blackishbrown,<br />

ap. -1(1.3) mm, single or in groups. Sp.<br />

10-12(13) x 6-6.5 µm . C. grimmiae<br />

(From the same host C. vitellinaria Szat: ap.<br />

orange, margin <strong>of</strong> same color or somewhat<br />

lighter; not recorded from the region)<br />

7* On other crustose lichens. Ap. -0.5 mm, rust-red<br />

to rust brown, margin ± same color, possibly<br />

somewhat lighter or darker than the disk. In<br />

alpine sites 8<br />

8 On gray crusts with blackish soralia (Miriquidica<br />

nigroleprosa) in alpine sites. Ap. convex and<br />

marginless from the first, -0.4 mm. Sp. 9.5-12 x<br />

7-8 µm. Arct-alp – Alps, BayW, Riesengeb<br />

C. magni-filii Poelt<br />

8* On crustose and foliose lichens, above all<br />

Dimelaena oreina, Lecanora muralis,<br />

Rhizoplaca, Umbilicaria etc. Ap. -0.5 mm, with<br />

permanent margin. Sp. 9-13 x 6.5-7.5 µm. Alps<br />

C. epithallina Lynge<br />

9 On endolithic Verrucaria species. Thallus thin<br />

or lacking. Ap. -0.6 mm, orange, with border 10<br />

9* On various epilithic crustose lichens, e.g.<br />

Acarospora. Thallus orange-yellow, clearly<br />

developed, thickish, coarse warty (-granular) to<br />

small lumpy or minutely crenate-lobed. Areoles<br />

scattered or grouped, closely attached to the host<br />

thallus. Ap. -1.5(2) mm. Sp. 11-14 x 6-7 µm.<br />

Aspect <strong>of</strong> Candelariella vitellina C. inconnexa*<br />

10 Thallus indefinitely (endolithic), “on” Bagliettoa<br />

parmigera and relatives. Ap. usually covering a<br />

rounded surface <strong>of</strong> up to 0.6 cm in diameter. Sp.<br />

7-15 x 6-8 µm C. oasis<br />

10* Thallus ochre-yellow, ± circular, usually -1.5 cm,<br />

<strong>of</strong> thin, at the margin indefinitely ordered radiaterosetted,<br />

elongated areoles or indefinite lobules,<br />

on Verrucaria calciseda. Ap. orange to orangered.<br />

Sp. 9-15 x 5-8 µm . C. polycarpa<br />

11 Thallus yellow, orange, red, brown-yellow, K+<br />

violet-red . 25<br />

11* Thallus not so colored, clearly developed or<br />

lacking, K- or K+ slightly violet colored, rarely<br />

fleck-like K+ weakly violet-red (!: the K-reaction<br />

yellow to red <strong>of</strong>ten depends upon the color <strong>of</strong><br />

bordering thallus part!) . 12<br />

12 On calcareous rock and calcareous anthropogenic<br />

substrates (concrete, mortar etc.) . 13<br />

12* On silicate rock 16<br />

13 Thallus very clearly developed . 14<br />

13* Thallus indefinite or very thin 15<br />

14 Thallus rosetted-roundish, sometimes appearing<br />

lobed, with exception <strong>of</strong> the region <strong>of</strong> the margin<br />

scruffy-granular to sorediate surface, whitish to<br />

light gray. Ap. rare, rust-red to red, <strong>of</strong>ten with<br />

undulating proper margin, frequently with<br />

thalloid margin in addition, -1 mm. If fruiting,<br />

then thallus (almost) not lobed. Only on the<br />

upper surface <strong>of</strong> lime removed limestone,<br />

dolomite or anthropogenic substrates<br />

C. teicholyta<br />

14* Thallus thick, cracked (-areolate), clearly<br />

bordered, but not appearing lobed, not scruffygranular<br />

to sorediate, white. Ap. red, numerous<br />

and crowded, clearly bordered, exterior <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

with only a whitish thalloid margin remnant, -0.5<br />

mm. Sp. 16-18 x 4-6 µm C. erythrocarpa<br />

15 Sp. with thin, up to 2(2.5) µm thick septum (1/8<br />

<strong>of</strong> the sp. long), (13)15-20(22) x 6-9 µm. Ap.<br />

yellow to rust-red, scattered, with like-colored or<br />

somewhat lighter, usually very thick, finally<br />

disappearing margin, -0.6 mm. Thallus<br />

indefinite, usually as whitish flecks. Above all<br />

on limestone C. lactea<br />

15* Sp. with thicker, up to (2.5)3.5-5 µm thick<br />

septum (at least ¼ <strong>of</strong> the sp. long), (9)10-16 x 5-9<br />

µm. Ap. orange-yellow, orange, orange-brown,<br />

close standing with disappearing margin, 0.3-0.5<br />

mm. Hym. 60-75 µm. Thallus indefinite or thin,<br />

gray. Especially frequent on anthropogenic<br />

substrates C. holocarpa*<br />

16 Thallus whitish to light gray, with exception <strong>of</strong><br />

the (± decorticate) marginal part <strong>of</strong> the sorediate<br />

to granular-scruffy ± rosetted surface, usually<br />

appearing lobed at the margin. Soredia 60-160<br />

µm. Ap. rare, rust-red to red, at first concave,<br />

then flat, margined, with or without thalloid<br />

margin, -1 mm. Almost only on anthropogenic<br />

substrates . C. teicholyta<br />

16* <strong>Lichens</strong> with other characteristics, in the center<br />

as a rule not whitish sorediate to scruffy-granular<br />

. 17<br />

17 Margin <strong>of</strong> the ap. clearly colored other than the<br />

disk, not yellow, orange, or red . 18<br />

17* Margin <strong>of</strong> the ap. usually rather similar colored to<br />

the disk, yellow, orange, rust red, or olive . 21<br />

18 Thallus pale brown to bleached out, small,<br />

areolate to almost squamulose. Ap. dark<br />

cinnabar red to brownish red, with brown to<br />

blackish brown thalloid margin, long time<br />

sunken. Sp. 11.5-14.5 x 4.5-6.5 µm<br />

C. congrediens<br />

18* Thallus/ap. margin not brown. Yet insufficiently<br />

studies species group . 19<br />

19 Thallus throughout with granular upper surface,<br />

gray, dark gray, scruffy to cracked areolate. Disk<br />

rust red, with definite, <strong>of</strong>ten lighter proper<br />

margin, <strong>of</strong>ten with exterior deposited light gray to<br />

gray thalloid margin. Ap. -1.5 mm. Ecology like<br />

C. teicholyta ! C. albolutescens<br />

19* With other characteristics. Ap. with thalloid<br />

margin . 20<br />

20 Disk brown-orange, dark red, dark rust brown to<br />

blackish red. Ap. -0.8 (1) mm, with permanent,<br />

raised, ± thallus colored margin, flat, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

sparse. Thallus dark gray to gray-blackish or<br />

dark greenish-gray, cracked-areolate, rather thin,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten rounded, sometimes appearing zoned at the<br />

margin, with blackish prothallus. Areoles<br />

irregularly angular, <strong>of</strong>ten elongate toward the<br />

129


margin and ± radially aligned. Paraph. scarcely<br />

thickened above. Sp. 11-15 x 6-8 µm<br />

C. aractina<br />

(Possibly to this species: Disk dark rust-red to<br />

blackish. Ap. -0.4 mm, scattered, sitting up, flat,<br />

with blackish margin. Thallus dark gray to bluegray,<br />

areolate to cracked. Exc. dirty green. Sp.<br />

10-14 x 5-7 µm, septum ca. 4-6 µm. Paraph.<br />

scarcely thickened above<br />

. ! C. festivella (Nyl.) Kieffer)<br />

20* Disk (yellow)orange, brown-orange, ochre.<br />

Without blackish prothallus. Ap. usually -1 mm,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten rather sparse. Thallus greenish-gray, gray,<br />

bluish-gray, black-gray, usually greenish when<br />

moist, relatively thick, areolate, areoles unevenly<br />

warty, <strong>of</strong>ten somewhat raised at the margin and<br />

finally sorediate to granular-warty or blastidiate<br />

there. Paraph. up to 5 µm thick above. Sp. 10-<br />

18 x 5.5-9 µm. Septum ca. 4-5 µm thick<br />

! C. chlorina<br />

(When thallus not granular or sorediate or<br />

blastidiate, gray, gray-brown, black-brown, see<br />

C. conversa (3))<br />

21 Thallus not recognizable or very thin and<br />

indefinite . 22<br />

21* Thallus definitely developed. Paraph. ends only<br />

slightly thickened (2-3(3.5) µm) . 23<br />

22 Ap. yellow-orange, orange, orange-brown, -0.5<br />

(0.7) mm, with orange colored, <strong>of</strong>ten somewhat<br />

shiny margin (rarely (young) outer with apparent<br />

gray thalloid margin), flat to soon moderately<br />

convex and finally marginless, numerous, closestanding.<br />

Sp. 10-16 x 5-8 µm, septum 2.5-5 µm,<br />

¼ -1/2 <strong>of</strong> the spore length. Paraph. ends<br />

thickened up to 4-5 µm above. Hym. 60-75 µm.<br />

Thallus very thin, ± gray, or indefinite.<br />

Commonly on syanthropic and calcareous<br />

substrates, frequently on concrete .<br />

C. holocarpa*<br />

22* Ap. orange, dark orange, orange-red, dirty<br />

orange, orange-brown, even with olive colored<br />

tint, flat, with permanent, orange to orange-red<br />

colored margin, -0.5(0.7) mm, sessile with a<br />

narrowed base, usually rather scattered or in<br />

small groups. Sp. 11-15(15) x 3.5-5.5 µm,<br />

septum 1.5-3.5 µm thick. Paraph. ends gradually<br />

up to 2-3 µm thickened. Hyp. without oil<br />

droplets. Thallus light gray, thin to indefinite<br />

(when sp. 12-15 x 4.5-6.5 µm, septum 2.5-6 µm,<br />

ap. margin disappearing, exc. cortex slightly<br />

blue: ! C. caesiorufella (Nyl.) Zahlbr. (C.<br />

letpocheila H.Magn.)) C. arenaria<br />

23 Sp. 13-17 x 5.5-7, septum 2-3.5 µm thick, ca. 1/5<br />

<strong>of</strong> the spore length. Ap. light to dark orange,<br />

orange-brown, permanently margined, -0.5 (0.7)<br />

mm. Thallus light gray to gray, cracked-areolate<br />

to areolate, <strong>of</strong>ten extensive (probably host<br />

thallus) . C. subpallida*<br />

23* Sp. septum thicker, 1/3 - ½ <strong>of</strong> the spore length 24<br />

24 Ap. rust red, red-brown, with definite, permanent<br />

brown-red margin, -1.0 mm. Thallus dark gray to<br />

gray, coherent-uneven to cracked-areolate. Sp.<br />

12-17(21) x 6-8(10) µm, septum ca. 5-6 µm<br />

. C. crenularia<br />

24* Ap. orange, brown-orange, with lighter, shiny<br />

orange colored thick, flat, convex, projecting,<br />

permanent margin, -0.5(0.7) mm, basally<br />

constricted, <strong>of</strong>ten thick-standing. Paraph. ends<br />

little thickened. Thallus lead- gray to black,<br />

cracked to cracked areolate, with black,<br />

sometimes fibrous prothallus, fleck-like K+<br />

violet. Sp. 12-17 x 8-10 µm, septum 5-7 µm<br />

. C. atr<strong>of</strong>lava*<br />

25 Thallus lobed (placoid) at the margin . 26<br />

25* Thallus not lobed at the margin 38<br />

26 Thallus upper surface entirely mealy-granular to<br />

granular, decorticate, granules mostly ca. 0.15-<br />

0.2mm thick. Thallus well developed ± rounded<br />

and clearly bordered at the margin, indefinitely<br />

effigurate, shiny yellow, thin to thickish.<br />

Medulla whitish. Ap. lacking C. xantholyta<br />

26* Thallus with other characteristics, with definite<br />

cortex, usually rounded-rosetted and with<br />

definite, narrow, marginal lobes (placoid) 27<br />

27 With soralia or ± spherical isidia. Ap. rare 28<br />

27* Without soralia or isidia, usually with ap.; ap.<br />

above all in the center part <strong>of</strong> the thallus 32<br />

28 Thallus without soralia, in the center with<br />

numerous close standing, narrowed at the base, -<br />

0.1 mm thick, spherical isidia, usually -1.5 cm<br />

wide, yellow to yellow-orange. Marginal lobes<br />

very narrow, coalescing C. granulosa<br />

(Attention: In the case <strong>of</strong> C. decipiens sometimes<br />

soralia development is arrested, instead <strong>of</strong> which<br />

lumpy warts are produced, thallus usually over<br />

1.5 cm in size)<br />

28* Thallus with soralia 29<br />

29 Thallus disintegrating sorediate in the center and<br />

citron- to light yellow, at the margin with narrow<br />

(up to 0.5 mm wide) radiating lobules<br />

↑ (C. cirrochroa 31)<br />

29* Thallus with small bordered soralia, usually -2<br />

cm wide 30<br />

30 Thallus with lip- to capitate soralia at the ends <strong>of</strong><br />

small, very short lobules (in the interior and<br />

central region, scarcely in the outer region), not<br />

dying in the interior, light yellow to orangeyellow,<br />

± pruinose, -2(3) cm. Soralia colored<br />

like the thallus. Marginal lobes commonly<br />

closely coalescing, branching toward the end<br />

divisions, sometimes slightly pruinose .<br />

C. decipiens<br />

30* Thallus with small (flat to concave) fleck soralia<br />

at the interior end <strong>of</strong> narrow, radiate arranged<br />

lobules, ca. -1.6 (2.5, rarely more) cm, interior<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten dying and therefore ring form. Marginal<br />

lobes <strong>of</strong>ten forked, closely coalescing to separate<br />

. 31<br />

130


31 Thallus yellow to yellow-orange. Fleck soralia<br />

(citron)yellow, clearly lighter than the thallus,<br />

commonly definitely bordered and rounded to<br />

radially elongated. Marginal lobes up to 3 mm<br />

long and 0.5 mm wide, at the front <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

somewhat widened, ± pruinose . C. cirrochroa<br />

31* Thallus red-orange to red lead red, fleck soralia<br />

orange to red. Marginal lobes small, not<br />

broadened at the front, usually not pruinose<br />

C. proteus<br />

32 Sp. with outward bulging dividing walls, ± lemon<br />

shaped to almost four-angled (Sp. ). Thallus<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten large, -5(10) cm, yellow to orange. Lobes<br />

coalescing (C. aurantia s.l.) 33<br />

32* Sp. not bulging outward in the region <strong>of</strong> the<br />

dividing wall, ellipsoidal. Thallus scarcely over<br />

2.5 cm . 34<br />

33 Thallus very thick and flat pressed closely to the<br />

substrate, -5(10) cm. Lobes very flat, as though<br />

flattened, mostly 1.5-3 mm wide. Interior <strong>of</strong> the<br />

thallus <strong>of</strong>ten (zoned) lighter colored. Cortex<br />

usually without crystal layer. Sp. 10-16 x 7-12<br />

µm C. aurantia s.str.<br />

33* Thallus lobes narrower, -1 (1.5) mm, convex,<br />

clearly separated from one another, but closely<br />

coalescing, at the ends ± branching. Thallus<br />

usually -4(6) cm. Cortex usually covered with a<br />

thin layer <strong>of</strong> crystals (section). Sp. 8-15 x 5-10<br />

µm . C. flavescens<br />

34 Thallus up to the central part in long, narrow<br />

strongly convex to almost round stalks, underside<br />

corticate, with the lobes not completely attached<br />

to the substrate (thallus with loosened with a thin<br />

knife), usually orange to orange-red, -4 cm<br />

↑ Xanthoria elegans<br />

34* Thallus surface attached to the substrate, only the<br />

upper side corticate 35<br />

35 Thallus lobes very thin and narrow, very delicate,<br />

0.1-0.3 mm wide. Ap. commonly -0.3 mm.<br />

Thallus parasitic on endolithic Verrucaria<br />

(calciseda) . C. polycarpa (10)<br />

35* Thallus lobes more robust, wider. Not parasitic<br />

. 36<br />

36 Ripe spores broadly ellipsoidal, 9-16 x 5-9 µm<br />

(Sp. ) Sp. septa at most ¼ <strong>of</strong> the sp. long. Ap.<br />

very narrowly sessile. Thallus usually brownishred,<br />

red-orange, red lead red, very rarely<br />

pruinose, -1.5 cm. Medulla very loose (on<br />

silicate rock: var. baumgartneri (Zahlbr.) Poelt.<br />

Difficultly addressed, rare species . C. biatorina<br />

36* Sp. elongate to (narrowly) ellipsoidal . 37<br />

37 Very rare alpine species on overhanging<br />

calcareous boulders, intensively red lead red,<br />

nonpruinose or slightly pruinose at the lobe ends.<br />

Thallus -1 cm, with very narrow, lobules<br />

branching toward the tips, interior ± areolate and<br />

covered with ap. Sp. 9-14 x 3.5-7 µm, septa ¼ to<br />

1/3 the length <strong>of</strong> the sp. Difficult to separate<br />

from C. saxicola-forms C. arnoldii<br />

37* Frequent. Thallus yellow, orange, rarely red lead<br />

red, pruinose, rarely nonpruinose, -2.5 cm,<br />

interior warty areolate and covered with ap. Sp.<br />

ellipsoidal, 9-12(14) x 4.5-6(7) µm (Sp ), septa<br />

reaching at least 1/3 <strong>of</strong> the length <strong>of</strong> the sp. Form<br />

rich species . C. saxicola<br />

(If on the sea coast, in the water-spray region,<br />

rosetted, thallus <strong>of</strong>ten over 1 cm in size, sp. 11-<br />

16 x 5-7 µm: C. scopularis (Nyl.) Lettau)<br />

38 Thallus with bordered soralia or uniformly<br />

leprose, i.e. consisting <strong>of</strong> fine granules . 39<br />

38* Thallus not sorediate, not granular or “mealy” 46<br />

39 Thallus with bordered fleck soralia 40<br />

39* Thallus continuously with mealy, granular or<br />

finely isidiate upper surface 41<br />

40 On silicate rock on overhangs, <strong>of</strong> ± irregularly<br />

ordered, compressed, -1(1.5) mm long 0.3 mm<br />

wide, thinner at the margin, smooth, areoles,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten times appearing branched, ochre yellow,<br />

yellow, yellow- orange, brown-orange, with<br />

yellow to yellow-orange fleck soralia. Ap. Rare<br />

. C. obliterans<br />

40* Thallus usually on lime-rich rock and artificial<br />

stone, small squamulose to areolate, usually<br />

citron-yellow to (orange)yellow, with citronyellow<br />

soralia at the margin <strong>of</strong> the 0.8 mm large<br />

areoles, sometimes finally entirely sorediate. Ap.<br />

moderately frequent, disk orange, margin<br />

yellowish, entire or sorediate . C. citrina<br />

41 Upper surface <strong>of</strong> the thallus uniformly leprose,<br />

consisting <strong>of</strong> fine granules or at least with<br />

powdery upper surface, ± white, decorticate, not<br />

cracked or areolate. Ap. lacking. On rain<br />

sheltered overhangs and in niches . 42<br />

41* Thallus not uniformly leprose, but producing a<br />

cracked areolate crust, granular to finely<br />

granular-sorediate or finely isidiate, not<br />

uniformly powdery. Ap. rather rare to frequent 44<br />

42 Thallus upper surface disintegrating sorediate,<br />

under the sorediate upper surface corticate thallus<br />

part (granules). Soredia corticate, commonly<br />

yellow, citron-yellow. Thallus generally<br />

irregularly bordered, not rosetted-rounded, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

cracked ↑ C. citrina<br />

42* Without corticate thallus part . 43<br />

43 Thallus yellow, well developed rounded and<br />

clearly delimited, even appearing lobed-folded at<br />

the margin, with continuous powdery upper<br />

surface or <strong>of</strong> -0.2 mm thick granules. Medulla<br />

whitish . C. xantholyta<br />

43* Thallus ochre, gray-yellow, light ochre-yellow,<br />

consisting <strong>of</strong> -0.1 mm thick granules, powdery,<br />

not delimited, usually not rounded, not appearing<br />

lobed C. chrysodeta<br />

44 Thallus powdery- to granular-sorediate (to finely<br />

isidiate) (soredia mostly ca. 40 µm), crackedareolate<br />

or small squamulose to granular, citronyellow<br />

to yellow, in the shade even greenish. Ap.<br />

orange, with sorediate to granular thalloid<br />

margin, -1 mm. Sp. 10-15 x 5-6 µm C. citrina<br />

131


44* Thallus not typically sorediate 45<br />

45 Thallus white-yellow to yellow, usually pruinose,<br />

with very uneven upper surface <strong>of</strong> convex to<br />

almost spherical or even flattened, ± attached<br />

areoles/granules, thick to very thick. Ap. brownorange,<br />

at first concave, then flat, with yellow,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten pruinose proper margin and swollen,<br />

permanent, ca 0.2 mm thick pruinose thalloid<br />

margin, -1.5 mm. Sp. 10-15 x 6-8 µm. On walls<br />

. C. ruderum<br />

45* Thallus (orange)yellow to ochre-yellow, not<br />

pruinose, areolate, areoles -1 mm, thick, <strong>of</strong><br />

granules to elongate narrow cushions <strong>of</strong> (40)50-<br />

100 µm diameter, moderate to very thick. Ap.<br />

orange to orange-red, soon moderately convex,<br />

with depressed, usually soon regressing,<br />

commonly same-colored, nonpruinose proper<br />

margin, <strong>of</strong>ten covered on the outer side with<br />

thallus granules, -0.6(0.9) mm . C. coronata<br />

46 On silicate rock 47<br />

46* On lime-rich rock, mortar, concrete 51<br />

47 Thallus gray-rose to (yellowish)cinnabar red,<br />

small, -1.5 cm, cracked areolate, areoles<br />

conspicuously flat, smooth, usually somewhat<br />

enlarged at the thallus margin, -1.5 mm. Ap.<br />

carmine-red, at first punctiform, then flat, usually<br />

angular, indefinitely margined, -0.4 mm. Sp. 7-<br />

11 x 4-6 µm C. rubelliana<br />

47* Thallus not gray-rose to cinnabar red . 48<br />

48 Septum thin, -2(3) µm. Sp. 12-23 x 5-7.5 µm.<br />

Thallus thin, areolate to indefinite, citron-yellow,<br />

yellow, yellow-gray. Areoles flat to somewhat<br />

raised and there lighter at the margin. Ap. -0.6(1)<br />

mm, <strong>of</strong>ten crowded into groups. Disk orangeyellow<br />

to ochre, flat, with permanent, entirely<br />

yellow margin and <strong>of</strong>ten with outer layer<br />

depressed, sometimes granular thallus “collar”.<br />

Relation to C. ferrarii (Bagl.) Jatta yet unclear<br />

. ! C. crenulatella<br />

48* Septum thicker . 49<br />

49 Ap. yellow to olive-yellow, flat to convex, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

with lighter margin, -0.5 mm. Thallus light<br />

yellow, yellow, citron-yellow, thin, smoothed,<br />

coherent to fleckwise developed. Sp. 9-15 x 4.5-<br />

7.5 µm C. vitellinula*<br />

49* Ap. disk orange, orange- to rust brown . 50<br />

50 Thallus orange yellow to yellow-brown, areolate<br />

to almost lumpy, areoles ± angular, usually 0.2-<br />

0.4 mm. Ap. orange to red-orange, with<br />

depressed, finally indefinite, same-colored proper<br />

margin, -0.3(0.5) mm. Sp. 9-15 x 4.5-8 µm.<br />

Septum ¼-1/2 <strong>of</strong> the sp. length<br />

. C. irrubescens<br />

50* Thallus citron-, green- to gray-yellow, ochre, pale<br />

yellow-(whitish), weakly cracked to usually<br />

cracked-areolate, areoles flat to concave, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

grazed by snails. Ap. brown- orange to rustbrown<br />

(color clearly contrasting from the thallus,<br />

thereby the thallus ± two colored), with usually<br />

somewhat lighter, orange colored proper margin,<br />

sometimes with outer layered thallus margin,<br />

which thins out very soon and only remains<br />

recognizable only in section, -1(1.3) mm. Sp. 12-<br />

19 x 7-10(11) µm. Septum 1/3 - 1/2 <strong>of</strong> the sp.<br />

length C. flavovirescens<br />

51 Ripe sp. 4-celled, 11-19 x 5-8 µm (Sp. ).<br />

Thallus light yellow, light ochre, white-gray with<br />

yellowish flecks, smooth to finely cracked, thin.<br />

Ap. yellow- to brown-orange, with yellow/orange<br />

proper margin, at first concave, then flat, -0.7 mm<br />

C. ochracea<br />

51* Sp. 2-celled 52<br />

52 Septum very thin. <strong>Lichens</strong> usually on mortar .<br />

C. crenulatella (48)<br />

52* Septum thicker, ¼-1/2 the sp. length . 53<br />

53 Thallus green-yellow, citron yellow, gray-yellow<br />

to pale yellowish, <strong>of</strong>ten grazed upon and whitish<br />

in places, weakly cracked to cracked-areolate<br />

(areolate-squamulose), with the ap. becoming<br />

“two colored.” Ap. -1.5 mm, orange-brown, with<br />

usually lighter, orange colored proper margin and<br />

sometimes outer layer <strong>of</strong> the thalloid margin,<br />

sitting up. Sp. 12-19 x 7-10(11) µm. (Hyp. in<br />

the region commonly not/scarcely inspersed).<br />

Only on the upper surface <strong>of</strong> leached limestone<br />

C. flavovirescens<br />

53* Thallus usually deep yellow to orange, even<br />

ochre-yellow, very variable, coherent to cracked<br />

areolate or almost squamulose, sometimes even<br />

reduced, not becoming two-colored. Ap. -1mm,<br />

usually orange, margin <strong>of</strong>ten somewhat lighter<br />

than the disk, but commonly not clearly other<br />

colored, soon convex and marginless. Sp. 10-16<br />

x 6-9(10) µm. (Hyp. not or ± inspersed). (C.<br />

dolomiticola s.l.) . 54<br />

54 Living on endolithic Verrucaria species, small, -<br />

1.5 cm . 10<br />

54* Not on endolithic Verrucaria species . 55<br />

55 Parasitic on epilithic crustose lichens, e.g.<br />

Acarospora species. Thallus areolate, almost<br />

small squamulose, with ca. 0.5 mm large,<br />

scattered or in several groups or areoles. Ap. -<br />

1.5(2) mm . C. inconnexa (9)<br />

55* Commonly not parasitising other lichens.<br />

Thallus cracked areolate to mostly areolate, thick<br />

to thin and disappearing, even granular. Areoles<br />

0.2-2 mm with uneven upper surface, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

grazed upon. Ap. -1(1.5) mm, sessile to sunken.<br />

Very variable species. Ap. size and thallus<br />

condition very distinctive . ! C. dolomiticola<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Caloplaca albolutescens (Nyl.) Oliv.<br />

Like C. teicholyta (↑), but predominantly on<br />

sandstone, scarcely on mortar – mieur-med – rare<br />

(3); Ne, Rh, süSch, Hü<br />

132


Caloplaca alociza (Massal.) Migula<br />

(?C. agardhiana (Massal.) Clauz. & Roux)<br />

To above the tree line on rather to very like rich,<br />

hard rock on undunged, rather sunny, rained-on<br />

surfaces rapidly drying after the rain, rather like<br />

Verrucaria marm. (↑), Rinodina imm., above all<br />

in the Verrucarietum marm. – (bor-)mieur-med –<br />

rare; SJu, Ju, FrJu, Th, Al<br />

Caloplaca ammiospila (Wahlenb.) Oliv. (C.<br />

cinnamomea (Th.Fr.) Oliv.)<br />

On plant remains, soil mosses, old wood in the<br />

alpine zone, Char. Caloplacetum tir. – arct-alp –<br />

Al<br />

Caloplaca aractina (Fr.) Häyrè (C. viridirufa<br />

auct., C. fuscoatra auct.)<br />

On hard basic (and neutral) silicate rock, or<br />

slightly calcareous silicate rock on dry-warm<br />

sites, like Lecanora dem. (↑), yet more strongly<br />

preferring warmth – s’bor-med – Questionable in<br />

the region?<br />

Caloplaca arenaria (Pers.) Müll.Arg.<br />

(C. lamprocheila (DC.) Flagey)<br />

Up to above the tree line, predominantly on hard,<br />

mineral-rich (to basic) silicate rock, on sunny,<br />

rained-on to moderately rain protected surfaces,<br />

subneutroph.-m.acidoph., r.-v.photoph., a-<br />

/m.nitroph. – bor-med – rare; at this time not<br />

sufficiently clarified species, in the region above<br />

all syanthropic on tomb stones <strong>of</strong> schistose or<br />

basic silicate rock, e.g. Sch, Do, additionally 0,<br />

Al<br />

Caloplaca arnoldii (Wedd.) Zahlbr.<br />

In alpine and high montane sites on overhangs <strong>of</strong><br />

calcareous rock, like C. cirrochroa (↑) – mieuralp<br />

– v.rare (R); süSch (Feldberg), Alps<br />

Caloplaca assigena (Lahm ex Arnold) DT. &<br />

Sarnth. (Blastenia a. (Lahm) Arnold)<br />

Up to the tree line on usually acid bark and<br />

wood, above all on branches, fences – mieur –<br />

v.rare (0); süSch, Ju, Av<br />

Caloplaca atr<strong>of</strong>lava (Turner) Mong. var.<br />

atr<strong>of</strong>lava<br />

Probably like C. subpallida. At this time<br />

taxonomically yet insufficiently clarified<br />

var. submersa (Nyl.) H.Magn.<br />

Above all in submontane and montane sites on<br />

hard silicate rock on occasionally submerged or<br />

from time to time irrigated habitats, like<br />

Verrucaria praeterm. (↑) – (s’bor-)mieur-subatlmed<br />

– rare (R); süSch, Vog, O, Ts<br />

Caloplaca aurantia (Pers.) J.Steiner (C. aurantia<br />

var. aurantia)<br />

In hilly to submontane, low precipitation, warm<br />

sites, above all in the wine growing region, on<br />

lime-rich to more rarely moderately lime-rich<br />

rocks, above all on smaller rocks in dry turfs and<br />

on limestone walls (e.g. vineyards), on m.r.nutrient<br />

rich (dust deposits), ± rainy, full sun to<br />

semi-shaded warm habitats, scarcely on mortar,<br />

concrete, basiph., v.(-r)xeroph., r.thermoph., r.r.photoph.,<br />

m.(-r.)nitroph., -- s’mieur-med –<br />

(r.)rare; above all Ne, Mn, additionally SJu, Ju,<br />

süHü, HRh, Rh, nöHü, Eif, He, Th, but v.rare<br />

Caloplaca biatorina (Massal.) J.Steiner<br />

Up into the alpine sites, yet always on relatively<br />

dry warm habitats, on rather rain sheltered<br />

overhangs and vertical surfaces on calcareous<br />

silicate rock and lime-rich rock (above all<br />

limestone), above all on nutrient rich habitats,<br />

m.basiph., photoph., m.-r.nitroph., in the<br />

Community <strong>of</strong> the Caloplacion dec. – mieur-med,<br />

paralp/alp – v.rare (R); Mos, Bo (Hohentwiel),<br />

SJu, Al<br />

Caloplaca cerina (Ehrh. ex Hedwig) Th.Fr. var.<br />

cerina<br />

Up to the tree line on basic- and nutrient-rich<br />

bark <strong>of</strong> free or open standing deciduous trees,<br />

especially on avenue and field trees, usually on<br />

dust impregnated trunks, but also on non<br />

eutrophic, subneutral bark (e.g. aspen,<br />

hornbeam), rare on wood, like Physconia dist.<br />

(↑), Xanthoria fallax (↑), Lecania cyrtella (↑);<br />

subneutroph. (-m.acidoph.), r.photoph., (a-)m.(r.)nitroph.,<br />

in the Xanthorion par. – bor-med –<br />

r.rare (3); above all Ju, SJu, Ne, but r.rare-rare,<br />

e.g. RhSch, He<br />

var. chloroleuca (Sm.) Th.Fr. (C. stillicidiorum<br />

(Vahl) Lynge)<br />

Predominantly above the tree line, yet isolated to<br />

the hilly zone (there relict), on mosses and plant<br />

detritus above all surface established calcareous<br />

thin turfs and on calcareous rocks, above all on<br />

radiation exposed, relatively dry habitats, like<br />

Megaspora verr. (↑), rarer also on mossy old<br />

deciduous trees, neutroph.-r.basiph., r.v.photoph.,<br />

in the Megasporion verr. – arctmieur(alp)-med-alp<br />

– rare(3); SJu, Ju, FrJu, Ries,<br />

Mn, Al, v.rare süSch, süHü, Ne, Bit, Eif, He<br />

133


var. muscorum (Massal.) Jatta over mosses on<br />

tree trunks and rocks above all in the montane<br />

sites e.g. in the Antitrichion<br />

Caloplaca cerinella (Nyl.) Flagey<br />

Up into montane sites on deciduous trees with<br />

base-rich, usually not or only a little eutrophic<br />

bark, above all on hornbeam, maple, ash, also on<br />

wood, like Lecania cyrtella (↑), above all in the<br />

Lecanoretum samb., with Lecania species and C.<br />

cerina – (s’bor-)-mieur-med – (r.)rare (3); Ju,<br />

SJu, süSch, süRh, O, Do<br />

Caloplaca cerinelloides (Erichsen) Poelt<br />

Like C. cerinella (↑) – s’bor-med – (r.)rare (3);<br />

e.g. süSch, Ju<br />

Caloplaca chalybaea (Fr.) Müll.Arg.<br />

Up into the alpine zone on hard, lime-rich rock<br />

(above all limestone) on rainy, rather open and<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten rather wind exposed habitats, commonly on<br />

larger rocks, on sloping and steep surfaces,<br />

avoiding stronger sun and very dry sites, basiph.,<br />

r.xeroph., r.(-v)photoph., (a-)m.nitroph.,<br />

increasing in numerous regions – mieur-med –<br />

rare; SJu-Ju-FrJu scattered, Ries, Al, but very<br />

rare (süHü ?+, Saar, Eif)<br />

Caloplaca chlorina (Flotow) Oliv. (C. cerina v.<br />

ch. (Flotow) Müll.Arg.)<br />

Predominantly on neutral to basic, <strong>of</strong>ten hard<br />

silicate rock, on walled in acid silicate rock, even<br />

on dust impregnated bark at the base <strong>of</strong> trees,<br />

like Xanthoria fallax (↑) – bor-med – rare; e.g.<br />

süSch, Ne, O, Rh, Pf<br />

Caloplaca chrysodeta (Vainio ex Räsänen)<br />

Dombr. (Leproplaca ch. (Vainio ex Räs.)<br />

Laundon)<br />

Up into high montane sites on lime-rich rocks on<br />

rain sheltered (but occasionally slightly foggy)<br />

overhangs and high relief vertical surfaces <strong>of</strong><br />

rocks on shaded habitats, also crossing over on to<br />

mosses, even in niches on older walls, basiph.,<br />

m.photoph.-r.skioph., m.nitroph., on contiguous<br />

rocks e.g. with Lepraria flavescens – bor-med –<br />

r.rare, but widespread, upper half <strong>of</strong> the<br />

calcareous region (e.g. Ju, SJu) syanthropic<br />

Caloplaca chrysophthalma Degel.<br />

Up into montane sites on trunks <strong>of</strong> older<br />

deciduous trees, above all on ash, oak, elm, on<br />

free standing trees, e.g. with Bacidia rubella –<br />

mieur(subatl)-smed(-med-mo) rare (1); süSch, Ju,<br />

Sju<br />

Caloplaca cirrochroa (Ach.) Th.Fr.<br />

Up into the alpine zone, in the region above all in<br />

submontane and montane sites, on carbonate<br />

rock, rare on calcareous silicate rock, on rain<br />

sheltered (but <strong>of</strong>ten also very sporadically<br />

weakly irrigated), <strong>of</strong>ten relatively warm<br />

overhanging and vertical surfaces on moderately<br />

to rather well lighted, in reduced forms also on<br />

rather light poor habitats, strongly avoiding<br />

dunging, scarcely on anthropogenic substrates<br />

(walls etc.) or in settlements, basiph., mesoph.r.xeroph.,<br />

(a-)m.nitroph., in communities <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Caloplacion dec., above all in the Caloplacetum<br />

cirr. – (s’bor-)mieur-med(mo) – rare; SJu, Ju,<br />

FrJu and Al. scattered, but rare: süHü, s129Sch,<br />

Bo, Ne, nöHü-O, MRh, Eif, Th<br />

Caloplaca citrina (H<strong>of</strong>fm.) Th.Fr.<br />

Lichen <strong>of</strong> a wide ecological amplitude. Up to<br />

above the tree line, above all on limestone and<br />

calcareous artificial rock (above all concrete),<br />

rarer on lime influenced silicate rock, on bark <strong>of</strong><br />

deciduous trees and over bark mosses, on wood,<br />

predominantly on ± nutrient rich sites, relatively<br />

weakly competitive species, above all on new<br />

habitats, as on walls, grave curbs, boundary<br />

markers etc., or on strongly dunged sites (at the<br />

base <strong>of</strong> walls (dog urination sites!), near manure<br />

heaps), here <strong>of</strong>ten surviving as a single species<br />

(or with Caloplaca decipiens) (highly NH4 + -<br />

tolerant), at the base <strong>of</strong> steep surfaces and<br />

overhangs <strong>of</strong> rocks (in case <strong>of</strong> eutrophication<br />

even on lime-free silicate), largely lacking on<br />

bird-roost sites (summits): on wood and bark on<br />

correspondingly eutrophic sites (above all at the<br />

base <strong>of</strong> trees or in bark cracks); basiph.-<br />

subneutroph., in the Caloplacion dec., Char.<br />

Caloplacetum citr. – bor-med – (v.)frequent<br />

Caloplaca congrediens (Nyl.) Zahlbr.<br />

In montane and high montane sites on mineral<br />

rich (neutral to basic or slightly calcareous) or<br />

dunged silicate rocks on mostly sunny, relatively<br />

warm sites, mostly on smaller boulders, also<br />

crossing over on moss, subneutroph., r.v.photoph.,<br />

anitroph.-m.nitroph. – mieur-subatlmed<br />

– v.rare; Vog<br />

Caloplaca conversa (Krempelh.) Jatta<br />

Above all up into montane sites on carbonate<br />

rocks and calcareous silicate rock on sunny, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

sporadically irrigated, rapidly drying habitats,<br />

subneutroph.-basiph., xeroph., ombroph.,<br />

(substrate hygrophytic) – mieur-mo/alp/pralp-<br />

134


smed-mo/alp – v.rare (R); süSch (Utzenfeld),<br />

Lahn (Runkel), FrJu, Al<br />

Caloplaca coronata (Krempelh. ex Körber)<br />

J.Steiner<br />

On m.-r.(s.) dunged limestone, above all on<br />

sunny surfaces, on rock caps, e.g. with Buellia<br />

venusta, (↑) basiph., r.-v.photoph., above all in<br />

the Placocarpetum monstrosi, also in the<br />

Caloplacetum sax. – mieur-med – r.rare; SJu Ju,<br />

FrJu moderately frequent (-r.rare), Mn, Th,<br />

additionally v.rare Ne, Bo, Eif, He<br />

Caloplaca crenularia (With.) Laundon (C.<br />

festiva (Ach.) Zwackh)<br />

Yet a little known lichen in the region at this<br />

time, predominantly on anthropogenic substrates,<br />

above all on wall crowns (mortar, concrete) –<br />

mieur-med – e.g. Ne, Mn, Rh<br />

Caloplaca decipiens (Arnold) Blomb. & Forss.<br />

Up into the alpine zone on limestone on rather to<br />

very eutrophic habitats, predominantly a<br />

synathrop, above all on walls (preferring vertical<br />

surfaces) in settlements, on mortar, plaster,<br />

concrete, asbestos, very strongly tolerant <strong>of</strong><br />

nitrogenous dunging (manure heaps), on near<br />

natural habitats (on bird rousting places, on<br />

overhangs <strong>of</strong> limestone) rare, optimal on well<br />

lighted warm habitats, basiph., xeroph., (m)r.v.photoph.,<br />

toxitol., Char. Caloplacion dec. –<br />

(s’bor-)mieur-med(mo), (subko) – frequent,<br />

relatively rare in silicate regions<br />

Caloplaca dolomiticola (Hue) Zahlbr. (C.<br />

velana auct.)<br />

On carbonate rocks on well lighted habitats,<br />

rather like C. variabilis (↑), Lecidella stigm. (↑),<br />

above all Aspicilion calc., rarer Caloplacion dec.<br />

–mieur-med – moderately frequent in limestone<br />

regions, but apophytic<br />

Caloplaca erythrocarpa (Pers.) Zwackh (non<br />

auct., C. lallavei (Clem. ex Ach.) Flagey)<br />

In warm, winter-mild, (r.) low precipitation, hilly<br />

sites on calcareous rock, above all on dolomitic<br />

limestone, limestone, calcareous sandstone, e.g.<br />

on boulders in dry turf, like Aspicilia calc. (↑),<br />

but in need <strong>of</strong> warmth, Char. Aspicilietum calc. –<br />

s’mieur-subatl-med – v.rare; Saar (1)<br />

Caloplaca ferruginea (Hudson) Th.Fr.<br />

Up into the montane zone, above all in mild<br />

climate sites on mostly smooth to flat-cracked<br />

subneutral, <strong>of</strong>ten mineral-rich bark <strong>of</strong> open to<br />

free standing deciduous trees (field trees, or<br />

roadways), subneutroph., r.photoph., a-<br />

/m.nitroph., e.g. in the Parmelietum ac. – borsubatl-med<br />

– v.rare (0); süSch. SJu, Al, süRh,<br />

nöPf, nöHü, O, Ne, Ju, Fr<br />

Caloplaca flavescens (Hudson) Laundon<br />

(C. heppiana (Müll.Arg.) Zahlbr., C. aurantia var.<br />

heppiana (Müll.Arg.) Poelt<br />

Up into the montane zone on carbonate rock on<br />

nutrient rich (e.g. slightly dust encrusted), m.-v.<br />

well lighted, <strong>of</strong>ten relatively warm habitats, <strong>of</strong><br />

poorer nutrients above all on rather rain sheltered<br />

to moderately rainy vertical surfaces and<br />

overhangs (little erosion), additionally on bird<br />

rousting places, on caps and sloping surfaces <strong>of</strong><br />

smaller rocks, <strong>of</strong>ten also on anthropogenic<br />

habitats, on walls (also on mortar), grave stones<br />

etc., clearly requiring less warmth than C.<br />

aurantia, basiph., m.-r(s.)nitroph., in the<br />

Caloplacion dec., <strong>of</strong>ten dominating – mieur-med<br />

– r.rare- m.frequent; SJu, Ju, and FrJu rather<br />

.frequent, Ne, Mn, also r.-v.rare (e.g. süRhön,<br />

Bo, Do, Hü, Rh, O, Pf, Saar, RhSch, Rh-Mn-T,<br />

He, Th<br />

Caloplaca flavorubescens (Hudson) Laundon<br />

(C. aurantiaca (Leightf.) Th.Fr. auct. p.p.)<br />

In the montane, high precipitation or humid sites<br />

on subneutral, usually s<strong>of</strong>t sap-rich or water<br />

storing bark, above all on aspen, in the<br />

Xanthorion, subneutroph., m.-r.photoph., a-(m.)<br />

nitroph. – bor-mieur-subatl-med – v.rare; Lux,<br />

Th+<br />

Caloplaca flavovirescens (Wulfen) DT. &<br />

Sarnth.<br />

Up into the high montane sits on mostly<br />

moderately lime-rich to lime-poor rocks or upper<br />

surfaces <strong>of</strong> leached carbonate rocks as well as<br />

slightly lime impregnated silicate rocks, above all<br />

on sandstone (arundinaceous sandstone) and<br />

dolomite in the region going over to walls (e.g. in<br />

vineyards), even on mortar, on sunny to semishaded,<br />

rainy surfaces, subneutroph.-m.basiph.,<br />

m.-r.(v.)photoph., (a-)m.(-r.)nitroph., e.g. in the<br />

Caloplacetum teich., Aspicilion calc. – bor-med<br />

– r.rare (3); above all Ne, SFW, Bo. additionally<br />

Av, Al, süSch, Vog, HRh, O, süRhön, Saar,<br />

RhSch, Bit, Rh-Mn-T, He, Th<br />

Caloplaca granulosa (Müll.Arg) Jatta<br />

Up into montane sites on lime-rich rock,<br />

occasionally even on calcareous, mostly basic<br />

silicate rock, on moderately rainy to rain<br />

135


sheltered, then however sporadically short time<br />

irrigated, sunny to semi-shaded surfaces, above<br />

all under overhangs, always on r.-v. nutrient rich<br />

sites, basiph., m.-v.photoph., Char. Caloplacetum<br />

gran. –(mieur-)smed-med(mo) – rare; SJu, Ju,<br />

FrJu, Vog, süHü, Ne, Bo<br />

Caloplaca grimmiae (Nyl.) Oliv. (C. consociata<br />

J. Steiner)<br />

In montane to alpine sites parasitic on<br />

Candelariella vit. (↑) and C. coralliza (↑) on<br />

mineral rich (neutral to basic or slightly<br />

calcareous) or dunged silicate rock on mostly<br />

sunny, relatively warm sites, mostly on smaller<br />

boulders, subneutroph., r.-v.photoph., m.r.nitroph.,<br />

in the Parmelion consp., Lecidelletum<br />

carp. – bor-med – v.rare (0); süSch, Pf, He, Al<br />

Caloplaca haematites (Chaub. ex St.Amans)<br />

Zwackh<br />

In hilly, warm, low precipitation sites on<br />

subneutral bark, in the region on walnut, like C.<br />

cerina (↑), yet limited to warm habitats –<br />

(s’mieur-)smed-med – v.rare (0); O, (Heidelb),<br />

Th<br />

Caloplaca herbidella (Hue) H.Magn.<br />

In (sub)montane to high montane, high<br />

precipitation, oceanic sites, above all on<br />

deciduous trees, on conifers commonly on<br />

branches (like Pertusaria ophth. ↑), on<br />

climatically mile to cool, relatively foggy<br />

habitats in open, near natural forests (on very<br />

moist sites even on free standing trees), in the<br />

lower sites above all in oak-beech forests on oak<br />

(like Parmotrema chin. ↑), on higher sites above<br />

all on beech, ash, sycamore (like Normandina ↑),<br />

even on bark mosses, (subneutroph.-)m.(-r.)<br />

acidoph., hygroph., a-(m.) nitroph., e.g. in the<br />

Parmelietum rev., Lobarion – bor-subatlmed0mo,<br />

oz -- rare (2); süSch and Vog, but<br />

v.rare (nöSch, Ju (Albtrauf), Sp. Pf, Mos, Bit,<br />

Eif, Av, also SJu, Al<br />

Caloplaca holocarpa (H<strong>of</strong>fm. ex Ach.) Wade<br />

(C. pyracea (Ach.) Th.Fr.)<br />

<strong>Lichens</strong> <strong>of</strong> wide ecological amplitude (however<br />

taxonomically probably non uniform), on<br />

subneutral to basic substrate, thus on usually dust<br />

impregnated bark, dust impregnated wood,<br />

calcareous rock (in the region almost exclusively<br />

on anthropogenic substrates: walls, grave<br />

markers etc. <strong>of</strong>ten on artificial rock, like terrazzo,<br />

laundry concrete, here like Candelariella aur. ↑),<br />

on open and nutrient-rich habitats, the bark<br />

dwelling form above all on avenue and field<br />

trees, yet also on non eutrophic bark (aspen,<br />

hornbeam), basiph.-subneutroph., m.-v.photoph.,<br />

a-/r.nitroph., in the Xanthorion par., Caloplacion<br />

dec., in Xanthoria elegans stands – arct-med –<br />

frequent (epiphytically rare)<br />

Caloplaca hungarica H.Magn. (C.subathallina<br />

H.Magn., C. depauperata H.Magn.)<br />

In montane and high montane, high precipitation,<br />

(r.)oceanic sites above all on smooth bark twigs<br />

<strong>of</strong> deciduous trees, shrubs, rarely conifers, e.g.<br />

on hawthorn, willow, ash, on well lighted<br />

habitats, in the region e.g. in the region <strong>of</strong><br />

extensive willows, subneutroph.-m.acidoph.,<br />

r.ombroph., r.hygroph., anitroph., in the Lecanori<br />

on subf. – mieur-pralp – rare (1); süSch, Ju, Al<br />

Caloplaca inconnexa (Nyl.) Zahlbr.<br />

On carbonate rock, parasitising on other lichens,<br />

like Acarospora cerv. (↑) -- s’mieur-med – rare,<br />

e.g. Ju<br />

Caloplaca irrubescens (Arnold) Zahlbr.<br />

Up into montane sites on carbonaceous or neutral<br />

to basic silicate rocks on sunny to semi-shaded,<br />

warm habitats, e.g. like Lecanora demissa (↑) –<br />

s’mieur-med – v.rare; süSch, süHü, Bo<br />

Caloplaca lactea (Massal.) Zahlbr.<br />

Up into the montane sites on limestone, first<br />

colonists on small stones in dry turfs and scree<br />

fields or on new surfaces <strong>of</strong> limestone (like<br />

Rinodina bisch. ↑, on usually sunny habitats,<br />

rarely also on walls, lime calcareous dust<br />

impregnated silicate rock, rather weak<br />

competitively and disappearing in lichen covered<br />

stands, basiph., (a-)m.nitroph. – mieur-med –<br />

r.rare; above all SJu, Ju, FrJu, also e.g. süHü,<br />

süRh, Ne, Bo, Mn, O, He, Th, Al<br />

Caloplaca lobulata (Flörke) Hellbom<br />

(Xanthoria l. (Flörke) B.de Lesd.)<br />

Up into montane sites on subneutral, <strong>of</strong>ten dust<br />

impregnated bark, above all on Norway maple,<br />

Sambucus, poplar, <strong>of</strong>ten on branches, like<br />

Xanthoria polyc. (↑), subneutroph., r.-v.photoph.,<br />

(a-)m.nitroph. – mieur-med – rare (1); Ne, Ju, OnöRh<br />

Caloplaca lucifuga Thor<br />

Up into the montane, penetrating however into<br />

the submontane sites in open forests and on<br />

forest margins on trunks <strong>of</strong> old oaks in deep bark<br />

cracks, r.acidoph., (r.skioph.-)m.photoph.,<br />

136


anombroph., a-/m.nitroph., e.g. in<br />

Chrysotrichetalia cand. -com., e.g. <strong>of</strong>ten with<br />

Calicium sal. (↑) – s’bor-med – rare (3); Sch, Ju,<br />

Ne, O, Mn, Bo, do, SFW, Ts<br />

Caloplaca luteoalba (Turner) Th.Fr.<br />

On subneutral, usually dust impregnated<br />

deciduous tree bark, but strongly preferring elm,<br />

rarely also going over to limestone (above all<br />

stones), e.g. with C. cerina (↑) in the Xanthorion<br />

par., subneutroph., r.photoph. – mieur-med – rare<br />

(0), names from O<br />

Caloplaca oasis (Massal.) Szat.<br />

In montane sites on endolithic Bagliettoa species,<br />

e.g. B. parmigera (↑) – mieur-med – Ju<br />

Caloplaca obliterans (Nyl) Blomb. & Forss.<br />

In montane and high montane, high precipitation<br />

sites on mostly hard, crystalline, slightly<br />

calcareous silicate rock on rather rain sheltered,<br />

sometimes sporadically weakly irrigated (crevice<br />

water) overhanging surfaces on cool, r.(-v)<br />

humid, semi shaded to shaded sites,<br />

(sub)neutroph., r.skioph.-m.photoph., Char.<br />

Caloplacetum oblit. – bor-mieur-mo(-med-mo) –<br />

rare (3); süSch, Vog, nöPf, O, Al, BayW, ThW<br />

Caloplaca obscurella (Lahm ex Körber) Th.Fr.<br />

In hilly and montane sites on subneutral or<br />

correspondingly eutrophic, usually cracked bark,<br />

above all at the base <strong>of</strong> the trunk, up to the<br />

middle <strong>of</strong> the trunk, above all on poplar, elder,<br />

elm, ash, and older fruit trees, like C. cerina (↑),<br />

Rinodina colobina, Char. Xanthorion – (s’bor-<br />

)mieur-med – r.rare, <strong>of</strong>ten overlooked; above all<br />

widespread in lime regions, Ju, SJu, süSch, Ne,<br />

süRh, HRh, Bo, O, ThW<br />

Caloplaca ochracea (Schaerer) Flagey<br />

(Xanthocarpia o. (Schaerer) Massal. & De Not.)<br />

Up into the montane sites on mostly hard, lime-<br />

rich rocks (above all limestone) on rainy, not to<br />

m.eutrophic sloping and vertical surfaces on<br />

completely sunny to half shaded habitats, basiph.,<br />

a-/m.nitroph. – (s’)mieur-subatl-med0mo –<br />

(r.)rare; SJu, Ju, FrJu; süHü and Eif v.rare<br />

Caloplaca polycarpa (Massal.) Zahlbr.<br />

C. tenuatula (Nyl.) Zahlbr.)<br />

On limestone parasitising above all on<br />

Verrucaria calciseda (↑), like Aspicilia calc. (↑),<br />

Char. Aspicilietum calc. – s’mieur-med – rare;<br />

Ju, Mn, Ne, FrJu<br />

Caloplaca proteus Poelt<br />

In montane to alpine sites on limestone,<br />

especially dolomite, like C. cirrochroa (↑) –<br />

(bor-paralp-)mieur-pralp/alp – v.rare (R); Ju,<br />

FrJu, Alps<br />

Caloplaca rubelliana (Ach.) Lojka<br />

in hilly, warm, low precipitation sites on hard,<br />

basic, neutral or slightly calcareous silicate rock<br />

on very warm, moderately rainy steep surfaces,<br />

e.g. with Dimelaena oreina, e.g. in the<br />

Lecanoretum dem., subneutroph., thermoph.,<br />

xeroph., r.-v.photoph. – s’mieur-med – v.rare, ;<br />

MRn, Rh-Mn-T<br />

Caloplaca ruderum (Malbr.) Laundon<br />

In hilly and submontane sites on vertical surfaces<br />

old walls, especially at the base under the<br />

influence <strong>of</strong> ammonium compounds (urine<br />

soaked surfaces), above all on mortal, basiph.,<br />

m.-r.photoph., nitroph. – mieur --r.rare?; e.g.<br />

Ne, Sch, Ju, SFW<br />

Caloplaca saxicola (H<strong>of</strong>fm.) Nordin (C.<br />

murorum (Ach.) Th.Fr.)<br />

Up into alpine sites on lime rich to weakly<br />

calcareous rock above all on vertical surfaces<br />

and overhangs, mostly on dry ± sunny, but also<br />

shaded, humid habitats, rarely also on dust<br />

impregnated wood, r. euryök, like C. decipiens<br />

(↑), yet its high point on less to strongly<br />

eutrophic sites and even going over to nutrient<br />

poor substrates, also on cool sites, less frequent<br />

than C. decipiens on anthropogenic substrates,<br />

here more (as well as less strongly competitive)<br />

on compact, relatively hard rocks than on mortar,<br />

basiph., m.-v.photoph., m.ombroph.-anombroph.,<br />

m.-r.(s.) nitroph., Char. Calopacetum sax.,<br />

Caloplacion dec. – bor-med – r.frequent<br />

(synathrop in regions without calcareous rocks)<br />

Caloplaca sinapisperma (Lam. & DC.) Maheu<br />

& Gillet (C. leucoraea (Ach.) Branth, Blastenia l.<br />

(Ach.) Th.Fr.)<br />

Penetrating into alpine sites, but scattered (relict<br />

dealpine) also in the montane zone, on dying<br />

mosses and other plant detritus over limestone<br />

and lime rich, ground surface or sandy soils, on<br />

open to the light habitats, e.g. in steppe heath,<br />

subneutroph.(-m.basiph.), r.-v.photoph., a-<br />

/m.nitroph., e.g. in Megasporion verr. – arctmieur(mo)alp(-smed-alp)<br />

– rare (3); al, Ju, SJu,<br />

FrJu, Do-Av, Eif (v.rare)<br />

137


Caloplaca subpallida H.Magn,<br />

Above all up into montane sites, but also up over<br />

the tree line, predominantly on mineral rich<br />

silicate rocks or on slightly dust impregnated<br />

surfaces, on sunny, warm, rainy surfaces, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

parasitic on crustose lichens, e.g. Aspicilia<br />

species (gibbosa group), like Rhizocarpon virid.<br />

(↑), Parmelia pulla (↑), above all in the<br />

Aspicilietum cin., Parmelietum consp.,<br />

Lasallietum (above all initial stages),<br />

subneutroph.-m.acidoph., r.-v.photoph., a-<br />

/m.nitroph. – s’bor-med – r.rare; Sch, Bog, O,<br />

nöPf, Mos, Eif, MRh-Ts, Al, Fr<br />

Caloplaca teicholyta (Ach.) J.Steiner (C.<br />

arenaria auct. p.p., non (Pers.) Müll.Arg.)<br />

Above all in hilly-submontane, warm, low<br />

precipitation to moderately high precipitation<br />

sites on ± neutral/subneutral, calcareous or lime<br />

dust impregnated or ± strongly eutrophic rock<br />

substrate on almost exclusively artificial habitats<br />

(walls, tombstones etc.), on walled in natural<br />

stone (<strong>of</strong>ten sandstone), on mortar, concrete,<br />

tiles, terrazzo, v.rare on near natural habitats on<br />

contiguous rocks (e.g. lime leached carbonate<br />

rock), on light rich, nutrient rich habitats,<br />

(sub)neutroph., xeroph., r.-v.photoph., m.r.nitroph.,<br />

above all Caloplacetum teich.,<br />

Lecidelletum carp. – mieur-med – m.-r.frequent,<br />

mostly introduced<br />

Caloplaca tiroliensis Zahlbr.<br />

In alpine sites on fresh dying plant detritus<br />

(moss, cushions plants) over calcareous soils in<br />

openings in the vegetation (e.g. from Caricetum<br />

curvulae) or over calcareous rocks (Androsacion<br />

alpinae), on well lighted sites, tolerating long<br />

time snow cover, subneutroph.-neutroph., Char.<br />

Caloplacetum tir. – arct-alp – v.rare (1); süSch<br />

(Belchen), Al<br />

Caloplaca variabilis (Pers.) Müll.Arg.<br />

Up into the alpine zone above all on lime rich,<br />

rarely lime poor rock, sometimes on lime dust<br />

impregnated or walled in silicate rich sandstone,<br />

usually on stones and smaller rocks or on rock<br />

caps (rainy surfaces), on r.-v well lighted, usually<br />

m.-r.eutrophic sites, also on anthropogenic<br />

habitats (walls, grave markers etc.), <strong>of</strong>ten on<br />

artificial stone (e.g. terrazzo), basiph., xeroph.,<br />

above all Caloplacion dec., Aspicilion calc. –<br />

mieur-med – m.frequent; lime region, introduced<br />

in silicate region<br />

Caloplaca vitellinula auct. medieur. (non (Nyl.)<br />

H.Olivier)<br />

Like C. obliterans . (↑), fruiting, nor sorediate<br />

parallel species? -- bor-mieur – rare; süSch,<br />

Vog, Bo, Saar, ThW<br />

Caloplaca xantholyta (Nyl.) Jatta (Leproplaca<br />

x. (Nyl.) Harm.)<br />

On very fragmented or porous, in the case <strong>of</strong><br />

very high humidity on compact and smooth<br />

limestone, on humid, not sunny, dry substrate to<br />

at time moist substrate sites, in canyons, on north<br />

faces, in forests, like Lepraria flavesc. . (↑),<br />

habitat amplitude overlapping even Gyalecta<br />

jen., basiph., m.-r.(v.)hygroph., (substrate<br />

hygroph.), (r.)m.photoph.-v.skioph., m.nitroph,<br />

above all in Verrucario-Caloplacetum xanthol.,<br />

Gyalectetum jen. – s’mieur-med(mo) – r.rare;<br />

SJu, Ju, FrJu, Al, MRh, süHü<br />

LIT.: CLAUZADE & ROUX 1985, FRIES 1871-74, KÄRNEFELT<br />

1989*, LAUNDON 1974, MAGNUSSON 1944, MIGULA 1929-<br />

31, NORDIN 1972, OZENDA & CLAUZADE 1970, POELT 1954,<br />

POELT & HINTEREGGER 1993, PURVIS et al. 1992 WUNDER<br />

1974<br />

Candelaria Massal.<br />

Introduction<br />

The thallus <strong>of</strong> Candelaria species is small,<br />

delicate, very narrow lobed, deeply incised and –<br />

like the lecanorine apothecia – yellow colored.<br />

In contrast to the similar in habit, small lobed<br />

Xanthoria species, the red coloring with<br />

potassium hydroxide fails to appear. The single<br />

species occurring in Europe <strong>of</strong> the six species<br />

included in the foliose lichen genus grows<br />

especially on subneutral bark on free standing<br />

deciduous trees. They are widely distributed in<br />

Europe, they are however rare in the boreal zone<br />

and lacking in the arctic and alpine regions.<br />

Genus Characteristics<br />

Thallus very fine lobed divided to very small<br />

fruticose, green-yellow to yellow, sometimes<br />

(thus in the indigenous species) granular to<br />

sorediate at the margin, both sides with<br />

paraplectenchymatous cortex, with coccoid green<br />

algae. Ap. yellow, with thalloid margin. Exc.<br />

very reduced. Hyp. colorless. Hym. I+ blue.<br />

Paraphyses simple to sparsely branching,<br />

138


thickened above. Asci clavate, Candelaria type,<br />

tholus only amyloid in the lower part, filled with<br />

non amyloid drops. Sp. to 16 up to about 50,<br />

single celled to appearing 2-celled. Pycnosp.<br />

ellipsoidal. Ch: Pulvinic acid -derivatives.<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Candelaria concolor (Dickson) B.Stein<br />

On subneutral (to moderately acid) mineral rich,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten dust impregnated bark on free standing<br />

deciduous trees, like Physconia dist. and<br />

Parmelia acet. (↑), Char. Xanthorion par. –<br />

s’bor-med(mo) – r.rare (3); above all Ju, süHü,<br />

süRh-HRh, süSch, SJu, Ne, Bo, Av, but rare, in<br />

intensively agricultural regions and regressing in<br />

industrial regions<br />

Lit.: HILLMANN 1936<br />

Candelariella Müll.Arg.<br />

Introduction<br />

Typical <strong>of</strong> Candelariella is a yellow, crustose,<br />

sometimes round lobed thallus with yellow<br />

apothecia with thalloid, rarely proper margin and<br />

with one or two-celled spores. In many species<br />

the thallus is gray or indefinite. In habit like the<br />

species <strong>of</strong> Caloplaca, showing however, because<br />

<strong>of</strong> the lack <strong>of</strong> anthraquinones, not deep red<br />

potassium hydroxide reaction.<br />

Of a total <strong>of</strong> perhaps 40 and about 20<br />

European species, the partially yet insufficiently<br />

known are, 10 proven n Germany, 9 from the<br />

region. C. reflexa, C. xanthostigma and the very<br />

rare C. subdeflexa and c. viae-lacteae, which are<br />

distributed in the south and in southern central<br />

Europe, occurring on bark. C. kuusamoensis<br />

lives on wood on nutrient rich sites (alpine huts,<br />

cattle fences, bird roost sites); C .aurella and C.<br />

vitellina occasionally found even on wood and<br />

bark, however as a rule reside on rock, preferably<br />

on calcareous, lastly on lime-free rocks. C.<br />

coralliza is characteristic <strong>of</strong> bird roosting sites on<br />

silicate rock, C. medians from corresponding<br />

sites on limestone, is however very frequent on<br />

anthropogenic habitats (walls). C. aurella, C.<br />

vitellina, C. coralliza and C. xanthostigma are<br />

distributed over all <strong>of</strong> Europe up into the arctic;<br />

finally into the high north <strong>of</strong> course rare. C.<br />

kuusamoensis has up to now been found in the<br />

outer part north Europe only relatively rarely (in<br />

central Europe). The so far known area <strong>of</strong> C.<br />

reflexa stretches from the mediterranean region<br />

up to southern Scandinavia. C. medians, a lichen<br />

<strong>of</strong> the mediterranean region, reaches the north<br />

boundary <strong>of</strong> its distribution in central Europe,<br />

where the natural occurrences are rare.<br />

Genus Characteristics and Determination<br />

Thallus crustose, usually definitely developed,<br />

granular, warty, areolate, sometimes rosetted and<br />

placoid, rarely indefinite and sessile in the<br />

substrate, yellow-green, yellow, yolk-yellow,<br />

sometimes with soralia or isidia,<br />

paraplectenchymatous cortex, with coccoid green<br />

algae. Ap. yellow, with thalloid margin, rarely<br />

(additionally) with proper margin or marginless.<br />

Exc. usually indefinite. Hyp. colorless. Hym. I+<br />

blue. Epihym. yellow-brown, granular.<br />

Paraphyses simple to isolated branching. Asci<br />

clavate, <strong>of</strong> the Candelaria type. Sp. to 8-32,<br />

ellipsoidal to elongate, rarely drop-like, 1- to<br />

apparent 2-celled. Pycnosp. short cylindric to<br />

ellipsoidal. Ch: Yellow part with Pulvinic acid -<br />

derivatives in different parts (Calycin, Pulvinic<br />

acid, Pulvinic acid dilactone), P-, C-/C± orange,<br />

K-, but even occasionally slightly reddish<br />

colored. Several species occur as Calycin-free<br />

mutants and are then – in the case <strong>of</strong> unaltered<br />

morphology and anatomy – citron-yellow-green<br />

(C. vitellina, C. aurella, C. medians).<br />

1 Thallus rosetted, with elongated lobules at the<br />

margin, therefore radially lobed (placoid),<br />

interior granular-warty, light yellow, -3 cm. Ap.<br />

rare. On rock . C. medians<br />

1* Thallus not rosetted, not lobed at the margin 2<br />

2 Thallus thick to very thick, deep cracked areolate,<br />

with almost cushion-like areoles, with granular<br />

uneven upper surface, yellow. Ap. rare. Sp. to<br />

12-32. Above all on bird roost sites 3<br />

2* Thallus not thick and deeply cracked areolate<br />

with granular upper surface . . 4<br />

3 On silicate rock. Thallus <strong>of</strong> thickly crowded, at<br />

first hemispherical, then elongated, cylindric to<br />

coralloid segments (side view <strong>of</strong> broken <strong>of</strong><br />

areoles). Ap. rare. Sp. 10-14 x 4.5-6 µm. On<br />

dunged silicate rock . C. coralliza<br />

3* On wood, other sites even on mosses, plant<br />

detritus, rarely on rock. Thallus consisting <strong>of</strong><br />

closely crowded, -0.3 mm granules, not <strong>of</strong><br />

elongated segments. Sp. 9-15 x 4.5-55 µm<br />

C. kuusamoensis<br />

4 Ap. lacking. Thallus erupting sorediate or<br />

throughout fine granular to mealy 5<br />

139


4* Ap. occurring . . 7<br />

5 Thallus at least in places with flattened, -0.5 (1)<br />

mm, rounded to lobed, yellow-green to citronyellow<br />

squamules, which first <strong>of</strong> all erupt<br />

sorediate on the underside and margins. Thallus<br />

squamules ultimately becoming sorediate, soredia<br />

covering the squamules. Often is to be found a<br />

thallus with hemi-spherical heaps <strong>of</strong> soredia<br />

without every spur <strong>of</strong> the squamules (C.<br />

efflorescens). Soredia ca. 20-40 (60) µm in<br />

diameter, usually more intensively yellow than<br />

the squamules (Attention, see also Candelaria<br />

with deeply divided lobules) . C. reflexa<br />

5* Thallus purely granular to finely mealy, without<br />

squamules or areoles 6<br />

6 Thallus <strong>of</strong> fine mealy, usually consisting <strong>of</strong> thick,<br />

irregularly divided heaps (soralia) <strong>of</strong> grouped<br />

soredia, yellow. Soredia ca. 20-40 (60) µm .<br />

↑ C. reflexa (5)<br />

6* Thallus consisting <strong>of</strong> equally divided, scattered to<br />

rarely thickly coalescing ± spherical to somewhat<br />

flattened granules, yellow to orange-yellow,<br />

without soralia. Granules ca. 30-110 (150) µm<br />

. C. xanthostigma<br />

7 Thallus gray, granular to coralloid or appearing<br />

squamulose. Ap. yellow, bordered, the margin<br />

sometimes with a outer gray thalloid layer. Sp. to<br />

8 per ascus. On bark C. viae-lacteae<br />

7* Thallus ± yellow or indefinite . 8<br />

8 Thallus with soralia, in places with flattened,<br />

green-yellow to yellow squamules. Ap. light to<br />

orange-yellow, rare. Sp. to 8 per ascus, 10-17 x<br />

4.5-5.5 µm . C. reflexa (5)<br />

8* Thallus without soralia . 9<br />

9 Sp. to 8 per ascus . 10<br />

9* Sp. to 12-32 11<br />

10 Ap. convex and usually marginless, -0.4 mm,<br />

usually very scattered. Thallus scarcely<br />

recognizable or thin, whitish to light gray, on<br />

bark and wood. Sp. 11-18 x 3.5-5.5 µm .<br />

C. subdeflexa<br />

10* Ap. flat to slightly convex, clearly margined.<br />

Thallus variable, granular or areolate, ± yellow,<br />

or almost lacking. Ap. 0.3-1.2 mm, usually<br />

numerous, <strong>of</strong>ten crowded. Disk yolk yellow,<br />

yellow, olive-yellow, olive. Sp. 10-18 x 4.5-7<br />

µm. On calcareous rock, wood, dust impregnated<br />

bark on tree trunks . C. aurella<br />

11 Thallus on bark and wood, uniformly fine<br />

granular. Granules ca. 0.1 mm in diameter. Ap.<br />

0.2-0.9 mm, usually deep yellow, sparse. Sp. 9-<br />

12 x 4.5 µm. Paraph. ends <strong>of</strong>ten capitate<br />

thickened . C. xanthostigma<br />

11* Thallus on silicate rock, rarely wood and bark,<br />

scattered or thickly granular to areolate, rarely<br />

rather thick and with almost cushion-like areoles,<br />

light yellow, yellow, more rarely reddish- or<br />

brownish-yellow, <strong>of</strong>ten K+ slightly reddish (yet<br />

never deep red). Ap. 0.5-1.5 mm, usually thallus<br />

colored. Sp. 9-15 x 4.5-6.5 µm. Paraph. ends<br />

mostly not thickened<br />

C. vitellina<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Candelariella aurella (H<strong>of</strong>fm.) Zahlbr.<br />

(C. heidelbergensis (Nyl.) Poelt)<br />

Up into alpine sites on lime-rich to weakly<br />

calcareous rock, frequent on mortar and<br />

calcareous artificial stone, also on lime dust<br />

impregnated wood, rare on the dusty trunk base<br />

<strong>of</strong> free-standing deciduous trees and on other<br />

mineral rich substrates, on well lighted, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

nitrogen rich habitats, frequent on walls, laundry<br />

concrete plates etc., regionally introduced,<br />

basiph., xeroph., (m.)r.-v.photoph., (a-)m.r.nitroph.,<br />

above all in the Caloplacion dec. –<br />

arct-med – frequent, above all synanthrop<br />

Candelariella coralliza (Nyl.) H.Magn.<br />

Up into the subalpine zone, rarely higher, on<br />

silicate rock on strongly dunged bird roosting<br />

places on radiation- and <strong>of</strong>ten r. wind exposed<br />

habitats, commonly on the crown <strong>of</strong> rocks, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

on Aspicilia caesiocinerea (↑), m.-r.acidoph.,<br />

ombroph., r.-v.photoph., r.-v.nitroph., Char.<br />

Candelarielletum cor. – arct-med(mo) – v.rare;<br />

Sch, Vog. Pf, RhSch, Lahn, Sp. O. HeBgl, Ries<br />

Candelariella kuusamoensis Räsänen<br />

In montane to alpine sites on bird roosting<br />

places, above all on the dunged cross-section <strong>of</strong><br />

posts and wood planks <strong>of</strong> sheds (above all ro<strong>of</strong><br />

ridges), <strong>of</strong>ten with Thelomma, m.acidoph.,<br />

v.photoph., ammonoph. – bor-mieur-h’mo – rare<br />

(2); SFW, Do, Obay, Alps<br />

Candelariella medians (Nyl.) A.L.Sm.<br />

(C. granulata (Schaerer) Zahlbr.)<br />

Up into the montane zone in mostly low<br />

precipitation, relatively warm-summer sites on<br />

limestone and calcareous artificial stone (mortar,<br />

concrete) on sunny sites, high point on<br />

anthropogenic, strongly eutrophic habitats, above<br />

all on wall crowns and on strongly eutrophic base<br />

or walls, on grave stones, highly resistant to dust-<br />

and gas form emissions <strong>of</strong> dunging, penetrating<br />

into the interior <strong>of</strong> large stands, regionally<br />

introduced, rare on near natural habitats, thus on<br />

bird roosting places on the crown <strong>of</strong> limestone,<br />

e.g. in open to light dry turfs (above all Ju),<br />

basiph., xeroph., ombroph., r.-v.photoph., r.v.(e.)<br />

nitroph., in the Physcio-Candelarielletum,<br />

140


Caloplacetum sax. –s’mieur-med(mo) – v.rarem.frequent;<br />

above all lime region, in forest rich<br />

and silicate regions (e.g. RhSch) rare<br />

Candelariella reflexa (Nyl.) Lettau (C.<br />

efflorescens auct. p.p.)<br />

Above all in submontane and montane, m.-v.<br />

high precipitation sites, on trunks <strong>of</strong> deciduous<br />

trees on mineral rich, subneutral bark, well<br />

developed above all on r. strongly rainy flanks<br />

and on sloping trunks, <strong>of</strong>ten on apple trees, ash,<br />

maple, also going over to moss, in lower sites<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten strongly sorediate and squamulose scarcely<br />

developed, here also on relatively dry habitats,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten on poplar, subneutroph.-m.acidoph.,<br />

ombroph., r.photoph., a-/m.nitroph., e.g. <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

with Normandina – mieur-med – m.frequent;<br />

above all Sch, Ju, SFW, Bo, RhSch<br />

Candelariella subdeflexa (Nyl.) Lettau<br />

Up into the montane zone, isolated even higher,<br />

above all on high precipitation sites on<br />

subneutral bark ± at the base <strong>of</strong> free standing<br />

deciduous trees, e.g. Walnut, ash, maple, also on<br />

dust impregnated sites, subneutroph., r.photoph.,<br />

a-/m.nitroph., probably Xanthorion species –<br />

mieur-med – v.rare (0); süSch (+?), SJu, Al<br />

Candelariella viae-lacteae Thor & V.Wirth<br />

Up into montane sites on free standing deciduous<br />

trees with subneutral to m.acid, <strong>of</strong>ten dust<br />

impregnated bark, above all on ash,<br />

subneutroph., r.photoph., m.ombroph., a-<br />

/m.nitroph., Xanthorion – s’mieur-med – v.rare<br />

(1); Ju (lx)<br />

Candelariella vitellina (H<strong>of</strong>fm.) Müll.Arg.<br />

(C. flavovirella (Nyl.) Lettau)<br />

Up into the alpine sites, acidoph. <strong>Lichens</strong> with<br />

wider ecological amplitude, on lime-free silicate<br />

rock, rarely on silicate mosses, wood, (basal) on<br />

trunks <strong>of</strong> deciduous trees especially on m.dunged<br />

sites, mostly on smaller boulders, rock caps, in<br />

fissures <strong>of</strong> rocks, on natural stone walls, tomb-<br />

and grave stones ( thus introduced in lime<br />

regions), <strong>of</strong>ten with Lecanora muralis (↑), also<br />

on bird boulders and on occasionally flooded<br />

boulders in brooks, commonly on r.-v. well<br />

lighted rainy habitats, m.-v.acidoph., ombroph.m.anombroph.,<br />

m.-v.photoph., m.-r.(v.) nitroph.,<br />

Char. Rhizocarpetea geogr., above all in the<br />

Candelariella vit. -Lecanora muralis community<br />

– arct-med – one <strong>of</strong> the most frequent silicate<br />

lichens, in rock free region on anthropogenic<br />

substrates<br />

Candelariella xanthostigma (Ach.) Lettau<br />

Up into high montane sites on deciduous trees,<br />

rarely on wood and on conifer trees, r.euryök,<br />

especially on m.acid, m eutrophic bark on the<br />

middle <strong>of</strong> the trunk <strong>of</strong> free standing trees and on<br />

forest margins, also on wound flux, <strong>of</strong>ten on fruit<br />

trees, linden maple, ash, oak, rather tolerant to<br />

toxins, in lichen poor regions above all with<br />

Amandinea punctata (↑), also like Physcia adsc.<br />

(↑), subneutroph. -r.acidoph., (m.)r.photoph., a-<br />

/m.(r.)nitroph., above all in Physcietalia adsc. –<br />

(arct-)bor-med -- frequent<br />

Carbonea (Hertel) Hertel<br />

(Determined ↑ Lecidea group)<br />

Introduction<br />

To the genus Carbonea number autotrophic and<br />

parasitic lichens with clearly developed crustose<br />

to endolithic thalli as well those living on lichens<br />

as parasymbionts with completely reduced<br />

thallus. The apothecia are black, lecideine. Of<br />

to this time ca. 20 species, 8 occur in Germany,<br />

predominantly silicate dwellers, in the Alps also<br />

a lime dweller (C. atronivea). C. vorticosa and<br />

those parasitising various crusts C. intrusa and C.<br />

assimilis are lichens <strong>of</strong> mineral rich<br />

(intermediary) silicate rock. In central Europe<br />

are the – with exception <strong>of</strong> C. vorticosa in the<br />

Alps – all becoming very rarely found (recorded<br />

e.g. in the Black Forest and in the Vosges).<br />

While C. assimilis occurs in temperate and warm<br />

temperate regions – in atlantic region as well as<br />

in north Norway -- the two other species are<br />

distributed in the boreal zone and montane to<br />

alpine sites above all central Europe. C.<br />

vitellinaria is parasymbiotic on Candelariella<br />

species and C. supersparsa is parasymbiotic on<br />

Lecanora species; both are distributed over a<br />

greater part <strong>of</strong> Europe. C. latypizodes is possibly<br />

very rare. C. distans – a central European-alpine<br />

species – lives parasitically on the alpine crustose<br />

lichen Orphniospora mosigii and is to be found<br />

in Germany in the Allgäu.<br />

Genus Characteristics and Determination<br />

141


Thallus crustose to endolithic, sometimes<br />

parasitic; many species lichenicolus fungi.<br />

Photobionts coccoid green algae. Ap. black to<br />

brown-black, rarely red-brown. Exc.<br />

carbonaceous-black to light colored and exterior<br />

strongly pigmented. Hyp. colorless to brownblack,<br />

orange, blue-green, etc. Epiphytic mostly<br />

blue-green to green. Paraphyses simple to<br />

branching and bound, thickened above. Asci<br />

clavate, Lecanora type. Sp. 1- to 2-celled.<br />

Pycnosp. long thread-like. Ch- or Atranorin,<br />

depside, Depsidone and others.<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the species<br />

Carbonea assimilis (Körber) Haf. & Hertel<br />

(Lecidea a. (Körber) Th.Fr.)<br />

In montane-high montane, (r.) oceanic, high<br />

precipitation sites on ± neutral to basic, ± lime<br />

free silicate rocks (mineral rich gneiss, slate,<br />

basalt) on sunny, relatively warm sloping and<br />

rainy vertical surfaces, parasitic on crustose<br />

lichens, subneutroph.-m.acidoph., r.-v.photoph.,<br />

a-/m.nitroph., e.g. in the community <strong>of</strong><br />

Aspicilietalia gibb. – bor-atl-mieur-subatl-smed –<br />

v.rare (1); süSch, Vog, BayW, Erz, Hz<br />

Carbonea distans (Krempelh.) Haf. &<br />

Obermayer (Lecidea distand Krempelh.,<br />

Lecanora mosigiicola (Eitner) Hertel &<br />

Rambold)<br />

In alpine sites parasitic on the thallus <strong>of</strong><br />

Orphniospora mosigii (Körber) Hertel &<br />

Rambold, on hard, acid silicate rocks – mieur-alp<br />

– Al<br />

Carbonea intrusa (Th.Fr.) Rambold & Triebel<br />

(Catillaria i. (Th.Fr.) Th. Fr., Micarea i. (Th.Fr.)<br />

Coppins & Kilias)<br />

In montane to high montane, high precipitation,<br />

oceanic sites on open and ± wind open<br />

metamorphic and magmatic silicate rocks,<br />

probably parasitic on crustose lichens, like e.g.<br />

Schaereria cinereorufa (↑), m.-r.acidoph.,<br />

v.ombroph., above all in the Umbilicarion cyl.,<br />

Pertusario-Ophioparmetum – bor-mieurmo/subatl<br />

– v.rare (R); Vog. süSch<br />

Carbonea latypizodes (Nyl.) Knoph & Rambold<br />

ined. (Lecidea l. Nyl., Lecidella lacteola (Nyl.)<br />

Hertel & Leuckert)<br />

Like Lecidella carpath. (↑), probably above all<br />

on near the soil, slightly eutrophic surfaces –<br />

v.rare (0); O<br />

Carbonea supersparsa (Nyl.) Hertel (Lecidea s.<br />

Nyl., Nesolechia s. (Nyl.) Rehm)<br />

In montane to alpine sites on silicate rock<br />

dwelling on Lecanora species, e.g. l. polytropa<br />

– bor-med – süSch, Rhön<br />

Carbonea vitellinaria (Nyl.) Hertel (Lecidea s.<br />

Nyl., Nesolechia v. (Nyl.) Rehm)<br />

Above all in the montane to alpine zone on the<br />

thallus <strong>of</strong> Candelariella vit. (↑) and C. coralliza<br />

(↑), predominantly on m. acid to subneutral,<br />

sunny, <strong>of</strong>ten relatively warm habitats – arct-med<br />

(-alp – rare; Sch, Vog, O, Mn, Ne, Ju, Ries, He,<br />

Erz, Al<br />

Carbonea vorticosa (Flörke) Hertel (Lecidea v.<br />

(Flörke) Körber)<br />

In high montane and alpine, high precipitation<br />

sites on mineral rich silicate rocks (e.g. basalt,<br />

slate), rarely on lime leached limestone, on<br />

mostly lower, m.-r. exposed rocks and boulders<br />

on well lighted, cool to cold, m.-r long snow<br />

covered habitats, subneutroph.-m.acidoph.,<br />

v.ombroph., anitroph. – arct-h’mo/alp – rare (3);<br />

süSch, Vog, BayW, Erz, Al, v.rare Rhön<br />

LIT.: FRIES 1874, HERTEL 1983, TRIEBEL 1989.<br />

Catapyrenium Flotow<br />

Introduction<br />

The thalli <strong>of</strong> the Catapyrenium species consist <strong>of</strong><br />

scattered to crowded, light gray to dark brown<br />

squamules with cortex. The small, ring<br />

blackened around the mouth fruiting bodies<br />

(perithecia) are sunken into the thallus or stand<br />

between the squamules. Similar in habit to the<br />

Endocarpon species, they are distinguished from<br />

them by single celled spores. There are today<br />

about 40 species known.<br />

Ten species are recorded in Germany. They<br />

grow on base-rich soils, e.g. in openings in dry<br />

turf, in soil filled rock fissures, on calcareous<br />

rock, on loess. C. michelii, c. pilosellum and C.<br />

squamulosum are found predominantly on naked<br />

soil in pioneer communities, C. cinereum, C.<br />

daedalum, C. psoromoides and C. tremniacense<br />

partly on soil, partly on mosses, e.g. on thin turfs.<br />

142


C. rufescens sits on high relief limestone and<br />

calcareous silicate rocks. C. lachneum and C.<br />

waltheri which are not recorded from the region,<br />

occurring in the neighboring Allgäu arctic-<br />

alpine, establish themselves <strong>of</strong>ten in soil filled<br />

rock fissures. The soil dwellers are as a result <strong>of</strong><br />

amelioration and enclosure <strong>of</strong> land (e.g. vineyard<br />

allocation) in regression.<br />

C. cinereum, C. daedalum, C. lachneum and<br />

C. waltheri are arctic/boreal-alpine species,<br />

which penetrate up into the mountains <strong>of</strong> south<br />

Europe; C. cinereum and C. daedalum existing,<br />

thus in the region, as relict occurrences in<br />

relatively nearer sea level. The area <strong>of</strong> C.<br />

psoromoides, C. pilosellum and tremniacense<br />

reaches over central- and south Europe; here we<br />

have also C. rufescens, C. squamulosum and the<br />

more rare C. michelii whose high point, occurs<br />

however even in north Europe.<br />

Genus Characteristics and Determination<br />

Thallus squamulose, commonly light to dark<br />

brown, red-brown, sometimes thickly white<br />

pruinose, stratified construction, upper side with<br />

paraplectenchymatous cortex, <strong>of</strong> ± anticlinal<br />

hyphae with rounded-angular to somewhat<br />

stretched cells, under side without or with weakly<br />

to clearly set<strong>of</strong>f paraplectenchymatous cortex,<br />

attached to the substrate with colorless to brown<br />

“rhizo-hyphae.” Photobionts: coccoid green<br />

algae. Per. sunken or, when between the<br />

squamules, projecting, with black apex. Exc.<br />

dark in the region <strong>of</strong> the apex, otherwise light to<br />

dark, with or without involucrellum. Hym. I+<br />

yellow-orange to reddish, rarely bluish-green,<br />

K/I+ blue. Paraphyses lacking in ripe per.<br />

Periphyses predominantly simple. Asci thin<br />

walled, clavate to elongate cylindric, without<br />

tholus, wall I-, exterior with thin amyloid gelatin<br />

layer. Pycnosp. short cylindric to cylindric or<br />

elongate ellipsoidal. Sp. 1-celled, ellipsoidal.<br />

Ch-.<br />

1 Per. sitting between the thallus squamules, not<br />

sunken, with carbonaceous invol. Squamules ±<br />

crustose coalescing, very small, -1(1.5) mm, thin<br />

(mostly 100-200 µm thick) 2<br />

1* Per. sunken into the thallus squamules, without<br />

invol . 3<br />

2 Thallus squamules with blackish paraplectenchymatous<br />

lower cortex. Exc. brown to blackbrown,<br />

surrounded by a ring-like carbonaceous<br />

involucre. Sp. elongate egg form to almost<br />

clavate, 17-21 x 8-10 µm. Rhizoid hyphae dark.<br />

In alpine sites C. waltheri<br />

2* Thallus squamules without lower cortex and<br />

medulla. Exc. brown to black-brown, surrounded<br />

by a carbonaceous involucre only in the upper<br />

part. Sp. ellipsoidal, 13-17(18) x 6-7 µm.<br />

Rhizoid hyphae colorless. In lower sites<br />

C. tremniacense<br />

3 Squamules entirely white pruinose, but margins<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten dark bordered, finely crenate to deeply<br />

crenate lobed,, usually coalescing, ± compressed,<br />

1-2(3) mm. Thallus with definite dark prothallus.<br />

Lower cortex blackish, paraplectenchymatous.<br />

Sp. 17-23 x 6.5-8.5 µm C. cinereum<br />

3* Squamules possibly pruinose in places . 4<br />

4 Rhizoid hyphae dark, producing a thick dark<br />

prothallus. Asci clavate, sp. ± two rows. Upper<br />

cortex thin (30 µm) 5<br />

4* Rhizoid hyphae light. Asci cylindric, sp. single<br />

series 7<br />

5 Squamules finely crenate to deeply crenate lobed,<br />

usually whitish pruinose, <strong>of</strong>ten dark bordered,<br />

usually coalescing, ± compressed. Lower cortex<br />

blackish, paraplectenchy-matous. Sp. 17-23 x<br />

6.5-8.5 µm C. cinereum<br />

5* Squamules not deeply crenate, not dark bordered,<br />

to foliose lobed, approaching ± effigurate thallus<br />

(with somewhat elongated marginal lobes),<br />

without lower cortex. Very rare species . 6<br />

6 Asci 55-65 x 13-15 µm. Sp. ellipsoidal to almost<br />

fusiform, on the average under 17 µm long (13-<br />

17 x 5.5-7 µm, sometimes with apparent two part<br />

content. Squamules usually light brown to gray<br />

or gray greenish. Lobe ends <strong>of</strong>ten flecked gray to<br />

violet gray pruinose<br />

C. psoromoides<br />

6* Asci 75-85 x 17-20 µm. Sp. elongate egg form to<br />

clavate, on the average over 17 µm (17-22 x 6-8<br />

µm), content not two-part. Marginal lobes<br />

broadly rounded, thick, nonpruinose, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

somewhat indented. Thallus sometimes finely<br />

diffusely pruinose on the interior thallus parts<br />

(not flecked) C. daedalum<br />

7 Per. wall dark, 20 µm thick below. Sp. 11-15 x<br />

5-6 µm. Squamules 1-4 mm large, thin, -250 µm,<br />

closely attached, light to dark brown, dull,<br />

undersides blackish . C. michelii<br />

7* Per. wall colorless, over 20 µm thick 8<br />

8 Squamules covered with very fine colorless hairs<br />

at the margin . C. pilosellum (12)<br />

8* Squamules not hairy at the margin . 9<br />

9 Thallus attached directly to the rock, robust,<br />

leathery, brown to dark brown or red-brown, dull<br />

or mostly shiny, usually wavy curved.<br />

Squamules 6-10 x 3-5 mm in size, 350-600 µm<br />

thick, margins commonly somewhat raised. Sp.<br />

15-20 x 7.5-9 µm, <strong>of</strong>ten empty and deformed.<br />

Pycn. sessile on the margin . C. rufescens<br />

9* Thallus on soil or on soil encrusted rock 10<br />

143


10 Squamules very robust, (300) 350-600 µm thick.<br />

Medulla hyphae almost exclusively with long<br />

cylindric lumina . 11<br />

10* Squamules thin, 200-400 µm thick, 2-6 mm<br />

broad. Medulla hyphae with numerous spherical<br />

lumina. Sp. 12-17 x 5.5-7.5 µm 12<br />

11 Sp. 14-17 x 6-8 µm. Squamules 2-7 mm, middle<br />

to mostly dark (red) brown, dull, <strong>of</strong>ten with<br />

bulging margin C. lachneum<br />

11* Sp. 15-20 x 7.5-9 µm. Squamules mostly 6-10<br />

mm, middle to dark brown to red-brown<br />

* C. rufescens (9)<br />

12 Squamules mostly somewhat raised at the<br />

margin, delicately hairy when young, mostly<br />

brown to orange-brown, dull. Pycn. sparse,<br />

indefinite, sessile at the margin <strong>of</strong> the squamules<br />

. C. pilosellum<br />

12* Squamules compressed, flat, commonly attached<br />

at the margins, not hairy, light to dark brown,<br />

dull or slightly shiny. Pycn. sunken in the<br />

squamule surface. Sp. frequently unripe .<br />

C. squamulosum<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Catapyrenium cinereum (Pers.) Körber<br />

(Dermatocarpon c. (Pers) Th.Fr.)<br />

Above all in the montane to alpine sites on ±<br />

calcareous, soil surfaced rock bases on fine rich<br />

soils, <strong>of</strong>ten humus sites, on thin soil layer on<br />

calcareous rocks, <strong>of</strong>ten on weathered dolomite<br />

soils, going over to raw humus and moss, e.g. in<br />

openings on (semi)dry turfs, in pioneer<br />

communities on rock crowns (Alysso-Sedion),<br />

old rock rubble and on rubble surfaces,<br />

neutroph.-(m.)basiph., photoph., xeroph., e.g. in<br />

Toninion sed. – arct-med-alp – (v.)rare (3);<br />

above all FrJu; Ries, Ju, Do, Rh-Mn-t, He, Hz,<br />

Th; frequent in the Alps<br />

Catapyrenium daedalum (Krempelh.) B. Stein<br />

(Dermatocarpon d. (Krempelh.) Th.Fr.)<br />

In montane to alpine sties on calcareous subsoil,<br />

like C. cinereum (↑) and Physconia musc. (↑) –<br />

arct-mieur(alp)-(med-alp) – v.rare (1); FrJu,<br />

Ries, Al, Alps<br />

Catapyrenium lachneum (Ach.) R.Sant.<br />

(Dermatocarpon l. (Ach.) A.L.Sm.)<br />

In alpine sites, rarely lower, on soil surface raw<br />

soils, soil- or rock-mosses, plant detritus,<br />

commonly on base-rich substrates (geologically<br />

subsoil calcareous rocks or SiO2 poor silicate<br />

rocks); neutroph.-basiph., photoph. -- arct-mieuralp(-med-alp)<br />

– v.rare; Al, Vog<br />

Catapyrenium michelii (Massal.) R.Sant.<br />

(Dermatocarpon m. (Massal.) Zwackh)<br />

On fine soil and loess, like C. squamulosum –<br />

mieur-smed – v.rare (0); Ne, Do<br />

Catapyrenium pilosellum Breuss<br />

Like IC. squamulosum (↑) – mieur-subatl-med –<br />

rare, overlooked (1); süHü, Do<br />

Catapyrenium psoromoides (Borrer) R.Sant.<br />

(Dermatocarpon p. (Borrer) DT. & Sarnth.)<br />

Penetrating on deciduous trees with subneutral<br />

bark, but also (in the region) over mosses on<br />

limestone or soil surface raw calcareous soils on<br />

well lighted habitats; subneutroph.-m.basiph., r.v.photoph.<br />

– mieur-med – v.rare (1); FrJu, Ju,<br />

SJu<br />

Catapyrenium rufescens (Ach.) Breuss<br />

(Dermatocarpon r. (Ach.) Th.Fr.)<br />

Up into alpine sites on limestone, rarely<br />

calcareous silicate rocks, preferably on steep<br />

surfaces and on fragmented sites on well lighted<br />

habitats, <strong>of</strong>ten on sporadically irrigated surfaces,<br />

also on soil encrusted rocks, upon/with bluegreen<br />

algae, rarely on mosses or soil, like<br />

Lecidea lurida (↑), Toninia cand., Synalissa<br />

symph., predominantly in Collemation fuscov. –<br />

bor-med – r.rare; SJu-Ju-FrJu, Al, v.rare süHü<br />

süSch, Ne, Mn, Ts, MRh, Lahn, Th<br />

Catapyrenium squamulosum (Ach.) Breuss<br />

(Dermatocarpon hepaticum auct, non<br />

Endocarpon hepaticum Ach.<br />

Up into the montane, rarely alpine zone on<br />

calcareous soil, on naked loam soils, loess, on<br />

garden soils, in surface based rock soils, in<br />

regions <strong>of</strong> gravel surfaces on gravel pits, on soil<br />

layers on rock terraces etc., even going over to<br />

mosses and plant detritus, pioneer plants on open<br />

rich garden soils, weakly competitive, in<br />

openings <strong>of</strong> (semi)dry turfs, Alyso-Sedion, on<br />

mostly warm, moderately to very well lighted<br />

sites, subneutroph.-basiph., xeroph., in the<br />

Toninion sed. – (bor)mieur-med – r.rare: above<br />

all Ne, Hü, Mn; SJu-Ju FrJu, Eif, Ts, He, Th, Al<br />

Catapyrenium tremniacense Massal.<br />

(Dermatocarpon t. (Massal.) J.Steiner)<br />

In hilly and submontane sites on calcareous<br />

garden soils in lacunae <strong>of</strong> dry trufs and gardens<br />

soils <strong>of</strong> gravel surfaces, on base rich soils in well<br />

lighted, warm habitats, e.g. in the Toninio-<br />

144


Psoretum – s’mieur-med – v.rare (1); Mn<br />

(Taubertal), FrJu, Do, Av<br />

Catapyrenium waltheri (Krempelh.) Körber<br />

(Dermatocarpon w. (Krempelh.) Blomb. &<br />

Forss.)<br />

In alpine sites on naked soil and raw humus over<br />

calcareous subsoil – arct-alp – v.rare; Al;<br />

scattered in the Alps<br />

LIT: BREUSS 1990<br />

Catillaria Massal.<br />

(Keys include Catinaria, Cliostomum, Megalaria,<br />

Micarea p.p.)<br />

Introduction<br />

In the broad sense one places in Catillaria<br />

crustose lichens with two-celled colorless spores<br />

and various colored apothecia without thalloid<br />

margins. Catinaria, Cliostomum, Megalospora<br />

and Micarea were separated from this unnatural<br />

group genus according to various characteristics<br />

in the construction <strong>of</strong> the apothecium. Catillaria<br />

in the narrow sense includes species with<br />

generally thin, gray to nearly indistinguishable<br />

thalli living in the interior <strong>of</strong> the substrate,<br />

usually black to brown-black apothecia with<br />

lecideine proper margin, paraphyses unbranched<br />

to singly branched in the upper part with capitate<br />

thickened, provided with a brown apex capped<br />

ends and two-celled elongate spores.<br />

C. atomarioides and C. chalybeia occur on<br />

(mostly mineral rich) silicate rock; C.<br />

lenticularia lives on calcareous rocks and C.<br />

nigroclavata on bark. C. chalybeia frequently<br />

invades man made substrates. The indigenous<br />

rock dwellers are distributed in the south and<br />

central Europe and penetrate above all in the<br />

west widely into the boreal zone. C.<br />

nigroclavata occurs up into central<br />

Fennoscandia.<br />

C. detractula, C. erysiboides, C. minuta and C.<br />

picila do not belong to Catillaria s.str. The latter<br />

two live on shaded limestone on vertical and<br />

overhanging surfaces on humid habitats. C.<br />

detractula is found on well lighted, warm sites on<br />

limestone, C. erysiboides on tough old wood, e.g.<br />

deciduous tree stumps. C. erysiboides is<br />

distributed in the boreal and summer green<br />

deciduous region. The area <strong>of</strong> C. alba, C.<br />

anomaloides, C. detractula, C. picila and C.<br />

minuta stretches over south and (predominantly<br />

to the south) central Europe; finally an<br />

occurrence (Gotland) in south Scandinavia.<br />

Genus Characteristics and Determination<br />

Thallus crustose, clearly developed to living in<br />

the substrate, whitish, gray, brown, blackish, with<br />

various coccoid and filamentous green algae.<br />

Ap. variously colored (in Catillaria i.e.s. black to<br />

dark brown), without thalloid margin, with or<br />

rarely without definite proper margin. Exc.<br />

usually clearly developed. Paraphyses simple to<br />

sparsely branched, capitate above, with brown<br />

cap (Catillaria i.e.s.) or colorless to pigmented<br />

above. Hyp. colorless to brown-black. Asci<br />

almost cylindric to clavate, in the case <strong>of</strong><br />

Catillaria i.e.s. with uniformly I+ (K/I+) blue<br />

tholus and exterior with thin I+ (K/I+) blue<br />

gelatin layer, in the case <strong>of</strong> Catillaria i.w.s. to the<br />

part Biatora- and Bacidia- type. Sp. 2-celled.<br />

Ch-.<br />

1 On garden soil, humus, plant detritus, moss . 2<br />

1* On rock, bark, wood, living on conifer needles . 6<br />

2 On naked mineralized, sandy-loam to loamy<br />

soils. Ap. convex to hemispherical, marginless,<br />

black, -0.6 mm. Epihym. and hyp. dark purplebrown,<br />

hym. purple. Exc. dark purple, soon<br />

reduced. Sp. 1-2 celled, 9-15 x 3-4(4.5) µm.<br />

Paraph. branched in the upper part. Thallus very<br />

thin flowing, scattered or warty areolate, blue<br />

greenish. Saxony .<br />

Micarea melaenida (Nyl.) Coppins<br />

2* On mosses, plant detritus, raw humus, humus<br />

soils 3<br />

3 Hyp. light, mostly colorless. Ap. whitish,<br />

yellowish, rose, brown, discolored gray 4<br />

3* Hyp. red-brown to black-brown 5<br />

4 Sp. 10-17 x 4-5 µm, with definite epispore, 2- to<br />

rarely 4-celled. Ap. brown-rose, orange, roseyellowish,<br />

yellowish, beige, convex from the<br />

first, -0.9(1.1) mm, sometimes coalescing, margin<br />

rapidly disappearing. Epihym., hym., hyp. and<br />

exc. colorless to slightly yellowish, exc. strongly<br />

developed, paraplectenchymatous. Paraph.<br />

scarcely branched, strongly cemented, 3-4 µm.<br />

Thallus greenish-gray, thickly fine granular to<br />

erupting sorediate, the sorediate region greenish,<br />

soredia 30-70 µm. Zeorine . .<br />

Mycobilimbia sphaeroides<br />

4* Sp. smaller. Ap. convex. Paraph. branched and<br />

reticulate. Exc. mostly strongly reduced, paraph.<br />

hyphae like ↑ Micarea<br />

145


5 Ap. marginless from the first. Exc. reduced, <strong>of</strong><br />

paraph. like hyphae . ↑ Micarea<br />

5* Ap. with margin for a long time, dark brown to<br />

black (then brown tinged when moist), -0.8(1.2)<br />

mm. Margin thin, <strong>of</strong>ten wavy. Exc. clearly<br />

developed. Hyp. red-brown to black-brown<br />

(<strong>of</strong>ten flecked), in the upper part (and in the<br />

hym.) <strong>of</strong>ten with scattered blue-violet, blue-green<br />

to brown, K+ green granules. Epihym. redbrown<br />

to pale brown. Subhym. sometimes bluegreen.<br />

Sp. 8.5-17 (19) x 3.5-6(7) µm, (-)2-celled,<br />

rarely 4- celled. Thallus indefinite or gray to<br />

brown tinged. Ch- . Mycobilimbia hypnorum<br />

6 On rock 7<br />

6* Not on rock 17<br />

7 On silicate rock. Paraph. simple to strongly<br />

branched . . 8<br />

7* On limestone. Paraph. simple, only occasionally<br />

short branched above. Thallus R-, Ch- 10<br />

8 Paraph. only little thickened above, frequently<br />

branched and reticulate (KOH), cemented. Exc.<br />

<strong>of</strong> paraphyses like hyphae. Ap. marginless (M.<br />

subnigrata, M. prasina, Carbonea intr.)<br />

↑ Micarea<br />

8* Paraph. strongly capitate thickened above (6 µm)<br />

and dark colored (with sharply bordered dark<br />

brown cap), occasionally short branching only<br />

above. Ap. with margin. Epihym. dark brown to<br />

(olive)black. Exc. clearly developed. R-, Ch- . 9<br />

9 Hyp. colorless. Hym. 30-40 µm, colorless. Ap.<br />

very small, -0.2 mm, black, when moist with<br />

brown-gray to dark brown disk and black margin.<br />

Thallus dark gray to black coalescing or warty to<br />

areolate. Sp. 8.5-13.5 x 3-4 µm .<br />

C. atomarioides<br />

9* Hyp. light to dark brown, hym. <strong>of</strong>ten above all in<br />

the upper part blue-green 45-60 µm. Ap. 0.2-<br />

0.5(1) mm, dark brown to black, even when<br />

moist. Thallus usually olive-gray, olive-brown,<br />

gray to black, rarely light, mostly coalescing to<br />

cracked. Sp. (8)9.5- 12.5(15) x (2.5)3-4 µm .<br />

C. chalybeia<br />

10 Paraph. only little thickened above (-3 µm),<br />

weakly colored. Thallus indefinite R- 11<br />

10* Paraph. strongly capitate thickened above, -6(8)<br />

µm . 12<br />

11 Hyp. colorless to pale yellowish. Ap. light<br />

orange brown to red-brown, margined, with at<br />

first deeply seated, later convex disk, -0.4 mm.<br />

Sp. 10-18 x 4-6.5 µm, ± slightly shrunken at the<br />

septum C. minuta<br />

11* Hyp. and exc. dark red-brown(violet), K+ purpleviolet.<br />

Ap. (dark)brown to black, when moist<br />

red-brown with a dark margin, ± marginless, flat<br />

to later strongly convex, -0.8 mm. Sp. 10-16(20)<br />

x 3-4.5(5) µm, elongate, 1-2 cells C. picila<br />

12 Hyp. colorless to slightly yellowish or slightly<br />

brownish . 13<br />

12* Hyp. red-brown to brown-violet, (usually also the<br />

epihym. and exc.) K± purple-violet. Ap. black<br />

(even when moist) . 15<br />

13 Ap. black, not lighter even when moist. Thallus<br />

strongly developed, lumpy-squamulose, <strong>of</strong>ten <strong>of</strong><br />

blackish blue algae under crust, dark brown, redbrown<br />

when moist, with cortex (in section diffuse<br />

violet in the region <strong>of</strong> the hyphae ends). Paraph.<br />

scarcely cemented, with pressure ± easily freed.<br />

Pigment producing the cap <strong>of</strong> the paraph. head<br />

not sharply delimited, but ± diffuse in the<br />

surrounding hymenial gelatin. Epihym. and exc.<br />

exterior dark violet, rarely greenish- black. Hym.<br />

50-55 µm. Sp. 8-12 x 3-5 µm<br />

.Toninia pennina<br />

13* Ap. red-brown, dark brown, black, with a clearly<br />

lighter disk when moist, sessile to slightly<br />

sunken, margin indefinite. Thallus generally<br />

indefinite . 14<br />

14 Paraph. cemented, without sharply delimited<br />

brown pigment cap. Pigment in the<br />

epihymenium diffusely dispersed, red-brown to<br />

brown-violet. Ap. brown to black, ± shiny, when<br />

moist brown with black margin, -0.3 mm,<br />

moderately to strongly convex. Hym. 50-75 µm.<br />

Sp. 9.5-13 x 4-5.5 µm C. detractula<br />

14* Paraph. under pressure ± easily freed, above with<br />

sharply delimited brown pigment cap. Ap. redbrown,<br />

(dark)brown to brown-black, when moist<br />

yellowish to red-brown with darker margin, -<br />

0.4(0.5) mm, flat to moderately (strongly)<br />

convex. Hym. 40-60 µm. Sp. 8-12 x 3-4 µm<br />

C. lenticularis<br />

15 Exc. and hyp. carbonaceous violet-black. Hym.<br />

dirty green, rarely colorless, epihym. black-green,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten abraded. Sp. 9-13.5 x 3.5-5.5 µm. Ap. 0.3-<br />

0.5(1.5) mm, ± shiny. Thallus indefinite or<br />

coalescing or squamulose areolate, whitish to<br />

ochre. Alps . C. tristis<br />

(Müll.Arg.) Arnold<br />

15* Exc. and hyp. not carbonaceous black (thin<br />

section). Hyp. (flecked) red-brown to<br />

brown-violet. Epihym. olive-brown to greenishblack<br />

. 16<br />

16 Thallus unclearly developed, rarely definite. Sp.<br />

2-2.5 x as long as wide, 10.5-13.5 x 3.5-7 µm.<br />

Ap. 0.3-0.5(0.8) mm . Toninia athallina<br />

16* Thallus usually clearly developed, cracked to<br />

lumpy-squamulose or warty areolate, areoles flat<br />

to convex <strong>of</strong> uneven, (yellowish) gray to graygreen,<br />

brown, rust-brown. Ap. 0.2-0.8 mm, flat<br />

to moderately convex, indefinitely margined. Sp.<br />

11-16.5 x 4-7 µm Toninia philippea<br />

17 Ap. light colored, whitish, yellowish, rose-<br />

brown, brown . 18<br />

17* Ap. dark brown to black 26<br />

18 Usually on thin branches and needles <strong>of</strong> conifers.<br />

Ap. -0.3(0.4)mm, light rose-brown to yellowish<br />

or beige, flat to convex, with thin whitish margin.<br />

Hyp. colorless, epihym. very pale. Sp. 10-15 x 3-<br />

146


5 µm, <strong>of</strong>ten shrunken at the septum. Thallus<br />

scurfy- granular to mealy, pale greenish, Ch-<br />

Fellhanera bouteillei<br />

18* On other substrates 19<br />

19 Ap. with raised margin for a rather long time, flat<br />

for a long time . 20<br />

19* Ap. completely marginless or not a raised margin<br />

or margin very rapidly disappearing 22<br />

20 Ap. -0.3 mm, waxy whitish to pale yelloworange,<br />

with sunken disk. Thallus smooth, dark<br />

green to indefinite. Pycn. hemispherical, brown<br />

yellowish. Sp. 10-14 x 2-3.5 µm. Algae<br />

Trentepohlia . see Dimerella pineti<br />

20* Ap. generally larger. Thallus with black pycn.,<br />

K+ yellow. Pycn. wall purple-brown (K+ more<br />

strongly purple). With true green algae. Sp. 8-16<br />

x 2.5-4 µm. Atranorin . 21<br />

21 Ap. lead gray, rose-gray, brownish to blackish, -<br />

0.8 mm. Epihym. rather light or dark, then K+<br />

violet. Pycn. -0.2 mm. Roccellic acid .<br />

Cliostomum griffithii (30)<br />

21* Ap. pale yellow to (rose)yellowish (in the<br />

herbarium even darker yellow), 0.5-1.0 mm, at<br />

first thick margined, concave to weakly convex,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten lacking. Thallus warty to almost lumpy<br />

areolate, whitish, yellowish gray, old herbarium<br />

specimens <strong>of</strong>ten ± ochre, pycn. 0.25-0.5 mm,<br />

projecting. Usnic acid in the ap<br />

. Cliostomum corrugatum<br />

22 Ap. <strong>of</strong>ten with pale margin, disk rose-brown to<br />

yellow-brown, weakly convex. Paraph.<br />

branched, reticulate. Sp. 9-16 x 3-5 µm. Thallus<br />

pale greenish to green-gray, with apothecia like<br />

structures having pycnosp. Pycnosp. 6-10 x 2-3<br />

µm . Micarea adnata<br />

22* Ap. without lighter margin. Without apothecia<br />

like containing whitish pycnosp 23<br />

23 Ap. brown-rose, orange, rose-yellowish,<br />

yellowish, beige, 0.5-1 mm. Sp. 11-17 x 4-5 µm.<br />

Epihym., hym, hyp. and exc. colorless to slightly<br />

yellowish<br />

Mycobilimbia sphaeroides (4)<br />

23* Ap. smaller, -0.4 mm . 24<br />

24 Ap. whitish, yellowish, yellow-brown, reddishyellow,<br />

ochre. Thallus R- 25<br />

24* Ap. otherwise colored, but very variable, pale to<br />

dark gray, brown-gray, lilac-gray, blackish.<br />

Thallus usually definite, <strong>of</strong> green ± spherical<br />

granules. Exc. reduced, made up <strong>of</strong> paraphyseslike<br />

hyphae. Paraph. branched and reticulate.<br />

Sp. 8-14 x 2.5-4 µm . ↑ Micarea prasina<br />

25 Pycn. frequent, white, pruinose, finally light<br />

yellowish, sessile to short stalked. Pycnosp.<br />

bacillar to ellipsoidal, 3-3.5 x 0.8-1 µm. Ap.<br />

whitish to (old) pale ochre, ± pruinose, hemispherical<br />

to almost spherical. Epihym. pale<br />

yellowish, with the finest crystals throughout (in<br />

K solution). Asci (1-)2 celled (6.5)8-10(11.5) x<br />

2.3-3 µm C. alba<br />

25* No white, pruinose pycn. occurring. Ap. pale<br />

yellowish, yellow-brown to reddish-yellow.<br />

Thallus indefinite. Exc. clearly developed.<br />

Epihym. pale. Sp. 8-15 x 3-5 µm C. erysiboides<br />

26 Ap. marginless from the first . 27<br />

26* Ap. at least at first clearly margined and ± flat,<br />

later even convex marginless . 28<br />

27 Exc. clearly developed, swollen, as though<br />

paraplectenchymatous. Paraph. simple (generally<br />

only slightly branched above), <strong>of</strong>ten strongly<br />

capitate. Ap. brown-black to black, 0.2-0.6 mm.<br />

Epihym. gray, brown, olive, green-black, K±<br />

greenish. Hyp. light. Sp. 8-15 x 2-3 µm. Ch-.<br />

Often on oak Bacidia globulosa<br />

27* Exc. reduced in the case <strong>of</strong> a completely<br />

developed ap, composed <strong>of</strong> paraph. like hyphae.<br />

Paraph. branched and reticulate, not strongly<br />

capitate. Epihym. <strong>of</strong>ten violet. Commonly on<br />

wood, see Micarea (denigrata, misella, elachista)<br />

28 Sp. 20-30 x 10-15 µm, ellipsoidal, thick walled.<br />

Ap. -1(1.8) mm, flat, thickly margined, later<br />

convex marginless, rather like Lecidella<br />

elaeochroma, disk rough. Hyp. red-brown to<br />

green-blackish. Epihym. dark green. Hym. 120-<br />

140 µm. Thallus very thin, with (<strong>of</strong>ten<br />

incorrectly identified) Trentepohlia algae. Ch-<br />

. Megalaria grossa<br />

28* Sp. clearly smaller . 29<br />

29 Sp. 2-3.5 µm wide, elongate 30<br />

29* Sp. at least 3.5 µm wide, ellipsoidal, rarely<br />

fusiform 32<br />

30 Paraph. not capitate above. Thallus usually<br />

clearly developed, thickly granular to warty,<br />

whitish to light gray, K+ yellow, <strong>of</strong>ten with<br />

black, -0.2 mm wide pycn. (wall K+ purple). Ap.<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten various colored on one thallus, rose-gray,<br />

gray-brown, brown to blackish, <strong>of</strong>ten slightly<br />

pruinose, if dark, then epihym. K± violet, at first<br />

concave, later flat to moderately convex, 0.4-<br />

0.8(1) mm. Pycnosp. 3.5-4 x 1.5-2 µm.<br />

Atranorin, Roccellic acid<br />

Cliostomum griffithii<br />

30* Paraph. strongly capitate thickened. Thallus<br />

generally thin, Ch- . 31<br />

31 Paraph. cemented, not easily freed by pressure,<br />

without sharply delimited pigment cap. Sp. 8-15<br />

x 2-3 µm, elongate. Ap. -0.5 (0,6) mm, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

even when young scarcely margined, at first flat,<br />

very soon highly convex marginless, thallus<br />

usually scarcely recognizable .<br />

Bacidia globulosa (27)<br />

31* Paraph. weakly cemented, rather easily freed by<br />

pressure, with brown pigment cap above. Hyp.<br />

light brown above (rarely dark brown), light<br />

below. Sp. (7)8-10 x (2)2.5-3.5(4) µm. Ap. -0.4<br />

mm, flat, thin margined, finally convex<br />

marginless, dark brown to black. thallus thin,,<br />

gray, gray-brown . C. nigroclavata<br />

32 Hyp. brown, red-brown, black-brown, even<br />

flecked green to brown-green . 33<br />

147


32* Hyp. colorless to pale brownish 35<br />

33 Epihym. scarcely colored to yellow-brown.<br />

Thallus usually crustose coalescing or thin warty,<br />

rarely granular, gray, brown tinted gray.<br />

Hyp./exc. red-brown to black-brown, hyp. even<br />

green flecked. Algae protococcoid. Ap. redbrown,<br />

brown, dark brown to almost black (then<br />

rust tinged with moistened), -0.8(1)mm, at first<br />

concave, then for a long time flat to moderately<br />

convex and with a little projecting, finally<br />

disappearing, same colored or darker, <strong>of</strong>ten shiny<br />

margin. Hyp. and hym. sometimes with scattered<br />

brownish to greenish or bluish granules. Sp. 1celled,<br />

rarely 2-celled, (8)10-15 x 3.5-6 µm. Ch- .<br />

Mycobilimbia sanguineoatra<br />

33* Epihym. dirty bluish, black-blue to violet-brown,<br />

K+ green or violet. Hyp. light brown or redbrown.<br />

Algae Trentepohlia (cells relatively<br />

large). Ap. black to brown, at least at first clearly<br />

margined . 34<br />

34 Thallus thin, not sorediate, pale yellowish, P-, C-<br />

. Epihym. dark purple-brown to blackish bluegreen(-violet),<br />

K+ red-violet. Hym. colorless or<br />

± red-violet. Sp. 12-17 x 6-8 µm. Ap. flat to<br />

slightly convex Megalaria laureri<br />

34* Thallus with granular, <strong>of</strong>ten coalescing soralia,<br />

usually for the most part erupting sorediate<br />

granular, finally producing a cracked areolate<br />

sorediate crust, gray with (blue)greenish tint,<br />

yellowish-green to whitish, K+ yellow, P+ rustred,<br />

C-, KC± yellow. Epihym. dirty bluish to<br />

dark green, K+ green. Hyp. colorless to light<br />

brown, K- (ap. rare). Sp. 10-19 x 4.5-6.5.<br />

Atranorin, ± Zeorin, Fumarprotocetraric acid<br />

.Megalaria pulverea<br />

35 Sp. 8-16 x 2.5-4 µm. Ap. rose-gray, gray-brown,<br />

brown to blackish, <strong>of</strong>ten slightly pruinose, if<br />

dark, then epihym. K± violet, at first concave,<br />

later flat to moderately convex, 0.4-0.8(1) mm.<br />

Thallus usually clearly developed, white-gray to<br />

gray, K+ yellow, <strong>of</strong>ten with black pycn<br />

.Cliostomum griffithii (30)<br />

35* Sp. (9)10-15 x 4.5-7 µm, relatively thick walled.<br />

Ap. dark red-brown, brown-black, red-black,<br />

black, concave, later flat to slightly convex,<br />

margined, 0.2-0.6 mm, margin finally<br />

disappearing. Epihym. yellowish to brown, hyp.<br />

slightly brownish. Paraph. easily freed by very<br />

slight pressure. Thallus thin, <strong>of</strong>ten finely<br />

granular. Ch- 36<br />

36 Asci predominantly 12-16 spored. Sp. 9-13 x 5-6<br />

µm . Catinaria neuschildii<br />

36* Asci 8-spored . Catinaria atropurpurea<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Catillaria s.str.<br />

Catillaria atomarioides (Müll.Arg.) Kilias<br />

In hilly to montane, rarely higher sites on hard,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten mineral rich silicate rock on m.-r. well<br />

lighted habitats, e.g. in open forests, pioneer, on<br />

slightly irrigated rocks, m.acidoph.-subneutroph.<br />

– s’bor-atl-mieur(subatl)-med – rare (R); Sch,<br />

additionally Ofr, Obay, Westf<br />

Catillaria chalybeia (Borrer) Massal.<br />

Up to the tree line on silicate rock, at least on<br />

subneutral and moderately acid substrates, thus<br />

on rocks <strong>of</strong> basic or slightly lime impregnated<br />

silicate rocks, frequent on walls, but not<br />

overgrowing mortar, also on tiles, also on<br />

sometimes flooded or short time overflowing<br />

boulders in brooks, usually on semi-shaded<br />

surfaces, subneutroph.-m.acidoph., mesoph.hygroph.,<br />

(r.skioph.)m.-r.photoph., a-/m.r.nitroph.<br />

– bor(atl)-mieur-med(mo) – r.rare, on<br />

anthropogenic substrates scattered in the silicate<br />

regions; near naturally occurring e.g. Sch, Vog,<br />

Eif<br />

Catillaria lenticularia (Ach.) Th.Fr.<br />

Up into the alpine zone on carbonate rocks, rarer<br />

on calcareous or dunged silicate rocks, usually<br />

on steep- to overhanging surfaces on well lighted<br />

to radiation protected sites, basiph., r.skioph.r.(s.)photoph.,<br />

m.nitroph. – mieur-med – r.rare:<br />

SJu, Ju, FrJu, Hü, Ne, HRh, Ml, Saar, Th, Al<br />

Catillaria nigroclavata (Nyl.) Schuler<br />

Up into the montane sites above all species on<br />

mineral- or nutrient-rich bark <strong>of</strong> deciduous trees<br />

on the branches and trunks, above all on freestanding<br />

avenue- field- and garden trees, toxic<br />

tolerant, also endures eutrophication by dung<br />

emitted dust, e.g. even on green algae sites with<br />

Scoliciosp. chlor., subneutroph.-m.acidoph.,<br />

xeroph. -mesoph., photoph., m.-r.nitroph., e.g. in<br />

the Physcietum adscend. – s’bor-med – r.rare (3);<br />

e.g. Sch, SJu, Ju, Bo, Ne, SFW. Rh, O, Sp, Bit,<br />

Th<br />

Catillaria s.l.<br />

Catillaria alba Coppins & Vèzda<br />

In submontane and montane, high precipitation<br />

sites on old debarked deciduous tree stumps on ±<br />

rain sheltered flanks in open forests (e.g. oakbeech<br />

forests) – mieur-smed – v.rare (1); süSch<br />

(Säckingen)<br />

Catillaria detractula (Nyl.) Oliv.<br />

148


Usually on lime-rich rocks up into montane sites<br />

on sunny, warm habitats, basiph., photoph. –<br />

s’mieur-med – rare (R); Ju<br />

Catillaria erysiboides (Nyl.) Th.Fr.<br />

In montane-high montane sites on decaying<br />

wood, e.g. on the cross-section <strong>of</strong> old tree<br />

stumps, like e.g. Xylographa par. – bor-mieur –<br />

rare (1); süSch, Vog, Ju, Eif, ThW<br />

Catillaria minuta (Massal.) Lettau<br />

Up into the montane zone on lime-rich rocks,<br />

above all limestone, prefers sites away from the<br />

sun on vertical surfaces and overhangs, usually in<br />

valleys and ravines; basiph., r.skioph.m.(r.)photoph.,<br />

m.-r.hygroph., e.g. with C. picila<br />

– (s’)mieur-smed-mo – rare; SJu-Ju-FrJu, süHü<br />

Catillaria picila (Massal.) Coppins (Lecidea p.<br />

(Massal.) Nyl., C. anomaloides auct.)<br />

Up to the tree line, rarely above, ecology very<br />

like C. minuta and <strong>of</strong>ten associated with it –<br />

mieur-med – rare; SJu-Ju-FrJu, süHü, Al<br />

LIT.: KILIAS 1981, PURVIS ET AL. 1992, VAINIO 1934<br />

Catinaria Vainio<br />

(Determination ↑ Catillaria)<br />

Introduction<br />

The Catinaria species are crustose lichens with a<br />

simple thallus with green algae, light brown to<br />

blackish apothecia with a later <strong>of</strong>ten pressed<br />

back proper margin and two-celled colorless<br />

spores. The indigenous species are rare, possibly<br />

strongly threatened wood- and bark dwelling<br />

(deciduous trees, fir) humid forests. They are<br />

already for a long time no more to be found.<br />

They occur from the boreal zone to central<br />

Europe and partly up into the mountains <strong>of</strong> the<br />

mediterranean region.<br />

Genus Characteristics<br />

Crustose lichens with a thallus with green algae<br />

definitely sessile into the substrate. Ap. with ±<br />

definite biatorine proper margin, light brown to<br />

black, concave to flat. Exc. interior rather light,<br />

exterior colored, <strong>of</strong> cemented hyphae. Hyp.<br />

colorless to pale brown. Hym. blue. Epihym.<br />

colorless to brown. Paraphyses simple to forked<br />

and sparsely reticulate, slightly thickened above.<br />

Asci clavate, exterior with I+ blue gelatin layer,<br />

with I+ (K/I+) uniform blue tholus or with<br />

apparent non-amyloid axial mass, with <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

indefinite ocular chamber. Sp. 8 to 16,<br />

ellipsoidal. Ch-.<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Catinaria atropurpurea (Schaerer) Vèzda &<br />

Poelt (Catillaria a. (Schaerer) Th.Fr.)<br />

Up into high montane sites on wood and bark<br />

especially old deciduous-, rarely conifer trees, on<br />

the trunk and trunk base, also on tree stumps, on<br />

humid, usually not sunny habitats, subneutroph.m(r.)acidoph.,<br />

hygroph., a(-m.) nitroph., e.g. in<br />

the Lobarion – bor-med-mo – rare (0); Sch. Vog,<br />

Ju, Do, Av, Al, Eif, ThW<br />

Catinaria neuschildii (Körber) P.James<br />

(Catillaria n. (Körber) Th.Fr.)<br />

Like C. atropurpurea (↑) – bor-smed – v.rare<br />

(0); süSch<br />

LIT.: PURVIS ET AL. 1992, VAINIO 1934<br />

Catolechia Flotow<br />

(Determination ↑ Buellia)<br />

Introduction<br />

C. wahlenbergii, the single species <strong>of</strong> the genus,<br />

is distinguished by the brilliant citron yellow,<br />

thick squamules to foliose, lobed at the margin,<br />

black underside thallus, that is attached by strong<br />

black rhizine strands. The black lecideine<br />

apothecia sit between the squamules. The lichen<br />

resides on moist soil filled fissures <strong>of</strong> silicate<br />

rocks on cold, habitats away from the sun in high<br />

precipitation high mountain sites. The arcticalpine<br />

species has continued to live between the<br />

northern part <strong>of</strong> the area and the alpine<br />

mountains (Carpathians, Alps, Pyrenese) as a<br />

small relict population in the high central<br />

mountains, in the Harz, in the Bohemian Forest,<br />

in the Riesen mountains and the high Black<br />

Forest. In the Black Forest only a single<br />

149


individual has been found; here they are<br />

threatened with extinction.<br />

Genus Characteristics<br />

Thallus squamulose-foliose, folded-lobes<br />

(squamules elongated) at the margin, greenyellow,<br />

underside black, attached to the substrate<br />

with strong black rhizine strands, very thick<br />

structure, with a thick epinecral layer, photobiont<br />

coccoid green algae. Ap. black, with thin, later<br />

disappearing proper margin, sitting between and<br />

at the margin <strong>of</strong> the squamules. Exc. dark red-<br />

brown. Hyp. dark brown, out hyphae lying<br />

radially. Hym. I+ blue. Epihym. dark olive<br />

green to blackish. Paraphyses richly branching<br />

and reticulate, scarcely thickened above. Asci<br />

clavate, exterior with I+ blue gelatin envelope,<br />

the young with a strong tholus, <strong>of</strong> which the part<br />

toward the ascus lumen I+ weak blue, at the tip<br />

directly underneath the outer wall layer a disk<br />

shaped I+ intensively blue structure. Sp. 2-(4-)<br />

celled, without perispore. Ch: Pulvinic acid<br />

derivatives.<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Catolechia wahlenbergii (Ach.) Körber (Buellia<br />

w. (Ach.) Sheard, B. Pulchella (Schrader) Tuck.)<br />

In alpine, very high precipitation sites, very rare<br />

on high central mountain peaks, in garden rich<br />

humus, moist fissures <strong>of</strong> silicate rocks, on thin<br />

soil layers over rock, on cold shaded, but <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

well lighted habitats, r.-v.acidoph., hygroph.,<br />

m.photoph. 00 arct-mieur-alp – v.rare (1) süSch<br />

(Feldberg), BayW*, Hz*, Al<br />

LIT.: HAFELLNER 1978.<br />

Cecidonia Triebel & Rambold<br />

(Determination ↑ Lecidea Pt 6)<br />

Introduction<br />

The genus includes lichen dwelling, gall<br />

producing fungi (at this time 2 species). C.<br />

umbonella produces small rounded white galls<br />

on the thallus <strong>of</strong> the Lecidea lapicida group. The<br />

arctic-alpine species is known in central Europe<br />

in addition to the Alps only from one site in the<br />

high Black Forest.<br />

Genus Characteristics<br />

Lichen dwelling, fungi producing galls in the<br />

thallus <strong>of</strong> the host. Galls white to light beige, -6<br />

mm wide. Ap. black, with proper margin, disk<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten with navel. Exc. exterior carbonaceous<br />

black, interior lighter. Hyp. ± brown. Hym. with<br />

brown pigmented hyphal strands, I+ blue (to<br />

red). Epihym. (olive)-brown. Paraphyses<br />

reticulate, frequently branched. Asci clavate to<br />

subcylindric, tholus Lecidea like. Sp. 1-celled,<br />

ellipsoidal. Pycnosp. bacillar.<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Cecidonia umbonella (Nyl.) Triebel & Rambold<br />

(Lecidea u. Nyl.)<br />

In alpine sites on silicate rock parasitic on<br />

Lecidea lapicida (↑), on ± exposed rocks – Arctalp<br />

– v.rare (R); süSch (Belchen), Alps<br />

LIT.: TRIEBEL & RAMBOLD 1988<br />

Cephalophysis (Hertel) Kilias<br />

(Determination ↑ Lecidea PT 3)<br />

Introduction and Genus Characteristics<br />

C. leucospila, the single European species <strong>of</strong> the<br />

genus, is an arctic-alpine crustose lichen <strong>of</strong><br />

calcareous rock, which earlier was counted as<br />

Lecidea because <strong>of</strong> their lecideine black<br />

apothecia and single celled spores. The species<br />

is distinguished from others, e.g. by Caloplaca<br />

species by the ascus type (Teloschistes type).<br />

Paraphyses clavate-capitate, septate, shrunken at<br />

the septa, loose. Epihym. blue-green. Hyp.<br />

olive-brown to brown-black. Exc. reddish to<br />

wine-red, exterior brown-black. Thallus whitish<br />

to endolithic.<br />

LIT.: HERTEL 1967, KÄRNEFELT 1989*, KILIAS 1985<br />

Cetraria Ach.<br />

150


(Key includes Cetrelia, Cornicularia, Platismatia,<br />

Vulpicida)<br />

Introduction<br />

Cetraria includes quite various appearing foliose<br />

and fruticose lichens with mostly olive- to dark<br />

brown or pale greenish thalli. The fruticose<br />

lichens have in part band-form surface to<br />

channeled or almost round stalk thallus segments.<br />

The brown or black lecanorine apothecia sit as<br />

well as the partially stalked pycnidia marginally.<br />

Many species remain generally sterile; the<br />

propagation occurs in these cases by thallus<br />

fragments or soredia. The genus is<br />

cosmopolitan, but is distributed primarily in the<br />

cold and temperate regions <strong>of</strong> the northern<br />

hemisphere. The deep yellow species<br />

(Vulpicida) was recently separated from<br />

Cetraria. In <strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong> 11 species, <strong>of</strong><br />

the 12 <strong>of</strong> those existing in Germany today. An<br />

ongoing classification shows the independence <strong>of</strong><br />

the pale greenish species the C. cuccullata/C.<br />

nivalis-group (Flavocetraria), the C. commixta/<br />

hepatizon-group and other groups, which are<br />

represented in Germany respectively by C.<br />

laureri (Tuckneraria), C. oakesiana<br />

(Allocetraria) and C. sepicola.. Cetraria in the<br />

narrowest sense, erect growing brown fruticose<br />

lichens, includes only 15 species.<br />

Several Cetrarias grow on acid bark<br />

especially in cool mountain sites, thus C.<br />

chlorophylla, C. laureri, C. oakesiana and C.<br />

sepincola. While later many are present on cold,<br />

continental sites (above all in the Moors), C.<br />

laureri and especially C. oakesiana remain<br />

restricted to oceanic, high precipitation regions.<br />

The silicate lichens C. commixta and C.<br />

hepatizon belong to the arctic-alpine floral<br />

element; which exhibit in central Europe a<br />

disjunct area with occurrences in a few central<br />

mountains, where they dwell on exposed rocks<br />

on high lying sea boulders. C. islandica, C.<br />

ericetorum, C. aculeata, C. muricata, C.<br />

cucullata and C. nivalis are fruticose erect<br />

growing species <strong>of</strong> the dwarf shrubby heath and<br />

thin turf commonly over silicate rock, C.<br />

islandica and C. aculeata commonly also over<br />

lime. While C. cucullata, and C. nivalis occupy<br />

wind exposed sites and commonly do fall short<br />

<strong>of</strong> the tree line, one finds the “Iceland moss” (C.<br />

islandica) and C. aculeata on rocky clearings, in<br />

open forests, coastal boulders and thin turfs <strong>of</strong><br />

high mountain to into lowlands. C. muricata<br />

takes a between site and reaches its highest<br />

distribution in montane to alpine sites.<br />

Like many near natural oceanic species, C.<br />

oakesiana and C. laureri are extremely<br />

threatened in the region <strong>of</strong> richly structured<br />

forests. Necessary for their preservation are<br />

specific measures in dispute with the forest<br />

authorities. Also very threatened is C. sepincola<br />

dwelling predominantly on birch. C. cucullata,<br />

C. ericetorum and C. muricata must remain as<br />

very threatened outside alpine Germany because<br />

<strong>of</strong> the insignificant number <strong>of</strong> isolated<br />

occurrences outside <strong>of</strong> alpine Germany. The<br />

occurrence in the Ries and in the East Alp are<br />

obliterated. Of the three previously occurring a<br />

short time ago in the Black Forest, two<br />

populations are extinct because <strong>of</strong> afforestation.<br />

In <strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong> C. aculeata is also<br />

threatened, while it is somewhat frequent in west<br />

Germany. Even the populations <strong>of</strong> C. islandica<br />

decrease conditioned by soil enrichment and<br />

afforestation <strong>of</strong> thin turn. On the other hand, the<br />

area <strong>of</strong> C. chlorophylla has increased in recent<br />

years.<br />

C. cucullata is arctic-alpine distributed, as is<br />

C. nivalis; they are except in the central<br />

European Alps occurring in very isolated in a<br />

few high central mountains. The area <strong>of</strong> C.<br />

islandica reaches from the arctic to central<br />

Europe with south Germany <strong>of</strong>fshoots. Almost<br />

as widely distributed are C. aculeata and C.<br />

muricata, yet in recent years in southern central<br />

Europe and south Europe they are largely limited<br />

to mountain sites. C. ericetorum is a borealcentral<br />

European lichen quite lacking in the<br />

arctic and south Europe. C. chlorophylla and C.<br />

sepincola are distributed in boreal conifer forests<br />

and penetrating into mountains in central Europe;<br />

also these species advance into the higher<br />

mountains at least isolated in the northern<br />

Mediterranean region. C. laureri and C.<br />

oakesiana are in the alpine mountains <strong>of</strong> central<br />

Europe (up into the Caucasus) and their environs<br />

and lacking in north Europe.<br />

Genus Characteristics and Determination<br />

Thallus foliose to erect fruticose, with concave or<br />

almost tubular or almost cylindric-angular thallus<br />

segments, rarely almost cushion-like and flat<br />

lobed, brown, olive, greenish-white to pale<br />

151


yellowish, sometimes sorediate or isidiate on the<br />

lobe margins, dorsiventrally constructed and the<br />

underside <strong>of</strong>ten differently colored, or bilaterally<br />

to ± radially symmetrical, underside or<br />

marginally <strong>of</strong>ten with pseudocyphellae, both<br />

sides (all sides) with cortex (cortex paraplectenchymatous<br />

or prosoplectenchymatous), coccoid<br />

green algae. Ap. ± marginal, brown to brown-<br />

black with thalloid margin. Hyp. colorless.<br />

Epihym. red-brown, brown, dark brown.<br />

Paraphyses branched, rarely reticulate bound,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten thickened above. Asci ± clavate,<br />

Lecanora-type. Sp. 1-celled, ellipsoidal to<br />

spherical. Pycn. sunken, projecting to stalked,<br />

pycnosp. short cylindrical to bacillar, dumb-bell<br />

form, fusiform. Ch: Protolichesterinic acid<br />

widespread, isolated Fumarprotocetraric acid,<br />

Alectoronic acid above all, in a few species<br />

Usnic acid. In the narrowest sense Cetraria<br />

includes brown to olive-brown fruticose lichens<br />

with band-form to almost cylindric segments and<br />

paraplectenchymatous upper cortex as well as<br />

point- to short linear pseudocyphellae on the<br />

lower side.<br />

1 Sitting loosely on soil or raw humus and mosses,<br />

fruticose, ± erect, occasionally even loosely on<br />

mossy silicate rock. Segments band-like flattened<br />

to almost tubular or ± cylindric. Ap. generally<br />

lacking . 2<br />

1* Thallus on bark or rock, foliose, decumbent or<br />

erect or small shrubby-cushion like . 8<br />

2 Thallus pale yellow-greenish to yellowish- white<br />

or strongly yellow, 2-4(5) cm high, medulla R- 3<br />

2* Thallus light to dark brown . . 5<br />

3 Thallus deep yellow, with yellow medulla, erect,<br />

not channeled. On wind exposed alpine<br />

calcareous turfs. Usnic acid, Vulpinic acid,<br />

Pinastrinic acid. – n’mieur-mieur-alp – Alpine<br />

Vulpicida tubulosus<br />

Schaerer) Mattson & Lai<br />

(C. tubulosa (Schaerer) Zopf)<br />

3* Thallus pale yellow-greenish, yellowish-white,<br />

greenish-white, with white medulla, rigidcartilaginous,<br />

ascending to erect. Usnic acid,<br />

Protolichesterinic acid 4<br />

4 Thallus segment channeled in curving to tubular,<br />

smooth, <strong>of</strong>ten violet to reddish at the base.<br />

* . C. cucullata<br />

4* Thallus segment not or only weakly channeled, ±<br />

flattened, but wrinkled-pitted, yellow-brown at the<br />

base . C. nivalis<br />

5 Thallus segment at least partially ± channeled,<br />

broader lobes even band-like flat, with stalk-like<br />

outgrowths at the margins, light to dark brown, on<br />

shaded habitats even olive to partly brownish-<br />

white, <strong>of</strong>ten reddish colored at the base, 2-6 cm<br />

high. Protolichesterinic acid 6<br />

5* Thallus segment tubular to slightly flattened, never<br />

channeled, becoming ± symmetrical, -1 mm thick,<br />

covered with thorny projections, shiny brown to<br />

black-brown, -4 cm high, producing turfs, strongly<br />

branched. Thallus/medulla R-. Lichesterinic acid,<br />

Protolichesterinic acid. Sometimes difficult to<br />

separate . 7<br />

6 Medulla R-. Thallus segment very narrow, -1 mm<br />

wide, strongly channeled to rolled tubular, dark<br />

brown to brown-black. Whitish pseudocyph.<br />

commonly limited to the margins <strong>of</strong> the thallus<br />

segment. * C. ericetorum<br />

6* Medulla P+ yellow to orange, K-, C-. Thallus<br />

segment (1)2-10(20) mm wide, usually weakly<br />

enrolled, brown to dark brown, in the shade very<br />

light (olive to pale brownish). “Underside”<br />

usually lighter, <strong>of</strong>ten whitish. Pseudocyph. on the<br />

combined underside, white, elliptical to rounded.<br />

Fumarprotocetraric acid, ± Protocetraric acid<br />

* C. islandica<br />

7 Thallus segment usually rather uneven, irregularly<br />

angular pitted, ± flattened, -1 mm thick, loosely<br />

branched. Medulla in the older branches very<br />

loose * . C. aculeata<br />

7* Thallus segment not irregularly angular pitted,<br />

commonly ± rounded in cross section, but even<br />

flattened, -0.5 mm thick, relatively thickly<br />

branched, therefore (young) <strong>of</strong>ten almost cushionlike.<br />

Medulla remaining solid * C. muricata<br />

8 Thallus on rock, brown to black-brown, ± shiny,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten with ap 9<br />

8* On bark, wood, only exceptionally on rock (above<br />

all 13) . 11<br />

9 Thallus dwarf shrubby (almost shrubby cushion),<br />

tightly attached, ± ascending from the substrate, -2<br />

cm high, black-brown, with both sides flattened,<br />

sparsely forked branched, -1 mm wide (widened<br />

toward the ends) thallus segment, without<br />

marginal warts, without rhizines. Ap. terminal,<br />

thallus colored. Ch- Cornicularia normoerica<br />

9* Thallus ± decumbent, thallus segments narrow,<br />

usually about 1-1.5(2) mm wide, 5-15(20) mm<br />

long, irregularly pinately branched and growing<br />

over one another, margins somewhat enrolled,<br />

thereby slightly concave, with scattered marginal,<br />

clavate to spherical black “warts” (Pycn., pycnosp.<br />

4-6 x 1 µm). With scattered rhizines 10<br />

10 Underside usually dark brown. Medulla K-, P-,<br />

C-, KC+ rose/KC-. Pycnosp. ellipsoidal to<br />

fusiform. Ch- or ± α-Collatolic acid, ±<br />

Alectoronic acid C. commixta<br />

10* Underside usually dark brown to brown- black.<br />

Medulla K+ yellow to yellow-red, P+ yellow, C-,<br />

KC+ yellow-orange. Pycnosp. dumb-bell<br />

shaped. Stictic acid, ± Norstictic acid .<br />

C. hepatizon<br />

11 Thallus upper side brown to dull olive,<br />

ascending. Medulla R-. Protolichesterinic acid .12<br />

152


11* Thallus otherwise colored. Ap. very rare . 13<br />

12 Thallus thickly covered with brown ap, without<br />

isidia, thickly dwarf shrubby to almost cushionlike,<br />

round, usually up to 2 cm wide and 1(1.5)<br />

cm high, brown to dark brown, usually shiny,<br />

underside only a little lighter. Almost always on<br />

branches <strong>of</strong> birch, on planted Scots pine, wood. *<br />

. C. sepincola<br />

12* Thallus usually without ap., with marginal isidia<br />

or isidiate border soralia, usually <strong>of</strong> little erect<br />

irregularly curved, flat to concave, at the margin<br />

consisting <strong>of</strong> undulating lobes, brown-olive to<br />

dark brown, when moist olive-green, underside<br />

light brown to whitish, wrinkled.<br />

* C. chlorophylla<br />

13 Thallus deep yellow to citron yellow, medulla<br />

yellow, at the margin with swollen yellow border<br />

soralia, with close lying, ascending margins, -5<br />

mm wide lobes. Usnic acid, Vulpinic acid,<br />

Pinastrinic acid Vulpicida pinastri<br />

13* Thallus pale yellow-greenish or gray, bluish-<br />

gray, brown-gray. Medulla white . 14<br />

14 Thallus yellow-greenish to pale gray-greenish,<br />

undersides whitish to light brown, K-, P-.<br />

Medulla R-. Usnic acid, Protolichesterinic acid.<br />

Rare montane/high montane species. Lobes -5<br />

mm wide . 15<br />

14* Thallus gray, bluish-gray, on exposed sites even<br />

browned, undersides brown to black, with age<br />

also white, usually large, lobes 0.5-2 cm wide.<br />

Cortex K+ yellow. Atranorin 16<br />

15 Thallus undersides brown, without pseudocyph.,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten with border soralia at the margin, robust,<br />

rather close lying. Pycnosp. 7-11 x 0.8-1 µm.<br />

Caperatic acid, (Lichesterinic acid)<br />

* C. oakesiana<br />

15* Thallus underside whitish to light brownish, with<br />

isolated rounded pseudocyph., border soralia<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten scarcely developed, thallus segment usually<br />

clearly ascending at the margin. Pycnosp. 3-4.5 x<br />

0.5-0.8 µm. * C. laureri<br />

16 Thallus upper side without scattered white<br />

puncti, smooth to <strong>of</strong>ten unevenly wrinkled,<br />

sometimes dark flecked, lobes broad, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

curved, commonly not uniformly rounded,<br />

strongly incised, <strong>of</strong>ten strongly ascending, at the<br />

margins with soralia and/or coralloid isidia (then<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten crinkled) or naked, underside dark brown to<br />

black or black flecked, in moist sites even white<br />

flecked or almost entirely white, with only<br />

isolated rhizines. Medulla R-. Caperatic acid *.<br />

Very variable species, commonly with<br />

Pseudevernia and Hypogymnia physodes .<br />

Platismatia glauca<br />

16* Thallus upper side with fine white, scattered<br />

puncti or short elliptical flecks (Pseudocyph.),<br />

smooth, with broad, regularly rounded lobes, at<br />

times bordered with white swollen border soralia<br />

and above all here ascending, undersides black,<br />

with scattered rhizines, brown at the margin,<br />

without rhizines (Cetrelia olivetorum s.l.) . 17<br />

17 Medulla C-, KC- or KC+ rose, K-, P-. ±<br />

Perlatolic acid, ± Imbricaric acid.<br />

* Cetrelia cetrarioides<br />

17! Medulla C+/KC+ rose-red, K-, P-. Olivetoric<br />

acid * . Cetrelia olivetorum<br />

17* Medulla C-, KC+ rose, K-, P-. α-Collatolic acid,<br />

Alectoronic acid * . Cetrelia chicitae<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

(Allocetraria Kurokawa & Lai)<br />

Cetraria oakesiana Tuck. (Allocetraria o.<br />

(Tuck.) Randl. & Thell)<br />

In high montane, oceanic, very high precipitation<br />

sites usually on conifer trees (spruce, fir),<br />

commonly at the trunk base, on relatively<br />

constant, v.-e.humid, cool, rather long time snow<br />

covered habitats in the interior <strong>of</strong> beech-spruce<br />

and spruce-fir forests, mostly in the<br />

neighborhood <strong>of</strong> brooks and water falls,<br />

r.acidoph., m.photoph.(-r.skioph.),<br />

substrathygroph., anitroph., e.g. with<br />

Menegazzia, Bryoria bic. (↑) - mieur-pralp –<br />

v.rare (1); süSch (2x), Al<br />

(Cetraria s. str.)<br />

Cetraria aculeata (Schreber) Fr. (Cornicularia<br />

a. (Schreber) Ach., C. tenuissima (L.) Zahlbr.,<br />

Coelocaulon aculeatum (Schreber) Link)<br />

In hill and montane, usually low precipitation to<br />

moderately high precipitation sites on sandy soil,<br />

level, sandy or fine gravel acid loam and stony<br />

soil, even on calcareous soils, in openings in<br />

silicate and lime turfs (Nardo-Callunetea,<br />

Festuco-Brometea), in rock debris community.<br />

(Seslerio-Festucion), in sandy meadow<br />

(Corynephorion), in open Scots pine forest, stony<br />

oak forest (Luzulo-Quercetum), always on well<br />

lighted usually warm summer, sunny sites on dry<br />

soil with sparse vegetation, v.acidoph.subneutroph.,<br />

r.xeroph., r.-v.photoph., Char.<br />

Cladonion arb., above all in Cladonietum fol. –<br />

bor-med-mo – rare (2); above all RhSch and Pf,<br />

also Vog, He, Th, Fr, v.rare nöRh, Rh-Mn-T,<br />

Sch, O, Sp, Ju, Ries etc.<br />

Cetraria ericetorum Opiz (C. crispa (Ach.)<br />

Nyl., C. tenuifolia (Retz) R.H.Howe)<br />

Like C. cucullata (↑), yet also on less extreme<br />

wind exposed sites and more <strong>of</strong>ten even in<br />

153


montane sites, e.g. in sunny calcareous turfs, here<br />

like C. aculeata (↑) – bor-mieur-mo/alp(-smedalp)<br />

– v.rare (1); Ju, Sju, süSch, Vog, ThW, Erz,<br />

Rothaargeb., Hz, Al<br />

Cetraria islandica (L.) Ach. – Icelandic Moss<br />

From Lowland up to well above the tree line on<br />

usually rather to very acid, low nutrient sand and<br />

sandy loam, turf and stony soils, but also on level<br />

lime rich soils, usually on well lighted habitats,<br />

as in silicate and calcareous turfs, dwarf shrub<br />

heaths, open Scots pine forest, high moors and<br />

moor forests, but also surviving on moderately<br />

well lighted sites, <strong>of</strong> rather wide ecological<br />

amplitude, in lower sites like C. aculeata (↑), in<br />

higher sites even on very wind exposed ridges<br />

and such things (e.g. like C. cucullata ↑) as well<br />

as on rather long time snow covered sites, the<br />

habitat amplitude includes all reindeer lichens,<br />

acidoph.-euryion (on calcareous subsoil very<br />

loosely attached), (r.)m.hygroph.-r.xeroph.,<br />

anitroph., Peltigeretalia (Char.) and others – arctmieur(-med-mo)<br />

-r.rare (3); Al, Sch & Vog<br />

moderately frequent, Erz, BayW, Fr, r.rare Ju,<br />

FrJu, but rare to v.rare (e.g. Ts, Eif)<br />

Cetraria muricata (Ach.) Eckfeldt (Cornicularia<br />

m. (Ach.) Ach., Coelocaulon muricatum (Ach.)<br />

Laundon)<br />

In montane and high montane, high precipitation<br />

sites in cool-moist peat bogs and on silicate rocks<br />

over moss cover and humus as well as in very<br />

open to the wind, in winter almost permanently<br />

snow-free openings in meager turf in central<br />

mountain high sites (like C. cucullata ↑), in<br />

north Germany also on habitats with C. aculeata,<br />

m.-r.(s.)acidoph., r.-v.photoph., in the<br />

“Cladonietum mitis and related communities. –<br />

arct-bor-med-alp – rare (1); Rhön, Eif, Vgb, Ts,<br />

Sch, Vog, BayW, ThW, Erz, Hz<br />

(Flavocetraria Kärnef. & Thell)<br />

Cetraria cucullata (Bellardi) Ach.<br />

Above the tree line in very wind exposed meager<br />

turfs and openings <strong>of</strong> dwarf shrub heath, on<br />

ridges and rock margins, commonly on very acid<br />

silicate soils, isolated also on coarse limestone<br />

soils, on cold, early-snow free, high precipitation,<br />

but <strong>of</strong>ten desiccated habitats, relict (or<br />

distributed by birds?) also in low sites in<br />

openings in vegetation, m.-v.acidoph.,<br />

v.anemoph., anitroph. – arct-alp – v.rare, beyond<br />

the Alps (1); süSch (Feldberg, Bernau+,<br />

Wittenschwand+), Vog, Ju (Herbrechtingen +),<br />

Ries ?+, BayW, Hz, Al<br />

Cetraria nivalis (l.) Ach.<br />

Like C. cucullata (↑), yet more strongly limited<br />

to extremely wind exposed locations, Char.<br />

Cetrarion niv. – arct-alp – BayW, ThW,<br />

Lüneburger Heide*, Al<br />

(Tuckneraria Randl. & Thell)<br />

Cetraria laureri Krempelh. (Tuckneraria l.<br />

(Krempelh.) Randl. & Thell)<br />

In montane and high montane sites on cool to<br />

cold, high precipitation, heavy snow habitats on<br />

conifers, on the trunk and on the branches,<br />

usually in spruce-fir forests, rather like Bryoria<br />

bicolor (↑), yet also on decidedly cold air<br />

accumulating sites, e.g. like Hypogymnia bitteri<br />

(↑), r.acidoph., r.-m.photoph., anitroph., in the<br />

Pseudevernietum, Thelotremetum with<br />

Menegazzia – mieur-pralp – v.rare (1); süSch, Al<br />

(r.rare)<br />

Other Species<br />

Cetraria chlorophylla (Willd.) Vainio<br />

Above all in montane-high montane sites, but<br />

today also even in lower sites in addition, on acid<br />

(even though made acid by air pollution) bark <strong>of</strong><br />

deciduous trees and conifers on rather well<br />

lighted to rather poorly lighted, usually cool to<br />

cold, temperate <strong>of</strong>ten continental influenced<br />

habitats, on trunk and branches, in higher sites<br />

above all on conifers, like Hypogymnia farin.<br />

(↑), on lower sites usually on free-standing<br />

deciduous trees, above all oak, linden, e.g. like<br />

Hypog. tubulosa (↑) and Pseudevernia (↑), Char.<br />

Pseudevernietum – bor-smed-mo(-med-mo) –<br />

r.rare; above all Sch, Al, O, SFW, RhSch, HeBgl<br />

Cetraria commixta (Nyl.) Th.Fr. (C. fahlunensis<br />

sensu Vainio)<br />

Like C. hepatizon (↑), but supposedly more<br />

limited to cold-moist very high precipitation sites<br />

– arct-bor-mieur-alp – v.rare (1); süSch, nöSch,<br />

Vog, BayW, Erz, Hz, Alps<br />

Cetraria hepatizon (Ach.) Vainio<br />

In high montane and alpine (more rarely<br />

montane) high precipitation sites on silicate rock<br />

on usually rather to very open to the wind<br />

154


habitats, like Parmelia stygia (↑), Char.<br />

Umbilicarion cyl. – arct-bor-h’mo/alp – rare (3);<br />

süSch, Vog, BayW, Erz, Hz; v.rare nöSch, Rhön,<br />

?Ts, ThW, also Al<br />

Cetraria sepincola (Ehrh.) Ach.<br />

In montane to subalpine, mostly high<br />

precipitation sites on temporarily very cold, late<br />

frost endangered, high snowfall, rather variable<br />

humidity habitats on acid bark and wood, in cold<br />

air accumulating basins, in high and moss<br />

overgrown, on peat bogs, below the tree line<br />

almost only on bog-birch (rarely on alder), above<br />

the tree line on dwarf pine with Parmeliopsis<br />

hyp. (↑), r.-v.acidoph., r.-v.photoph., hygroph.,<br />

v.ombroph., anitroph., in the region in the<br />

Parmeliopsidetum and Pseudevernietum – bormieur-mo(-smed-subalp)<br />

– rare (2); Sch, Vog,<br />

Rhön, BayW, Av; v.rare O, Sp, Ju, Hu, Eif,<br />

Sauerl, Erz.<br />

LIT.: ANDERS 1928, HILLMANN 1936, KÄRNEFELT 1979,<br />

1986 KÄRNEFELT & THELL 1993*, KÄRNEFELT ET AL. 1992,<br />

POELT & VÈZDA 1981<br />

Cetrelia W.Culb. & C.Culb.<br />

(Determination ↑ Cetraria)<br />

Introduction<br />

The Cetrelia species are light to bluish gray<br />

foliose lichens with broad, rounded lobes with<br />

black, marginally brown underside and few<br />

attachment threads. Characteristic are fine,<br />

punctiform to short streak-form white<br />

pseudocyphellae on the upper side. The<br />

apothecia are rarely produced; they stand near<br />

the lobe margins and are perforated in the center.<br />

Several species produce border soralia.<br />

The genus (ca. 15 species) is predominantly<br />

distributed over the northern hemisphere,<br />

especially eastern and southeastern Asia. The<br />

three occurring in Germany, are closely related,<br />

but genetically isolated species – they are also<br />

chemical races – occurring in west Europe up<br />

into southern Fennoscandia and in oceanic<br />

regions <strong>of</strong> central Europe especially on<br />

deciduous trees in near natural forests. They are<br />

clearly in regression in the last decade.<br />

Genus Characteristics<br />

Thallus foliose, gray, blue-gray, even browned in<br />

places. Lobes broadly rounded, upper side with<br />

punctiform to elliptical pseudocyphellae, in the<br />

case <strong>of</strong> the indigenous species with border<br />

soralia, underside black, brown at the margin,<br />

with simple rhizines. Cortex ± paraplectenchymatous.<br />

Photobiont Trebouxia. Ap. central- to<br />

marginally located, disk brown to brown-red,<br />

usually perforated, with thalloid margin. Asci <strong>of</strong><br />

the Lecanora type. Sp. 1-celled, ellipsoidal.<br />

Pycnosp. short bacillar, with slight swelling<br />

toward the ends. Ch: Cortex with Atranorin,<br />

medulla with depsides and depsidones.<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Cetrelia cetrarioides (Del. ex Duby) W.Culb. &<br />

C.Culb. (Parmelia c. (Del. ex Duby) Nyl.)<br />

In montane and high montane, rarely even<br />

submontane sites, above all in high precipitation,<br />

relatively oceanic regions, on the bark <strong>of</strong><br />

deciduous trees and spruce, in lower sites like<br />

Parmotrema chinense (↑), in higher sites like<br />

Menegazzia and Lobaria pulm. (↑), m.r.acidoph.,<br />

m.-r.photoph., r.-s.hygroph.,<br />

anitroph., in the Parmelietum revol.,<br />

Thelotremetum with Menegazzia, Lobarion –<br />

s’bor-subatl-med(subatl) – rare (3); Vog, Sch, Al<br />

& SJu r.rare, at times (v.)rare, today strongly in<br />

regression: Ju, Ne, SFW, Bo, Do, Av, PfW, Hu,<br />

We, Eif, O, Sp, Ts, He, ThW, Mn<br />

Cetrelia chicitae W.Culb. & C.Culb.<br />

In submontane, mild sites on the bark <strong>of</strong><br />

deciduous trees in forests, e.g. like Pertusaria<br />

hymenea – atl – v.rare (1); SFW (1x)<br />

Cetrelia olivetorum (Nyl.) W.Culb. & C.Culb.<br />

(Parmelia o. Nyl.)<br />

In montane and submontane sites, probably<br />

bound less to high precipitation and oceanic<br />

regions than C. cetrarioides, e.g. in the<br />

Parmelietum rev., Pertusarietum amarae –<br />

(v.)rare (3); süSch, Ju, Do, Bo, Ne, nöSch, O<br />

LIT.: CULBERSON & CULBERSON 1968<br />

Chaenotheca (Th.Fr.) Th.Fr.<br />

(Key includes Sclerophora)<br />

155


Introduction<br />

Chaenotheca is distinguished by a stalked<br />

fruiting body with spherical to almost top-<br />

shaped, black, <strong>of</strong>ten yellow-green or whitish<br />

pruinose capitulum, which bears a brown dusty<br />

mass <strong>of</strong> spores and ascus remnants, a so-called<br />

mazaedium. The thallus develops at times as an<br />

almost squamulose, warty to mealy crust, at times<br />

scarcely visible contained in the substrate.<br />

The species lives on bark and wood, Ch.<br />

furfuracea even on mosses, soil and silicate rock.<br />

Typical they are in humid habitats protected from<br />

rain, such as overhanging tree flanks and bark<br />

cracks. Most <strong>of</strong> the species are sensitive to<br />

alteration <strong>of</strong> the microclimate or to air pollution<br />

and regress. Only Ch. chrysocephala and<br />

especially Ch. ferruginea are relatively less<br />

sensitive and have benefited as acidophytes also<br />

by the significant increase <strong>of</strong> conifer forests. Ch.<br />

brachypoda, Ch. brunneola and C. xyloxena are<br />

found usually on decaying conifer wood (stumps<br />

and debarked stems), Ch. gracilenta on old<br />

deciduous tree stumps. Ch. phaeocephala, Ch.<br />

chlorella, Ch. cinerea, Ch. hispidula and Ch.<br />

laevigata grow most frequently on old oaks and<br />

ash, Ch. subroscida and Ch. stemonea on fir<br />

and spruce.<br />

The genus is mainly indigenous to the<br />

temperate and cool regions <strong>of</strong> the earth. Of the<br />

20 species occurring in a greater part <strong>of</strong> both<br />

hemispheres, 15 are known from Germany and<br />

the region. Ch. cinerea is a species <strong>of</strong> the<br />

summer green deciduous forest. All others are<br />

above all in the boreal zone and distributed over<br />

central Europe. In south Europe these lichens<br />

are not lacking, however they have their in most<br />

cases in the mountains are rare.<br />

Genus Characteristics and Determination<br />

Thallus crustose, in the substrate to clearly<br />

developed and usually granular, warty or<br />

squamulose, gray, brownish, yellow, with various<br />

green algae. Ap. stalked, with spherical to top-<br />

shaped capitulum, with or without margin, black,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten pruinose on the capitulum underside and<br />

margin, sometimes the mazaedium pruinose.<br />

Stalk constructed <strong>of</strong> periclinal hyphae. Exc.<br />

scarcely to clearly developed. Paraphyses<br />

sparsely branched. Asci disintegrating early. Sp.<br />

1-celled, spherical, brown to pale brown, rarely<br />

ellipsoidal to cylindric and one or multi-septate.<br />

Ch: in a few species Pulvinic acid derivatives in<br />

the mature, rarely in the thallus, rarely other<br />

substances<br />

Key Hints: Capitulum spherical means: Exc. or<br />

visible margin indefinite; conic =± top-shaped,<br />

margin and exc. usually well developed. Ch-<br />

indicated in the thallus. Lichen substances also in the<br />

ripe ap.<br />

1 Ap. underside <strong>of</strong> the capitulum and the margin<br />

(greenish-)yellow pruinose . 2<br />

1* Ap. capitulum not (greenish-)yellow pruinose.<br />

Sp. spherical . 12<br />

2 Thallus bright yellow to green-yellow, R- . 3<br />

2* Thallus not bright yellow to greenish, Ch- . 5<br />

3 Thallus mealy, green-yellow to citron yellow.<br />

Ap. capitulum ± without margin, spherical, stalk<br />

extensively yellow pruinose. Ap. -2.7 mm high.<br />

Sp. spherical, 2-3 µm. Algae Stichococcus. On<br />

bark, moss, soil, rock. Vulpinic acid, Pulvinic<br />

acid. Pulvinic acid-Lactone Ch. furfuracea<br />

3* Thallus not mealy, algae coccoid 4<br />

4 Thallus olive-yellow to green-gray, granular. Sp.<br />

cylindric. Ch- (Ap.: Vulpinic acid) .<br />

Ch. laevigata (6)<br />

4* Thallus mostly bright yellow, coarse granular to<br />

warty areolate. Ap. capitulum clearly margined,<br />

not spherical, stalk only yellow pruinose above,<br />

otherwise black to brown. Ap. -1.3(1.5) mm<br />

high. Sp. ellipsoidal to almost spherical, 6-9 x 4-<br />

5 µm. Algae chlorococcoid. On bark. Vulpinic<br />

acid . Ch. chrysocephala<br />

5 Sp. predominantly ellipsoidal to cylindric . 6<br />

5* Sp. predominantly spherical . 7<br />

6 Sp. 6-15 x 3-4 µm, mature almost cylindric, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

curved, 1-celled or with 1-3 indefinite septa, with<br />

irregular upper surface. Ap. -1.5(2.5) mm high.<br />

Ap. stalk green-yellow pruinose. Thallus oliveyellow<br />

to gray-green, granular to warty, with<br />

chlorococcoid algae Ch. laevigata<br />

6* sp. 5-7.5 x 2.5-3.5 µm, ellipsoidal, 1-celled. ap. -<br />

1.2 mm high. Ap. stalk only green-yellow<br />

pruinose above. Thallus gray-green, usually<br />

clearly developed, granular, with Stichococcus<br />

algae Ch. chlorella<br />

7 Thallus indefinite, in the substrate . 8<br />

7* Thallus ± definite. Sp. 5.6-7.2 µm. Exc. and<br />

margin well developed. Ap. -1.3 mm high.<br />

Algae chlorococcoid 11<br />

8 Sp. 2.3-4 µm. ap. capitulum ± spherical to ±<br />

hemispherical or top-shaped. Algae Trentepohlia<br />

or Stichococcus 9<br />

8* Sp. larger. Algae Trentepohlia 10<br />

9 Stalk extensively green-yellow pruinose above,<br />

otherwise black. Ap. 0.5-2.5 mm high, yellowgreen<br />

pruinose, ± spherical capitulum. Algae<br />

156


Stichococcus. Exc. indefinitely developed. Sp.<br />

2.3-3.5 µm . Ch. brachypoda<br />

9* Stalk pale brown, nonpruinose reddish- brown in<br />

the core, exterior with transparent “envelope”<br />

(reddish-brown core easily visible in the original<br />

condition). Ap. 0.5-0.8 mm, when young<br />

yellowish pruinose, later underside sometimes<br />

slightly violet to red brown. Algae Trentepohlia.<br />

Exc. well developed, one species producing a<br />

collar at the base <strong>of</strong> the capitulum around the<br />

stalk end. Sp. 3-3.6 µm. Capitulum ± spherical<br />

to top-shaped Sclerophora peronella<br />

10 Ap. capitulum conic to egg-shaped, stalk greenyellow<br />

pruinose above, black in the under part.<br />

Ap. 0.5-1.0 mm high. Sp. 5.0- 7.5 µm. Exc. or<br />

margin well developed Ch. hispidula<br />

10* Young ap. capitulum spherical and ± sessile,<br />

light yellow pruinose, later lens-form to<br />

hemispherical, underside pale yellow to when<br />

older (sometimes even sp. mass) whitish<br />

pruinose, stalk light yellow, transparent when<br />

moist, white with age. Ap. -0.8 mm high. Sp. 7-<br />

8.5 µm. Exc. well developed<br />

Sclerophora nivea<br />

11 Thallus mealy-sorediate (granules 0.04-0.12 mm<br />

in diameter), light gray to brownish. Ap.<br />

capitulum lens-shaped. Stalk 0.05-0.07 mm<br />

thick, usually green-yellow pruinose above and in<br />

the part Ch. subroscida<br />

11* Thallus usually thick, squamulose to warty,<br />

coherent, brown-olive to olive-gray. Ap.<br />

capitulum conic to lens-form. Stalk 0.06-0.1 mm<br />

thick, usually only green-yellow pruinose above,<br />

even nonpruinose. Ap. usually somewhat more<br />

crude than the former Ch. phaeocephala<br />

12 Thallus indefinite, in the substrate, possibly<br />

recognized by light gray flecks, usually wood<br />

dwelling. Ap. slender, -1.6 mm high . 13<br />

12* Thallus definite 17<br />

13 Sp. 3-4.5 µm thick, stalk black to light . 14<br />

13* Sp. 6-9 µm thick. Stalk pale yellowish, whitish,<br />

middle- to dark brown. Trentepohlia algae. Ap.<br />

-1.2 mm. Sp. very light, with colorless wall 16<br />

14 Stalk light brown. Trentepohlia algae. Ap. -0.8<br />

mm, young capitulum pale yellowish, with age<br />

underside red-brown to slightly violet. Sp. 3-3.6<br />

µm, very light, with colorless wall .<br />

Sclerophora peronella (9)<br />

14* At least the basal part <strong>of</strong> the stalk black. Algae<br />

coccoid green algae or Stichococcus. Ap. -1.6<br />

mm . 15<br />

15 Ap. capitulum and stalk nonpruinose. Stalk<br />

shiny black. Algae chlorococcoid. Capitulum<br />

spherical. Ap. -1.6 mm, sometimes with<br />

branched stalk and several capitula. Sp. 3.5-4.5<br />

µm, brownish . Ch. brunneola<br />

15* Ap. capitula underside and stalk strongly white<br />

pruinose in the upper part, base <strong>of</strong> the stalk black.<br />

Capitula conic. Ap. -1.5 mm. Sp. 3-3.8 µm.<br />

Algae Stichococcus. Ch- . Ch. xyloxena<br />

(When ap. capitula and stalk nonpruinose,<br />

capitula conic, mostly relatively coarse, see Ch.<br />

ferruginea (17) with weakly developed thallus)<br />

16 Ap. 0.7-1.2 mm high. Stalk light to dark brown.<br />

Young ap. <strong>of</strong>ten red-violet pruinose, old ap.<br />

underside strongly gray-white pruinose.<br />

Mazaedium later ± brown .Sclerophora farinacea<br />

16* Ap. 0.4-0.8 mm high. Stalk whitish to light<br />

yellowish. Underside <strong>of</strong> the ap. pale yellowish to<br />

white. Mazaedium light brown, <strong>of</strong>ten white<br />

pruinose . Sclerophora nivea (10)<br />

17 Thallus white-gray to gray-green, <strong>of</strong>ten partially<br />

or entirely yellowish-ochre to rust colored and<br />

here K+ deep red, granular to warty (upper<br />

surface rough), otherwise R-. Ap. undersides/<br />

margin and stalk black, nonpruinose, mazaedium<br />

± cinnamon brown, sp. mass K± red<br />

(microscope). Ap. relatively coarse and broad<br />

capped, -0.5 (0.8) mm wide, 1.7 mm high.<br />

Capitula conic. Sp. 5.5-7.5 µm, when ripe coarse<br />

cracked. Algae spherical, chlorococcoid.<br />

Chinonoides pigment . Ch. ferruginea<br />

17* Thallus not partially yellowish to rust colored<br />

and K+ red. Sp. smooth or with little weak<br />

cracks . 18<br />

18 Thallus with coccoid green algae, granular-<br />

mealy, greenish, gray-green, K-, C-, P±<br />

yellow(orange) (Baeomycesic acid, Squamatic<br />

acid), on wood, see rare forms <strong>of</strong> Ch. brunneola<br />

(15) with developed thallus.<br />

18* Algae not spherical, but elongate to approaching<br />

rectangular, <strong>of</strong>ten in short chains (Stichococcus)<br />

. 19<br />

19 Sp. 2.5-3 µm, almost colorless to pale brown.<br />

Ap. 2.5-3.5 mm high, 20-50 times as long as the<br />

stalk is thick, stalk <strong>of</strong>ten curved here and there.<br />

Stalk black, light gray pruinose at least above as<br />

well as the capitula underside. Capitula gray to<br />

light brown, ± spherical. Thallus thin, mealy,<br />

gray-green to gray. Unknown lichen substances<br />

. Ch. gracilenta<br />

19* Sp. larger, ± brown. Ap. clearly shorter 20<br />

20 Ap. capitula spherical, underside (and going over<br />

to the upper part <strong>of</strong> the stalk) as well slightly<br />

whitish-brownish pruinose, lower stalk brownblack.<br />

Ap. 0.5-1.0(1.4) mm high. Thallus thin,<br />

finely mealy, light bluish-green, P+ yellow-red,<br />

K-, C-. Sp. 3.5-5 µm. Unknown substances<br />

. Ch. stemonea<br />

20* Ap. capitula lens-form to conic to narrowly<br />

conic. Thallus Ch- 21<br />

21 Ap. short, 0.6-1 mm. Stalk pale brown below,<br />

darker above. Capitula long-conic, underside<br />

thickly and relatively coarsely white pruinose,<br />

pruinosity going over to the upper part <strong>of</strong> the<br />

stalk. Thallus warty-granular, occasionally<br />

indefinite. Sp. 4.5-55 µm Ch. cinerea<br />

21* Ap. <strong>of</strong>ten over 1 mm (up to 2mm) long. Stalk<br />

dark brown to black, weakly whitish pruinose<br />

above. Capitula lens form to conic, underside or<br />

157


margin slightly whitish pruinose to nonpruinose.<br />

Thallus mostly fine squamulose to granular,<br />

squamules relatively smooth (rough in the case <strong>of</strong><br />

Ch. ferruginea), sometimes erupting sorediate,<br />

variable, sometimes little developed. Sp. 3-5 µm<br />

. Ch. trichialis<br />

(in the case <strong>of</strong> poorer development, e.g. influence<br />

<strong>of</strong> air pollution, the species is sometimes not very<br />

easily separated from Ch. ferruginea); then it is<br />

important to observe the algae)<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Chaenotheca brachypoda (Ach.) Tibell<br />

(Coniocybe sulphurea (Retz.) Nyl.)<br />

Penetrating into submontane and montane,<br />

usually high precipitation sites on debarked,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten already very decayed conifer stumps with ±<br />

devastated outer surface, rarely on old bark or on<br />

wood <strong>of</strong> deciduous trees, mostly in near natural<br />

regions, old forests on very humid, ± rain<br />

sheltered habitats, r.(-s)acidoph., (m.photoph.) r.v.skioph.,<br />

anitroph., usually without consorts or<br />

with Ch. furfuracea – (bor-)s’bor-med-mo –<br />

v.rare (2); süSch, Bo, Ne, Sp. Rh, Rh-Mn-T, Vog,<br />

SFW<br />

Chaenotheca brunneola (Ach.) Müll.Arg.<br />

Above all in montane-high montane sites on<br />

decayed to very decayed, usually already<br />

relatively s<strong>of</strong>tened wood <strong>of</strong> old stumps and<br />

debarked trunks with nearly intact to devastated<br />

upper surface (above all on conifers), typically<br />

through the spongy-fibrous wood characteristic<br />

rotting stage, commonly on rather poor light, rain<br />

sheltered habitats, mostly without other consorts<br />

– bor-med-mo – rare (3); Sch, Vog, SJu-Ju-FrJu,<br />

SFW, O, Sp. PfW, RhSch, ThW, Al<br />

Chaenotheca chlorella (Ach.) Müll.Arg. (Ch.<br />

carthusiae (Harm.) Lettau)<br />

In hilly and submontane sites in the bark cracks<br />

on trunks above all older oaks, rarely other trees,<br />

also on debarked trunks and stumps, in the<br />

interior <strong>of</strong> forests, in the region <strong>of</strong> deciduous<br />

forests in humid (heavy snow) valleys,<br />

m.acidoph., (m.h-photo.-)r.skioph.,<br />

r.anombroph., v.hygroph., anitroph. – bor-mieur<br />

– v.rare (1); Ju, SFW, Rh-Mn-T, Fr, PfW<br />

(Bitsch), Ml<br />

Chaenotheca chrysocephala (Turner ex Ach.)<br />

Th.Fr.<br />

Concentrated in montane and high montane, high<br />

precipitation sites, like Calicium vir. (↑), yet <strong>of</strong><br />

broader ecological amplitude and commonly also<br />

in the hilly zone in addition, in lower sites above<br />

all on acid deciduous tree bark (oak, black alder,<br />

birch, above all in the Chaenothecetum ferr.), in<br />

higher sites above on conifers (above all<br />

Calicietum vir.), Char. Calicion vir. – bor-medh’mo<br />

– r.rare; above all Sch, Vog, RhSch, SFW,<br />

Do-Av, Al, Sju, rarer e.g. PfW, O, Sp, Ne,<br />

extensively lacking in dry-warm regions<br />

Chaenotheca cinerea (Pers.) Tibell<br />

In montane sites in l<strong>of</strong>ty deciduous forests<br />

(ravine forests) on humid, cool habitats on<br />

deciduous trees with subneutral (-m.acid) bark<br />

(e.g. ash, elm), m.photoph.-r.skioph., anitroph. –<br />

mieur – v.rare (1) - Ju, Fr<br />

Chaenotheca ferruginea (Turner & Borrer)<br />

Migula (Ch. melanophaea (Ach.) Zwackh)<br />

Up into the high montane zone, in the region<br />

above all in lower, low precipitation, relatively<br />

continental influenced sites, here limited to<br />

Scot’s pine, larch, rarely on other trees with r.v.acid<br />

bark (usually oak), above all in strongly<br />

altered forests on forest margins and roads, in<br />

higher sites mostly on fir and Scot’s pine in cold<br />

air accumulating basins, valleys, on rather to very<br />

rain protected sites on the trunk base up to the<br />

middle <strong>of</strong> the trunk, benefited by anthropogenic<br />

alteration by Scot’s pine and larch and today<br />

more frequent than formerly, v.acidoph.,<br />

r.photoindiff., a-(m.) nitroph., hygrophytically<br />

least demanding species <strong>of</strong> the genus, mesoph. -<br />

v.hygroph., Char. Chaenothecetum ferr., <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

with Hypocenomyce scal. – bor-med-mo –<br />

moderately frequent, even in epiphyte poor<br />

regions<br />

Chaenotheca furfuracea (L.) Tibell (Coniocybe<br />

f. (L.) Ach.)<br />

Up into the montane, rarely high montane sites<br />

on r.v. light poor, very humid, completely rain<br />

sheltered habitats, very substrate variable, on<br />

trunks <strong>of</strong> trees, usually at the base on elder or in<br />

deep bark cracks, on roots, on decayed wood, on<br />

silicate rock (above all sandstone), over mosses,<br />

even overgrowing naked soil (overhanging<br />

slopes), high point on rather acid substrate,<br />

anitroph., in the Calicion vir., <strong>of</strong>ten without<br />

consorts, Char. Chaenothecetum furf. – bor-medmo<br />

–r.rare (-m.frequent), yet in dry-warm regions<br />

(v.)rare<br />

158


Chaenotheca gracilenta (Ach.) Mattson &<br />

Middelborg (Cybebe g. (Ach.) Tibell, Coniocybe<br />

g. Ach.)<br />

Above all in the montane zone on rotting wood,<br />

old stumps and decaying bark <strong>of</strong> elder at the stem<br />

base <strong>of</strong> older trees, on roots, in uniform<br />

humidity, rather low light, <strong>of</strong>ten somewhat fresh<br />

substrate habitats, usually without consorts or<br />

with Lepraria lob. -–bor-mieur-med-h’mo –<br />

(v.)rare (1); Ju, Ne, O, Vog, Al, Ml<br />

Chaenotheca hispidula (Ach.) Zahlbr.<br />

In hilly and submontane sites in the bark cracks<br />

<strong>of</strong> older trunks <strong>of</strong> oak, elm, ash in old near<br />

natural, cool oak-hornbeam forests and oldgrowth<br />

deciduous forest, in moist valleys, in the<br />

Calicion vir., e.g. in Chrysotrichetum cand. –<br />

mieur-med(mo) – v.rare (2); süH-HRh, süRh, Ju,<br />

Ne (above all Sb), Sp, O, PfW, Vog, Rh-Mn-T,<br />

Ts, Th<br />

Chaenotheca laevigata Nèdv.<br />

In submontane and montane sites in the bark<br />

cracks <strong>of</strong> older deciduous trees, above all ash and<br />

old, rarely on bark/wood <strong>of</strong> conifers, in humid<br />

forests, r.-m.acidoph.(-subneutroph.), (r.-<br />

)v.hygroph., anombroph., m.photoph. -r.skioph.,<br />

anitroph., in the Calicion vir., usually with Ch.<br />

trichialis – bor-mieur-mo(-med) – v.rare (1); Ju,<br />

O, süSch<br />

Chaenotheca phaeocephala (Turner) Th.Fr.<br />

Especially in submontane, rarely montane sites,<br />

above all on deeply cracked bark <strong>of</strong> older oak<br />

trunks in open oak-hornbeam forests, at the forest<br />

margin and in park-like stands, rarely on other<br />

deciduous trees (above all linden), very rare on<br />

conifers, on sunny, usually m.-r well lighted, r.v.humid,<br />

temperate climate somewhat continental<br />

influenced sites, m.-r.acidoph., r.anombroph.,<br />

anitroph., in the Calicion vir., usually with few<br />

consorts, above all Ch. trichialis or Chrysothrix<br />

cand. – bor-mieur(-med) – rare (3); Mn, Sp, O,<br />

Fr, Ne, SFW, Ju, FrJu, Do, Sch. Rh, Rh-Mn-T,<br />

Mos-Eif<br />

Chaenotheca stemonea (Ach.) Müll.Arg.<br />

Up into montane, rarely high montane sites,<br />

above all base <strong>of</strong> trunks <strong>of</strong> old conifers, more<br />

rarely deciduous trees with acid bark ( above all<br />

oak), deep in bark cracks or elder and nisches at<br />

the stem bases, even on debarked stumps, usually<br />

on r.-v.light poor, completely rain sheltered small<br />

habitats in the interior <strong>of</strong> forests, r.-v.acidoph.,<br />

v.hygroph., anitroph., usually without consorts or<br />

with Ch. furfuracea – bor-mieur – rare (2); Sch,<br />

süHü-Rh, SJu, Ju, Ne, Bo, SFW, O, Sp, Hu, Mos<br />

Chaenotheca subroscida (Eitner) Zahlbr.<br />

In montane and high montane, rather to very high<br />

precipitation sites on cool to cold, moderately<br />

well lighted to rather (to very) light poor habitats<br />

on not rained upon sites on trunks <strong>of</strong> older<br />

conifers (fir and spruce) in fir- and fir-spruce<br />

forests, r.v.acidoph., v.hygroph., anitroph., e.g. in<br />

the Calicietum vir. with Ch. chrysoceph.,<br />

Calicium vir., C. glaucellum – bor-mieur-mo –<br />

v.rare (1); süSch<br />

Chaenotheca trichalis (Ach.) Th.Fr.<br />

Up into the high montane zone above all deep in<br />

the cracks <strong>of</strong> acid bark, in higher sites limited to<br />

fir and spruce, in lower sites on oak and ash,<br />

even on elder in the root region and on stumps,<br />

commonly in forests, m.-v.acidoph.,<br />

(r.)v.hygroph., anombroph., m.photoph.v.skioph.,<br />

anitroph., <strong>of</strong>ten only with Chrysothrix<br />

cand. – bor-med-mo – r.rare-m.frequent (3); in<br />

dry-warm strongly altered forest regions or<br />

debited regions v.rare to lacking or in strong<br />

regression<br />

Chaenotheca xyloxena Nádv.<br />

In montane sites in humid forests on decaying<br />

wood <strong>of</strong> debarked tree stumps and trunks, above<br />

all <strong>of</strong> conifers, r.acidoph., r.-v.skioph.,<br />

anombroph., anitroph. – bor-mieur-mo (-medmo)<br />

– v.rare (1); Bo, Lux Niedersachsen<br />

LIT.: TIBELL 1975, 1978A, 1980B, 1984*.<br />

Chaenothecopsis Vainio<br />

(Keys include Mycocalicium)<br />

Introduction<br />

The Chaenothecopsis species are living<br />

saprophytically on wood and bark or on lichens<br />

or algae covered living fungi with stalked,<br />

brown-black to black fruiting bodies. On<br />

account <strong>of</strong> the morphologic and ecological<br />

similarity with the “calyx” or “dust fruiting”<br />

lichens they were traditionally considered with<br />

lichen studies. The spherical, egg- or lens form<br />

capitula – in contrast to the similar<br />

159


Chaenotheca- or Calicium-species – produce no<br />

dusty spore mass (mazaedium).<br />

The genus is distributed in the temperate and<br />

cool-temperate regions <strong>of</strong> both hemispheres. Of<br />

the ca. 35 species only a few have been collected<br />

in Germany. Many species may have been<br />

overlooked. The species are almost entirely on<br />

moist, undisturbed or forest preserves. All are<br />

very rare and to a high degree threatened. Ch.<br />

rubescens lives on old oaks, Ch. consociata,<br />

which is parasitic on Chaenotheca<br />

chrysocephala, and Ch viridialba occur in near<br />

natural and natural old conifer forests on trunks<br />

above all <strong>of</strong> fir. Ch. pusilla resides at least on<br />

wood or stumps and debarked trunks. Ch.<br />

exserta is parasitic on crustose lichens on<br />

scarcely rained on surfaces <strong>of</strong> silicate rocks.<br />

These as well as Ch. rubescens are species <strong>of</strong> the<br />

summer green deciduous forests region. Ch.<br />

consociata, Ch. pusilla and Ch. viridialba occur<br />

predominantly in the boreal conifer forest zone<br />

and montane sites <strong>of</strong> the temperate zone.<br />

Genus Characteristics and Determination<br />

Thallus lacking or very indefinite. Saprophytic<br />

or living on lichens and algae colonies,<br />

sometimes loosely associated with algae (coccoid<br />

green algae, Trentepohlia). Ap. elongate, rarely<br />

short stalked, with spherical, egg-shaped to lens<br />

form capitula, black, stalk also brown-black or<br />

yellow at the base, rarely whitish. Central stalk<br />

<strong>of</strong> irregularly intertwined hyphae and relatively<br />

light, in the region <strong>of</strong> the margin <strong>of</strong> periclinal<br />

hyphae and dark colored. Without paraphyses<br />

(-like hyphae). Asci ± cylindric to narrowly<br />

clavate, half-ripe above with definite, fine canal<br />

bored through thickening. Sp. 1- to 2-celled,<br />

brown, ellipsoidal to fusiform-ellipsoid, with<br />

smooth to finely warty upper surface. In the case<br />

<strong>of</strong> Mycocalicium the thickened upper ascus wall<br />

has no canal and the hyphae in the aggregate<br />

stalk are dark and arranged parallel.<br />

1 On whitish crusts on overhanging silicate rocks<br />

(above all Haematomma), ap. -0.5 mm high,<br />

capitula spherical to lens form, -0.3 mm wide.<br />

Stalk light to black. Sp. 6-8(10) x 3-4 µm, 1celled<br />

Ch. exserta<br />

1* On bark, wood, bark-dwelling crustose lichens or<br />

Cladonia . 2<br />

2 On crustose lichens or Cladonia . 3<br />

2* On growing on other lichens (or not recognizable<br />

8<br />

3 On thallus squamules <strong>of</strong> red fruited Cladonia<br />

species. Sp. 2-celled, 6-10 x 2.3-3 µm. Ap. -0.7<br />

mm high Ch. parasitaster<br />

3* On crustose lichens (Arthonia, Chaenotheca,<br />

Calicium) 4<br />

4 Sp. 1-celled, 5-9 x 2.5-3.5 µm, somewhat pointed<br />

at the end, ornamented. On whitish crust with<br />

Trentepohlia algae (Arthonia byssacea), ap. -0.9<br />

mm high, stalk 0.05-0.08 mm thick, interior<br />

yellowish to reddish, K+ red. Capitula spherical to<br />

lens form, -0.35 mm wide. On deciduous trees,<br />

above all old oaks (see also Ch. pusilla) .<br />

Ch. rubescens<br />

4* Sp. 2-celed. On cup lichens (Chaenotheca,<br />

Calicium) with algae <strong>of</strong> the genera Trebouxia or<br />

Stichococcus. Ap. -1 mm high 5<br />

5 Stalk in squash preparations with greenish yellow<br />

tint, K+ purple (reaction rapidly disappearing).<br />

On wood-dwelling Chaenotheca brunneola. Ap.<br />

black throughout (rarely stalk brown at the base),<br />

capitula -0.4 mm wide. Sp. 5.5-9 x 2.2-3 µm,<br />

smooth – bor-med Ch. pusiola<br />

5* Stalk in squash preparations K- or K+ greenish or<br />

brownish . 6<br />

6 Sp. septum clearly lighter colored than the sp.<br />

wall. On Calicium and Chaenotheca species and<br />

various other crustose lichens. Sp. 5-7(9) x 2-<br />

2.5(3) µm, smooth . Ch. pusilla (9)<br />

6* Sp. septum not lighter colored than sp. wall . 7<br />

7 On the (green)yellow thallus <strong>of</strong> Chaenotheca<br />

chrysocephala. Ap. black throughout, capitula -<br />

0.4 mm wide, varying in form, finally lens form,<br />

sp. 6.5 x 2.5-3 µm. Epihym., hyp. and stalk<br />

reddish-brown in the outer region, K+ <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

greenish . Ch. consociata<br />

7* On the (greenish) gray thallus <strong>of</strong> Chaeno-theca<br />

trichialis. Ap. black throughout or stalk base even<br />

brown, K- or K+ brownish, stalk in squash<br />

preparations red-brown – bor-med<br />

Ch. epithallina Tibell<br />

8 Stalk whitish, rather long, -0.15(0.2) mm thick.<br />

Ap. 0.5-2 mm high, capitula -0.5 mm wide, full<br />

grown ± spherical (to lens form), reddish region<br />

in the stalk and in hyp. K+ green (squash<br />

preparations). Sp. 6-10 x 3-3.5 µm, 1-celled,<br />

finely ornamented. On bark <strong>of</strong> conifer trees<br />

Ch. viridialba<br />

8* Stalk black to brown 9<br />

9 Sp. 1-celled, brown. Ap. black 10<br />

9* Sp. (1-)2-celled, pale brown, septum much weaker<br />

colored than the outer wall. Full grown ap. ± lens<br />

form, -0.3 mm, black. Stalk ca. 0.04-0.08 mm<br />

thick, lighter toward the base (mostly green-brown<br />

to black-brown), squash preparations K-. Ap. -1<br />

mm high, externally like Mycocalicium subtile.<br />

(Alien) thallus evident as lighter flecks, with<br />

chlorococcoid or Stichococcus algae (or with<br />

Trentepohlia) or without algae or on Calicium or<br />

Chaenotheca thallus. Sp. 5-7(9) x 2-2.5(3) µm,<br />

smooth . Ch. pusilla<br />

160


10 Usually growing on whitish crusts <strong>of</strong> Arthonia,<br />

above all A. byssacea. Sp. 5-9 x 2.5-3.5 µm,<br />

somewhat pointed at the end. Ap. -1 mm high,<br />

stalk brown to black, 0.05- 0.8 mm thick,<br />

capitula spherical to lens form, -0.35 mm wide,<br />

(squash preparation) K+ red or K-. On<br />

deciduous trees, above all oak Ch. rubescens<br />

10* Not growing on Arthonia. Thallus not with<br />

Trentepohlia. capitula and stalk K-. Ap. black<br />

or stalk somewhat lighter . 11<br />

11 Sp. 5.5-8 x 2-3.5 µm, ± smooth. Capitula top<br />

shaped, 0.3-0.7 mm wide. Stalk 0.04-0.10 mm<br />

thick. Ap. -1.2 mm, sometimes even higher and<br />

in the older parts more robust, size very<br />

variable. Asci 45-65 µm. Without algae<br />

Mycocalicium subtile<br />

11* Sp. 5-7(8.5) x 2.5-3.5 µm, finely ornamented,<br />

brown to dark brown. Stalk 0.03-0.06 mm<br />

thick. Ap. -0.9 mm high. Capitula several<br />

spherical to lens form, -0.3 mm wide. Asci 5-35<br />

µm. On bark (above all conifer trees) in moist<br />

shaded sites – bor-mieur Ch. nana Tibell<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> Species<br />

Chaenothecopsis consociata (Nádv.) A.Schmidt<br />

(Calicium consociatum Nádv.)<br />

In the high montane zone parasitic on<br />

Chaenotheca chrysoc., <strong>of</strong> narrower ecological<br />

amplitude than these and limited to cold<br />

habitats, rather similar to Calicium vir. (↑), above<br />

all in spruce forests on high snowfall sites – bormieur-mo<br />

– v.rare (3); Sch, BayW, Alps<br />

Chaenothecopsis exserta (Nyl.) Tibell<br />

(Strongyleuma paroica auct.)<br />

In mild climatic, hilly and submontane sites on<br />

shaded steep surfaces <strong>of</strong> silicate rocks on the<br />

thallus <strong>of</strong> sorediate anombrophytic crusts, above<br />

all on Haematomma ochrol. (↑), like Calicium<br />

coryn. (↑) – mieur-subatl-med – v.rare (0); O,<br />

ThW<br />

Chaenothecopsis parasitaster (Bagl. & Car.)<br />

D.Hawksw.<br />

In montane and high montane sites on thallus<br />

squamules <strong>of</strong> red-fruited Cladonia species,<br />

usually on decayed wood, above all on relatively<br />

little rained upon sites (flanks, nisches <strong>of</strong><br />

stumps), even on peat walls – s’bor-mieur – rare<br />

(2); Sch<br />

Chaenothecopsis pusilla (Ach.) A.Schmidt (Ch.<br />

subpusilla (Vainio) Tibell, Calicium subpusillum<br />

Vainio, C. floerkei Zahlbr., Chaenothecopsis<br />

alboatra (Flörke) Nádv., Calicium alboatrum<br />

Flörke)<br />

In sub- to high montane sites, e.g. on trunk <strong>of</strong> old<br />

conifer trees in near natural and natural conifer<br />

forests, rather like Ch. viridialba (↑), on wood<br />

(stumps, debarked trunks, also boards), in the<br />

Calicion vir. or on old oaks in oak forests – bormieur-h’mo<br />

– v.rare (1); süSch (Feldberg), Ju,<br />

Vgb<br />

Chaenothecopsis pusiola (Ach.) Vainio<br />

(Calicium pusiolum Ach.)<br />

In cool sites on the thallus <strong>of</strong> Chaenotheca<br />

brunneola (↑) or associated with algae – bormed-mo<br />

– possible in the region<br />

Chaenothecopsis rubescens Vainio<br />

Like Arthonia byss. (↑), mostly parasymbiotic,<br />

above all in deep bark cracks – mieur – v.rare<br />

(2); süRh, süHü-HRh-süSch, Sb, Bo, Ml<br />

Chaenothecopsis viridialba (Krempelh.)<br />

A.Schmidt (Mycocalicium cinerascens (Nyl.)<br />

Vainio)<br />

In high montane, very high precipitation sites in<br />

near natural and natural, old conifer forests<br />

(above all spruce forests) on cracked bark on<br />

trunks (<strong>of</strong>ten near the base) <strong>of</strong> old conifer trees,<br />

almost only on spruce on cold (cold air basins),<br />

very to extremely humid, r.-v. poorly lighted<br />

habitats, v.acidoph., anombroph., anitroph., in<br />

the Calicietum vir. – bor-mieur-h’mo – v.rare<br />

(1); süSch (Feldberg, Notschrei)<br />

LIT.: SCHMIDT 1970, TIBELL 1973, 1975, 1984*, TITOV &<br />

TIBELL 1993.<br />

Chromatochlamys Trevisan<br />

(Determination ↑ Protothelenella)<br />

Introduction<br />

The thallus <strong>of</strong> Chromatochlamys is crustose,<br />

inconspicuous, leathery to warty, gray-white to<br />

light brown. The perithecia are sunken into the<br />

thallus and have light to blackish apex. The<br />

spores are muriform. Ch. muscorum is the single<br />

species known in Germany <strong>of</strong> the three included<br />

in Europe. They occur predominantly on<br />

pleurocarpus mosses, mostly on Pterigynandrum<br />

filiforme. The fungus hyphae penetrate<br />

into the moss leaflets, which as a result bleach<br />

161


out and die. The species is found predominantly<br />

on the ground and at the base in the lower trunk<br />

region <strong>of</strong> old deciduous trees, above all beech,<br />

and commonly also on mossy rocks. They are<br />

distributed from north Europe up into the<br />

mountains <strong>of</strong> south Europe, but are usually rare.<br />

In the region they are found in montane sites.<br />

They are in regression and in Germany are<br />

strongly threatened. Directed protection<br />

measures are necessary.<br />

Genus Characteristics<br />

Thallus crustose, leathery to cracked, light gray,<br />

greenish to pale brownish, with Trebouxia like<br />

photobiont. Per. ± sunken, with light to blackish<br />

apex. Exc. light to browned, <strong>of</strong> narrow, streaked,<br />

oval cells under the exterior part. Paraphysoids<br />

reticulate, periphysoids in the region <strong>of</strong> the<br />

ostiolum. Asci very thick walled, indented<br />

above, fissitunicate, I-. Sp. 2 to 8, sparsely to<br />

richly muriform, thin walled (outer wall not<br />

clearly thicker than the inner wall), colorless to<br />

slightly browned. Ch-.<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Chromatochlamys muscorum (Fr.) Mayrh<strong>of</strong>er<br />

& Poelt (Microglaena m. (Fr.) Th.Fr.)<br />

In montane and high montane, high precipitation,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten oceanic sites on dying, usually bark<br />

dwelling pleurocarpus mosses, above all at the<br />

trunk base <strong>of</strong> older deciduous trees ( above all<br />

beech, sycamore) in open high mountain mixed<br />

forest (Aceri-Fagetum), old beech stands, in the<br />

best hygrometric relations also on free-standing<br />

trees, subneutroph.-m.acidoph., m.-r.photoph.,<br />

substrathygroph., in the Lobarion, Rinodinetum<br />

conr., Antitrichion (above all on<br />

Pterigynandrum, Leucodon, Antitrichia) – borsmed-mo(-med-mo)<br />

– rare-v.rare (2); süSch,<br />

Vog, Ju, Ries, FrJu, SJu, Ml, Al, O+, Westf, He<br />

LIT.: MAYRHOFER & POELT 1985<br />

Chrysothrix Mont.<br />

(Determination ↑ Lepraria)<br />

Introduction<br />

Chrysothrix produces thick pulverulent to thin<br />

mealy, yellow to green-yellow thallus, which<br />

very rarely fruit or are only known as sterile.<br />

The four species <strong>of</strong> the cosmopolitan distributed<br />

genus are adapted to the ecologically<br />

conditioned rain-protected humid habitats. The<br />

two species occurring in central Europe grow on<br />

overhanging silicate rocks (Ch. chlorina) and on<br />

tree trunk flanks or in bark cracks (Ch.<br />

candelaris) on humid habitats. They are<br />

distributed in Europe with the high point in the<br />

summer green deciduous forest region, Ch.<br />

candelaris from the mediterranean up into<br />

southern Fennoscandia, Ch. chlorina up into the<br />

high North.<br />

Genus Characteristics<br />

Thallus powdery leprose, yellow, yellow-green,<br />

<strong>of</strong> spherical granules throughout, with coccoid<br />

green algae. Ap. unknown in the region,<br />

unbordered <strong>of</strong> very thin border, green-yellow,<br />

yellow or brownish. Exc. reduced. Paraphyses<br />

reticulate above. Sp. 2- to 4-celled, narrow<br />

ellipsoidal to narrow egg shaped, colorless. Ch:<br />

Pulvinic acid derivatives.<br />

Ecology and Distribution <strong>of</strong> the Species<br />

Chrysothrix candelaris (L.) Laundon (Lepraria<br />

c. (L.) Fr.)<br />

Up to the tree line on completely rain sheltered<br />

sites on the trunk <strong>of</strong> older trees, above all in the<br />

bark cracks, most frequently on oak, in higher<br />

places on fir, also on debarked trunks and<br />

stumps, commonly in moist valleys and in<br />

forests, m.-v.acidoph., r.-v.hygroph., r.skioph.m.(r.)<br />

photoph., anitroph., Char.<br />

Chrysotrichetalia cand. – s’bor-med – r.rare -<br />

m.frequent (3); becoming rare in low<br />

precipitation, under intensive agriculture, and in<br />

strong air pollution regions<br />

Chrysothrix chlorina (Ach.) Laundon (Lepraria<br />

ch. (Ach.) Ach. ex Sm.)<br />

Up into high montane sites, rarely higher, above<br />

all in high precipitation regions on completely<br />

rain sheltered over hangs and niches on lime free<br />

silicate rock on usually shady, humid habitats,<br />

above all in ravines, narrow valleys and forests,<br />

m.-r.acidoph., v.skioph. -m.(r.)photoph.,<br />

162


anitroph., Char. Chrysotrichetalia chlor. – borsmed(-med-mo)<br />

– r.rare; Sch, Vog, Pf, RhSch,<br />

ThW, v.rare O, Rhön<br />

LIT.: LAUNDON 1981, TONSBERG 1992.<br />

Cladonia Hill ex Browne<br />

(Determination incl. Pycnothelia)<br />

Introduction<br />

The species <strong>of</strong> the genus Cladonia are usually<br />

moderately conspicuous fruticose lichens.<br />

Numbered with them are the well known reindeer<br />

and cup lichens. The Cladonia plant consists, as<br />

a rule, <strong>of</strong> two parts, that spreading over the<br />

substrate “ground based,” squamulose or small<br />

foliose thallus and the more or less erect<br />

growing, higher podetia, whose many forms are<br />

known: horn- or peg-form, strongly bushy<br />

branching, trumpet- or coral-like. On the podetia<br />

develop brown, deep red or rarely yellowish<br />

apothecia without thalloid margin. Often no<br />

apothecia are produced; reproduction then occurs<br />

by thallus fragments or soredia, with which the<br />

upper surface <strong>of</strong> the may be entirely or partially<br />

covered. In the case <strong>of</strong> the richly branching,<br />

almost never fruiting reindeer lichens, the basic<br />

thallus is extremely reduced.<br />

Many species are very variable. The species<br />

concept is in many cases not stable. They are<br />

frequently separated into several chemical races,<br />

sometimes even hybrid intermediate forms. The<br />

world wide distributed genus numbers perhaps<br />

350 species. In the Federal Republic <strong>of</strong> Germany<br />

are – according to species understanding – ca. 60<br />

to 67 species recorded, in <strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong><br />

54 to 62.<br />

The Cladonia species live on naked soil, raw<br />

humus, moss, decaying wood, rarely bark and<br />

weathered rock. They usually flourish under well<br />

lighted, humid conditions on acid soil, on sites,<br />

on which through great nutrient distress or soil<br />

surface features has inhibited the competition <strong>of</strong><br />

higher plants or the vegetation layer has not yet<br />

closed after disturbance. They are frequently<br />

found on appropriate sites, e.g. rocky clearings,<br />

numerous unrelated species, as e.g. C.<br />

rangiferina, C. arbuscula, C. protentosa, C.<br />

furcata, C. squamosa, C. gracilis, C. pysidata, C.<br />

pleurota, C. unicalis and others. Under more<br />

humid conditions reindeer lichens and other<br />

Cladonias may even compete in dwarf shrubby<br />

heath.<br />

On decaying wood – almost all also on raw<br />

humus and peat – live especially C. botrytes, C.<br />

cenotea, C. coniocraea, C. digitata, C. pysicata<br />

ssp. chlorephaea, C. macilenta, C. norvegica, C.<br />

parasitica (almost only on oak stumps), C.<br />

polydactyla and C .squamosa. C. incrassata<br />

over runs peat, especially on the walls <strong>of</strong> peatcutting.<br />

Calcareous soils are only typical for a few<br />

species, thus for C. furcata ssp. subrangiformis,<br />

c. rangiformis, C. convoluta, C. symphycarpa, C.<br />

pysicata ssp. pysicata and ssp. pocillum. They<br />

are found in dry turfs and rocky meadows.<br />

Most <strong>of</strong> the indigenous species are distributed<br />

in the central European region and in the boreal<br />

zone, and isolated up into the arctic. The area is<br />

partially stretched into the mediterranean region;<br />

to these very widely distributed species belong C.<br />

cariosa, C. cervicornis, C. cenotea, C.<br />

coniocraea, C. digitata, C. fimbriata, C. furcata,<br />

C. mitis, C. pysidata, C. squamosa, C. subulata<br />

and C. symphycarpa. Widely distributed in<br />

central and north Europe (mostly up into the<br />

arctic) are also C. arbuscula, C. cornuta, C.<br />

deformis, C. gracilis, C. phyllophora, C.<br />

pleurota, C. rangiferina, C. rei and C. unicalis;<br />

they penetrate however – <strong>of</strong>ten with the<br />

exception <strong>of</strong> the Pyrenees –scarcely toward south<br />

Europe. The area <strong>of</strong> C. amaurocraea, C.<br />

bellidiflora, C. botrytes, C. carneola, C.<br />

macrophylla, C. metacorallifera, C. stellaris and<br />

C. sulphurina stretches over the boreal zone and<br />

frequently up into the arctic; in central Europe<br />

these species occur only as disjuncts penetrating<br />

the mountains. In the region they live on<br />

overhanging rocks <strong>of</strong> the high places, cold<br />

boulder fields and peat moors. The central<br />

European habitat lies mostly in the Böhmerwald,<br />

in Fichtel- and Erzgebirge, in the Sudentes, in<br />

Harz, in the Vosges, in the Black Forest and in<br />

the Alps.<br />

Many Cladonias reach the northern boundary<br />

in southern Sweden and Finland, penetrating<br />

however near the sea in western Scandinavia<br />

further toward the north. In the south stretching<br />

the distribution area usually to the submediterranean<br />

or partially, as e.g. in the case <strong>of</strong><br />

C. ciliata and C. rangiformis, into the<br />

mediterranean region. This group includes C.<br />

caespitica, C. ciliata, C. portentosa, C. foliacea,<br />

C. ramulosa, C. rangiformis, C. rei and C. zopfii.<br />

Many <strong>of</strong> these species show westward<br />

163


distribution tendencies. C. macilenta, C.<br />

parasitica and C. strepsilis penetrate further<br />

toward the north, in central Sweden, in the west<br />

as far as northern Scandinavia. C. peziziformis,<br />

C. incrassata, and C. polycarpoides are<br />

distributed in western central European<br />

subatlantic and are rare. C. convoluta above all<br />

lives in dry turfs, is indigenous to central the<br />

mediterranean region, occurs isolated in the<br />

warm region <strong>of</strong> Central Europe and reaches the<br />

plant geographically so remarkable islands <strong>of</strong><br />

Öland and Gotland.<br />

The most frequent species in the region are C.<br />

pyxidata, C. coniocraea, C. macilenta and C.<br />

furcata. C. digitata spreads out and finds<br />

suitable conditions on acid trunk bases.<br />

Appearing more strongly limited in Germany E.<br />

amaurocrea, C. stellaris, C. botrytes, C.<br />

metacorallifera, also C. carneola, C. convoluta<br />

and C. incrassata, in <strong>Baden</strong>-<strong>Württemberg</strong> also C.<br />

foliacea, which in West Germany is considerably<br />

more frequent. Also the reindeer lichens and<br />

many other Cladonias are influenced by dunging<br />

<strong>of</strong> thin turfs and dwarf shrubby heaths and are<br />

clearly in regression. Significant or isolated<br />

occurrences <strong>of</strong> such species deserve notice and<br />

protection.<br />

Genus Characteristics and Determination<br />

Thallus <strong>of</strong> two parts, the basal primary thallus<br />

developed on the substrate and the usually erect,<br />

hollow secondary thallus, the podetia. The<br />

squamulose-small foliose primary thallus, in the<br />

species group <strong>of</strong> the reindeer lichens and a few<br />

other species is crustose and rapidly<br />

disappearing. Basal squamules are usually<br />

ascending, rounded to elongate, entire margined<br />

to incised, sometimes sorediate at the margin and<br />

the underside, pale greenish, gray, brownish,<br />

underside usually whitish, without rhizines.<br />

Upper side with cortex <strong>of</strong> dense vertical hyphae,<br />

underside without cortex. Photobiont Trebouxia-<br />

like. Podetia erect, rarely decumbent-ascending,<br />

hollow, blunt, pointed or cupped, unbranched to<br />

richly branched, whitish, gray, yellowish, brown,<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten sorediate, with cortex to partially or (in the<br />

case <strong>of</strong> reindeer lichens) entirely without cortex.<br />

Ap. usually terminal or on cup margins <strong>of</strong> the<br />

podetia, rarely sessile on the basal squamules,<br />

without thalloid margin, commonly with rapidly<br />

disappearing proper margin, usually light to dark<br />

brown or red, rarely yellowish. Exc. <strong>of</strong> radial<br />

lying hyphae, exterior <strong>of</strong>ten colored like the disk.<br />

Hyp. colorless to light brownish or reddish.<br />

Epihym. usually brown or red. Hym. colorless or<br />

brownish to reddish, I+ blue. Paraphyses simple<br />

or sometimes forked. Asci narrowly clavate to<br />

almost cylindric, with I+ blue tholus, exterior<br />

with I+ blue gelatin layer. Sp. 1-celled egg- to<br />

fusiform. Pycn. positioned and colored similar to<br />

ap., sessile <strong>of</strong> short stalked. Pycnosp. bacillar to<br />

filamentous, usually curved. Ch: Depside,<br />

depsidones (especially frequent Fumarprotocetraric<br />

acid), Dibenz<strong>of</strong>urane, Terpenes; in red<br />

ap. Rhodocladonic acid.<br />

Notice: The Cladonias are conspicuous lichens, but at<br />

times very variable. Not rarely they have even given<br />

leading Lichenologists difficulty, in unambiguous<br />

placing <strong>of</strong> a specimen. In many cases a knowledge <strong>of</strong><br />

the lichen substance content is very helpful, in some<br />

indispensable. The indicated reaction shows on the<br />

thallus upper surface.<br />

Basal squamules = primary thallus; axil = place<br />

between two or more branches; podetia = erect part;<br />

awl-like = pointed tip<br />

Overview <strong>of</strong> the Parts <strong>of</strong> the Key<br />

1 <strong>Lichens</strong> with red ap. and/or red pycnidia (hand<br />

lens) PT 2<br />

1* <strong>Lichens</strong> with brown ap. and pycnidia or without<br />

ap . 2<br />

2 Podetia partially thickly sorediate . PT 3<br />

2* Podetia not sorediate 3<br />

3 Primary thallus crustose-warty or lacking,<br />

without each basic squamules and lobules/<br />

squamules on the podetia. <strong>Lichens</strong> richly to<br />

largely branched, rarely unbranched, always<br />

without cups . . 4<br />

3* Primary thallus squamulose/small foliose;<br />

commonly even the podetia at least with basal<br />

squamules . 5<br />

4 Thallus crustose-warty, warts -0.5 mm, light gray<br />

to brownish-gray, K+ yellow, P-, C-. Podetia<br />

short, -6(10) mm, at first inflated, then clavate to<br />

cylindric, simple to sparsely branched, with<br />

terminal ap. or pycn. Sp. 1- to 4-celled, 9-15 x 2-<br />

3.5 µm. Atranorin, Protolichesterinic acid,<br />

Lichesterinic acid, ± Squamatic acid<br />

Pycnothelia papillaria<br />

4* Primary thallus lacking. <strong>Lichens</strong> richly to largely<br />

branched, generally growing rapidly PT 1<br />

5 Only primary thallus occurring (selection<br />

characteristic <strong>of</strong> species) PT 4<br />

5* Also podetia occurring . PT 3<br />

Cladonia PT 1: Reindeer <strong>Lichens</strong> and<br />

Similar Fruticose <strong>Lichens</strong><br />

164


1 Podetia (at least at the base) with isolated<br />

protruding squamules (leaflets), with pointed<br />

ends or with capitate ap. Podetia entire cylindric<br />

or even long splits or channels. Primary small<br />

foliose thallus <strong>of</strong>ten occurring . 2<br />

1* Podetia entirely without squamules, cylindric, but<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten open in the axils. Primary thallus lacking 4<br />

2 K- or indefinite yellowish or brownish, P+ red,<br />

without Atranorin. Podetia without squamules to<br />

thickly squamulose, smooth cortex, in many<br />

forms long slits and then partially only<br />

channeled, little to strongly branched. Branches<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten rather also coming away twisted points,<br />

gray-white to gray-greenish to dark brown. Very<br />

variable forms. Furmarprotocetraric acid . .<br />

C. furcata ssp. furcata<br />

2* K+ yellow, P- or P+ red, with Atranorin . 3<br />

3 P-. Podetia usually erect and occurring in ± thick<br />

turfs, therefore similar to reindeer lichens, with or<br />

without squamules, whitish- gray, pale greenishgray,<br />

the ends strongly browned, the end branch<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten ± regularly forked, cortex variegated, dark<br />

fields (transparent algae groups) separated by<br />

light lines. Rangiformic acid, ± Fumarproto-<br />

cetraric acid * C. rangiformis<br />

3* P+ yellow-orange to red, podetia relatively robust<br />

and loosely branched, commonly decumbent to<br />

ascending,, sparsely squamulose, usually brown<br />

to olive, frequently cracked a the base and with<br />

erupting white bulges. Fumarprotocetraric acid<br />

* .C. furcata ssp. subrangiformis<br />

4 Podetia densely shrubby branched (virtually<br />

reindeer lichens), usually 3-8 (12) cm . 5<br />

4* Podetia weakly branching, <strong>of</strong>ten forked, smooth<br />

cortex, usually 1.5-10 cm. Always containing<br />

Usnic acid 12<br />

5 Podetia very closely branching, with cup-form<br />

curved (<strong>of</strong>ten almost cauliflower like) (lichens <strong>of</strong><br />

the cemetery wreaths). Isotomic branching, i.e.<br />

all <strong>of</strong> the single branch points going out ±<br />

uniformly developed, predominantly to 4<br />

(uniformly) star-form standing around the axil<br />

opening, without definite main stems. Pale<br />

yellowish, pale greenish-yellow, pale yellowishgray,<br />

terminal branch not browned. P-. Usnic<br />

acid, Perlatolic acid. <strong>Lichens</strong> <strong>of</strong> cold sites (watch<br />

for confusion with densely branched C.<br />

portentosa) . C. stellaris<br />

5* Podetia not conspicuously curved cup-form, with<br />

± definite main stems. Branching anisotomic, i.e.<br />

branches not uniformly developed (rarely<br />

isotomic tendencies: C. portentosa). Branches<br />

predominantly 2 or 3 around the axil openings 6<br />

6 Branches predominantly 2, rarely 3 going out<br />

from one point (branching dichotomous).<br />

Podetia relatively slender and thin (in comparison<br />

to C. rangiferina/arbuscula), yellowish-gray to<br />

gray-green (with Usnic acid) or rarely whitishgray<br />

to gray (without Usnic acid), branches<br />

mostly strongly curved, browned. Pycn. slime<br />

red (sometimes even with the hand lens<br />

recognizable at the pycn. mouth). ± Usnic acid,<br />

Fumarprotocetraric acid, (Protocetraric acid) et al<br />

. C. ciliata<br />

(when K+ yellow, with Atranorin, Rangi-ormic<br />

acid, ± Fumarprotocetraric acid, end branches<br />

splayed, but not curved back, podetia gray<br />

flecked: C. rangiformis 3)<br />

6* Branches usually going out 3 or 4 7<br />

7 Thallus gray-white to gray, K+ yellow, without<br />

Usnic acid, commonly with Atranorin,<br />

Fumarprotocetraric acid, (Protocetraric acid).<br />

Branch ends browned 8<br />

7* Thallus with (sometimes only weakly) yellowish<br />

tint (whitish, pale gray-yellow, yellow-green), K-,<br />

with Usnic acid, without Atranorin . 9<br />

8 Lower part <strong>of</strong> the podetia black, interior usually<br />

up to the upper part <strong>of</strong> the podetia center black.<br />

Pycn. slime red. Branch ends moderately<br />

strongly curved. * C. stygia<br />

8* Lower part <strong>of</strong> the podetia at best exceptionally<br />

black in a narrow basal part, interior not black.<br />

Pycn. slime colorless. Branch ends usually<br />

strongly curved. * . C. rangiferina<br />

9 End branch bushy aligned on all sides, thickly to<br />

sparsely branched, predominantly 3(4) standing<br />

around the axil opening, anisotomic to isotomic,<br />

P-. Upper surface <strong>of</strong> the podetia dull, usually not<br />

compact and dense, but very fine loosely felty<br />

(hand lens), <strong>of</strong>ten transparent when moist.<br />

Podetia sparsely branched. Usnic acid, Perlatolic<br />

acid . C. portentosa<br />

9* End branch usually definitely curved one sided,<br />

rarely aligned bushy all sided, P+ red or P-.<br />

Upper surface <strong>of</strong> the podetia usually compact and<br />

dense, cartilaginous, not transparent, without<br />

Perlatolic acid . 10<br />

10 P- (very rarely P+ red), with Rangiformic acid,<br />

Usnic acid. Podetia bushy branched, ends little<br />

curved C. arbuscula ssp. mitis<br />

10* P+ yellow or P+ red, Usnic acid, without<br />

Rangiformic acid . 11<br />

11 P+ yellow. Psoromic acid, ± Fumarproto-cetraric<br />

acid, ± Protocetraric acid. * Podetia <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

appearing cup-form. Very rare .<br />

C. arbuscula ssp. arbuscula<br />

11* P+ red (very rarely P-), without Psoromic acid,<br />

with Fumarprotocetraric acid, Protocetraric acid.<br />

* Podetia with mostly one sided branches, rarely<br />

more bushy branched. Widely distributed .<br />

C. arbuscula ssp. squarrosa<br />

12 Podetia blue-gray, gray, greenish-gray, repeatedly<br />

branched, with pointed ends, without cups,<br />

decumbent to ascending, very brittle. Axils<br />

closed. Pycnidial gelatin colorless (squash<br />

preparation). * . C. zopfii<br />

12* Podetia yellowish, gray-yellowish, pale greenyellowish,<br />

points <strong>of</strong>ten browned 13<br />

165

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