Hertelidea
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Hertelidea
''Hertelidea'' is a genus of crustose lichens in the family Stereocaulaceae. Characteristics of the genus include carbon-black ring or outer margin (exciple) around the fruit body disc (apothecium), eight-spored, ''Micarea''-type asci and mostly simple, hyaline ascospores that lack a transparent outer layer. ''Hertelidea'' species mostly grow on wood, although less frequently they are found on bark or soil. While the type species, '' Hertelidea botryosa'', has a widespread distribution, most of the other species are found only in Australia. Taxonomy ''Hertelidea'' was circumscribed in 2004 by Christian Printzen and Gintaras Kantvilas to accommodate species that were formerly referred to as the "''Lecidea botryosa''" group. Four species were originally included: ''Hertelidea botryosa'', ''H. eucalypti'', ''H. geophila'', and ''H. pseudobotryosa''. ''H. aspera'' was transferred to the genus from ''Lecidea'' in 2005, while ''H. wankaensis'' was described as ...
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Hertelidea Aspera
''Hertelidea'' is a genus of crustose lichens in the family Stereocaulaceae. Characteristics of the genus include carbon-black ring or outer margin (exciple) around the fruit body disc (apothecium), eight-spored, ''Micarea''-type asci and mostly simple, hyaline ascospores that lack a transparent outer layer. ''Hertelidea'' species mostly grow on wood, although less frequently they are found on bark or soil. While the type species, '' Hertelidea botryosa'', has a widespread distribution, most of the other species are found only in Australia. Taxonomy ''Hertelidea'' was circumscribed in 2004 by Christian Printzen and Gintaras Kantvilas to accommodate species that were formerly referred to as the "''Lecidea botryosa''" group. Four species were originally included: ''Hertelidea botryosa'', ''H. eucalypti'', ''H. geophila'', and ''H. pseudobotryosa''. ''H. aspera'' was transferred to the genus from ''Lecidea'' in 2005, while ''H. wankaensis'' was described as ...
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Hertelidea Eucalypti
''Hertelidea'' is a genus of crustose lichens in the family Stereocaulaceae. Characteristics of the genus include carbon-black ring or outer margin (exciple) around the fruit body disc (apothecium), eight-spored, ''Micarea''-type asci and mostly simple, hyaline ascospores that lack a transparent outer layer. ''Hertelidea'' species mostly grow on wood, although less frequently they are found on bark or soil. While the type species, '' Hertelidea botryosa'', has a widespread distribution, most of the other species are found only in Australia. Taxonomy ''Hertelidea'' was circumscribed in 2004 by Christian Printzen and Gintaras Kantvilas to accommodate species that were formerly referred to as the "''Lecidea botryosa''" group. Four species were originally included: ''Hertelidea botryosa'', ''H. eucalypti'', ''H. geophila'', and ''H. pseudobotryosa''. ''H. aspera'' was transferred to the genus from ''Lecidea'' in 2005, while ''H. wankaensis'' was described as ...
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Hertelidea Geophila
''Hertelidea'' is a genus of crustose lichens in the family Stereocaulaceae. Characteristics of the genus include carbon-black ring or outer margin (exciple) around the fruit body disc (apothecium), eight-spored, ''Micarea''-type asci and mostly simple, hyaline ascospores that lack a transparent outer layer. ''Hertelidea'' species mostly grow on wood, although less frequently they are found on bark or soil. While the type species, '' Hertelidea botryosa'', has a widespread distribution, most of the other species are found only in Australia. Taxonomy ''Hertelidea'' was circumscribed in 2004 by Christian Printzen and Gintaras Kantvilas to accommodate species that were formerly referred to as the "''Lecidea botryosa''" group. Four species were originally included: ''Hertelidea botryosa'', ''H. eucalypti'', ''H. geophila'', and ''H. pseudobotryosa''. ''H. aspera'' was transferred to the genus from ''Lecidea'' in 2005, while ''H. wankaensis'' was described as ...
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Hertelidea Pseudobotryosa
''Hertelidea'' is a genus of crustose lichens in the family Stereocaulaceae. Characteristics of the genus include carbon-black ring or outer margin (exciple) around the fruit body disc (apothecium), eight-spored, ''Micarea''-type asci and mostly simple, hyaline ascospores that lack a transparent outer layer. ''Hertelidea'' species mostly grow on wood, although less frequently they are found on bark or soil. While the type species, '' Hertelidea botryosa'', has a widespread distribution, most of the other species are found only in Australia. Taxonomy ''Hertelidea'' was circumscribed in 2004 by Christian Printzen and Gintaras Kantvilas to accommodate species that were formerly referred to as the "''Lecidea botryosa''" group. Four species were originally included: ''Hertelidea botryosa'', ''H. eucalypti'', ''H. geophila'', and ''H. pseudobotryosa''. ''H. aspera'' was transferred to the genus from ''Lecidea'' in 2005, while ''H. wankaensis'' was described as ...
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Hertelidea Botryosa
''Hertelidea'' is a genus of crustose lichens in the family Stereocaulaceae. Characteristics of the genus include carbon-black ring or outer margin (exciple) around the fruit body disc (apothecium), eight-spored, ''Micarea''-type asci and mostly simple, hyaline ascospores that lack a transparent outer layer. ''Hertelidea'' species mostly grow on wood, although less frequently they are found on bark or soil. While the type species, '' Hertelidea botryosa'', has a widespread distribution, most of the other species are found only in Australia. Taxonomy ''Hertelidea'' was circumscribed in 2004 by Christian Printzen and Gintaras Kantvilas to accommodate species that were formerly referred to as the "''Lecidea botryosa''" group. Four species were originally included: ''Hertelidea botryosa'', ''H. eucalypti'', ''H. geophila'', and ''H. pseudobotryosa''. ''H. aspera'' was transferred to the genus from ''Lecidea'' in 2005, while ''H. wankaensis'' was described as ...
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Hertelidea Wankaensis
''Hertelidea wankaensis'' is a species of crustose lichen in the family Stereocaulaceae. It is found in northeastern Australia, where it grows on dead wood. Taxonomy The lichen was described as a new species in 2006 by lichenologists Gintaras Kantvilas and John Alan Elix. The type was collected along Wanka Road, south of Dalby, Queensland. Here it was found growing on dead eucalyptus wood in grassland, at an altitude of . The specific epithet ''wankaensis'' is formed from the name of its type locality with the Latin ending ''-ensis'' ("place of origin") appended. Description The lichen has a dull grey crustose thallus comprising irregular, gnarled areoles that are 0.1–0.3 mm wide. There are numerous apothecia measuring 0.3–0.8 mm in diameter, which occur either singly or sometimes fused together in clusters of two or three. Ascospores are hyaline, broadly ellipsoid to ovate in shape, and typically 6–13 by 4–6 μm. There are two type of conidia pre ...
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Stereocaulaceae
The Stereocaulaceae are a family of lichen-forming fungi in the order Lecanorales. It contains five genera. Species of this family are widely distributed in temperate boreal and austral regions. Genera *'' Hertelidea'' – 6 spp. *''Lepraria'' – 86 spp. *''Stereocaulon'' – 45 spp. *''Squamarina ''Squamarina'' is a genus of lichens in the family Stereocaulaceae, although it has recently been suggested that it may belong in the family Ramalinaceae.Ekman, Stefan, Heidi L. Andersen, and Mats Wedin. 2008. The limitations of ancestral state r ...'' – 4 spp. *'' Xyleborus'' – 2 spp. References * Lichen families Lecanoromycetes families Taxa named by François Fulgis Chevallier Taxa described in 1826 {{Lecanorales-stub ...
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Hannes Hertel
Hannes Hertel is a German botanist and taxonomist and was Director of the State Herbarium in Munich, Germany 1992 - 2004. His specialist areas are the fungi and lichens. Early life and education Hannes Hertel was born in 1939. His doctorate was awarded in 1967 for work on members of the lichen genus ''Lecidea'' that thrive on lime rich rocks and sites. This was undertaken under the guidance of Josef Poelt. Career He was appointed to an academic post at University of Berlin in 1972 but in 1973 he moved to Munich to take up the post of curator at the State Herbarium in Munich. He became the provisional director from 1985 to 1992 and was then confirmed as Director and remained until his retirement in 2004. His specialist area was the taxonomy of lichens, and especially the genus ''Lecidea'' that he had first studied for his doctorate. He and students that he supervised brought order and a critical review of the 1000 accepted and 4000 published names within the genus in the early 1 ...
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Gintaras Kantvilas
Gintaras Kantvilas (born 1956) is an Australian lichenologist, who earned his Ph.D in 1985 from the University of Tasmania with a thesis entitled ''Studies on Tasmanian rainforest lichens''. He has authored over 432 species names, and 167 genera in the field of mycology. Kanvilas completed his secondary education at St Virgil's College St Virgil's College is an independent Catholic primary and secondary day school for boys, located over two campuses in Austins Ferry and Hobart, Tasmania, Australia. Established in 1911 by the Congregation of Christian Brothers, the College has ... in Hobart in 1973. In 1985, he was working for the Tasmanian National Parks and Wildlife Service. In 1987 he was listing his affiliation as Department of Botany, University of Tasmania, in addition to the Tasmanian National Parks and Wildlife Service. By 2001 his affiliation was listed as the Tasmanian Herbarium, and this has continued until at least 2018. The lichen genus, '' Kantvilasia'', is n ...
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Thallus
Thallus (plural: thalli), from Latinized Greek (), meaning "a green shoot" or "twig", is the vegetative tissue of some organisms in diverse groups such as algae, fungi, some liverworts, lichens, and the Myxogastria. Many of these organisms were previously known as the thallophytes, a polyphyletic group of distantly related organisms. An organism or structure resembling a thallus is called thalloid, thallodal, thalliform, thalline, or thallose. A thallus usually names the entire body of a multicellular non-moving organism in which there is no organization of the tissues into organs. Even though thalli do not have organized and distinct parts (leaves, roots, and stems) as do the vascular plants, they may have analogous structures that resemble their vascular "equivalents". The analogous structures have similar function or macroscopic structure, but different microscopic structure; for example, no thallus has vascular tissue. In exceptional cases such as the Lemnoideae, where ...
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Botanische Staatssammlung München
The Botanische Staatssammlung München is a notable herbarium and scientific center maintained by thStaatliche Naturwissenschaftliche Sammlungen Bayerns Its building is located within the Botanischer Garten München-Nymphenburg area at Menzinger Straße 67, München, Bavaria, Germany. A center for data science and biodiversity informatics calleSNSB IT Centeris affiliated. Its library is open to the public; scientific collections are open to researchers by appointment. The institution was established in 1813 by King Maximilian I Joseph of Bavaria to maintain the royal herbarium, which grew to include major collections from the University of München and botanist Johann Christian Daniel von Schreber, a student of Carl von Linné. In 1817, Maximilian sent botanist Carl Friedrich Philipp von Martius on a three-year expedition to Brazil, and upon his return appointed him the herbarium's curator. Martius' collection of South American vascular plants is among the world's foremost at 25 ...
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Festschrift
In academia, a ''Festschrift'' (; plural, ''Festschriften'' ) is a book honoring a respected person, especially an academic, and presented during their lifetime. It generally takes the form of an edited volume, containing contributions from the honoree's colleagues, former pupils, and friends. ''Festschriften'' are often titled something like ''Essays in Honour of...'' or ''Essays Presented to... .'' Terminology The term, borrowed from German, and literally meaning 'celebration writing' (cognate with ''feast-script''), might be translated as "celebration publication" or "celebratory (piece of) writing". An alternative Latin term is (literally: 'book of friends'). A comparable book presented posthumously is sometimes called a (, 'memorial publication'), but this term is much rarer in English. A ''Festschrift'' compiled and published by electronic means on the internet is called a (pronounced either or ), a term coined by the editors of the late Boris Marshak's , ''Eran ud Aner ...
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