Xanthocarpia Interfulgens
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Xanthocarpia Interfulgens
''Xanthocarpia'' is a genus of mostly crustose lichens in the family Teloschistaceae. It has 12 species with a largely Northern Hemisphere distribution. Taxonomy The genus was originally circumscribed in 1859 by Abramo Bartolommeo Massalongo and Giuseppe De Notaris, with ''Xanthocarpia ochracea'' as the type species. This species has tetralocular ascospores (i.e. divided into 4 chambers). Description ''Xanthocarpia'' has a thallus that is either crust-like (crustose) or like a shield or plate attached on the lower surface at a single central point (peltate). In some cases, the thallus is absent; in all cases, a cortex is absent. The lichen contains anthraquinones compounds. ''Xanthocarpia'' species often have apothecia, which are coloured yellow to orange. These apothecia are zeorine, meaning that the proper exciple (the ring-shaped layer surrounding the hymenium) is enclosed in the thalline exciple. Pycnidia can be present or absent; the conidia have a bacilliform to narrow ...
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Conidia
A conidium ( ; ), sometimes termed an asexual chlamydospore or chlamydoconidium (), is an asexual, non-motile spore of a fungus. The word ''conidium'' comes from the Ancient Greek word for dust, ('). They are also called mitospores due to the way they are generated through the cellular process of mitosis. The two new haploid cells are genetically identical to the haploid parent, and can develop into new organisms if conditions are favorable, and serve in biological dispersal. Asexual reproduction in ascomycetes (the phylum Ascomycota) is by the formation of conidia, which are borne on specialized stalks called conidiophores. The morphology of these specialized conidiophores is often distinctive between species and, before the development of molecular techniques at the end of the 20th century, was widely used for identification of (''e.g.'' ''Metarhizium'') species. The terms microconidia and macroconidia are sometimes used. Conidiogenesis There are two main types of conidium ...
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Xanthocarpia Interfulgens
''Xanthocarpia'' is a genus of mostly crustose lichens in the family Teloschistaceae. It has 12 species with a largely Northern Hemisphere distribution. Taxonomy The genus was originally circumscribed in 1859 by Abramo Bartolommeo Massalongo and Giuseppe De Notaris, with ''Xanthocarpia ochracea'' as the type species. This species has tetralocular ascospores (i.e. divided into 4 chambers). Description ''Xanthocarpia'' has a thallus that is either crust-like (crustose) or like a shield or plate attached on the lower surface at a single central point (peltate). In some cases, the thallus is absent; in all cases, a cortex is absent. The lichen contains anthraquinones compounds. ''Xanthocarpia'' species often have apothecia, which are coloured yellow to orange. These apothecia are zeorine, meaning that the proper exciple (the ring-shaped layer surrounding the hymenium) is enclosed in the thalline exciple. Pycnidia can be present or absent; the conidia have a bacilliform to narrow ...
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Xanthocarpia Ferrarii
''Xanthocarpia'' is a genus of mostly crustose lichens in the family Teloschistaceae. It has 12 species with a largely Northern Hemisphere distribution. Taxonomy The genus was originally circumscribed in 1859 by Abramo Bartolommeo Massalongo and Giuseppe De Notaris, with ''Xanthocarpia ochracea'' as the type species. This species has tetralocular ascospores (i.e. divided into 4 chambers). Description ''Xanthocarpia'' has a thallus that is either crust-like (crustose) or like a shield or plate attached on the lower surface at a single central point (peltate). In some cases, the thallus is absent; in all cases, a cortex is absent. The lichen contains anthraquinones compounds. ''Xanthocarpia'' species often have apothecia, which are coloured yellow to orange. These apothecia are zeorine, meaning that the proper exciple (the ring-shaped layer surrounding the hymenium) is enclosed in the thalline exciple. Pycnidia can be present or absent; the conidia have a bacilliform to narrow ...
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Xanthocarpia Feracissima
''Xanthocarpia feracissima'' is a species of saxicolous, crustose lichen in the family Teloschistaceae. It was first formally described as a new species in 1953 by Swedish lichenologist Adolf Hugo Magnusson, as a member of the genus ''Caloplaca''. The type specimen was collected in 1939 by John Walter Thomson in Lake Koshkonong, Wisconsin. In the original description, Magnusson notes a similarity to the lichen now known as '' Gyalolechia flavovirescens'', but distinguishes the new species by its lack of a visible thallus, the sordid-reddish color of its , and the "unusually narrow" septa of the spores. Patrik Frödén, Ulf Arup, and Ulrik Søchting transferred the taxon to ''Xanthocarpia'' in 2013, following molecular phylogenetic analysis of the family Teloschistaceae. The lichen occurs in the eastern United States and Canada. In North America, a common name for the species is "sidewalk firedot lichen". It is very common on cement and mortar, particularly on sidewalks that a ...
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Xanthocarpia Erichansenii
''Xanthocarpia erichansenii'' is a species of terricolous (ground-dwelling), crustose lichen in the family Teloschistaceae. It is found in southwest Greenland, where it grows on loess (a type of soil) among mosses. Taxonomy The lichen was first formally described in 2009 by the lichenologists Sergey Kondratyuk, Arne Thell, Ingvar Kärnefelt, and John Elix; it was initially classified in the genus ''Caloplaca''. The species epithet honours the Danish lichenologist Eric Steen Hansen, who, according to the authors, "has made enormous contributions to our knowledge of lichens in Greenland". Patrik Frödén and colleagues transferred the taxon to the genus ''Xanthocarpia'' in 2013. Description ''Xanthocarpia erichansenii'' features a thallus that typically measures between 3 and 15 mm in width. The thallus is generally composed of tiny, scattered that are convex in shape and range from yellow to a dull yellow-orange colour. These areoles are mostly rounded, varying in size ...
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Xanthocarpia Epigaea
''Xanthocarpia'' is a genus of mostly crustose lichens in the family Teloschistaceae. It has 12 species with a largely Northern Hemisphere distribution. Taxonomy The genus was originally circumscribed in 1859 by Abramo Bartolommeo Massalongo and Giuseppe De Notaris, with ''Xanthocarpia ochracea'' as the type species. This species has tetralocular ascospores (i.e. divided into 4 chambers). Description ''Xanthocarpia'' has a thallus that is either crust-like (crustose) or like a shield or plate attached on the lower surface at a single central point (peltate). In some cases, the thallus is absent; in all cases, a cortex is absent. The lichen contains anthraquinones compounds. ''Xanthocarpia'' species often have apothecia, which are coloured yellow to orange. These apothecia are zeorine, meaning that the proper exciple (the ring-shaped layer surrounding the hymenium) is enclosed in the thalline exciple. Pycnidia can be present or absent; the conidia have a bacilliform to narrow ...
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Xanthocarpia Diffusa
''Xanthocarpia'' is a genus of mostly crustose lichens in the family Teloschistaceae. It has 12 species with a largely Northern Hemisphere distribution. Taxonomy The genus was originally circumscribed in 1859 by Abramo Bartolommeo Massalongo and Giuseppe De Notaris, with ''Xanthocarpia ochracea'' as the type species. This species has tetralocular ascospores (i.e. divided into 4 chambers). Description ''Xanthocarpia'' has a thallus that is either crust-like (crustose) or like a shield or plate attached on the lower surface at a single central point (peltate). In some cases, the thallus is absent; in all cases, a cortex is absent. The lichen contains anthraquinones compounds. ''Xanthocarpia'' species often have apothecia, which are coloured yellow to orange. These apothecia are zeorine, meaning that the proper exciple (the ring-shaped layer surrounding the hymenium) is enclosed in the thalline exciple. Pycnidia can be present or absent; the conidia have a bacilliform to narrow ...
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Xanthocarpia Crenulatella
''Xanthocarpia crenulatella'' is a species of saxicolous (rock-dwelling), crustose lichen in the family Teloschistaceae. Taxonomy The species was first formally described by William Nylander in 1886, as a member of genus ''Lecanora''. Henri Olivier transferred it to the genus ''Caloplaca'' in 1909, and it was generally known as this name for more than a century. In 2013, Arup and colleagues transferred the taxon to genus ''Xanthocarpia'' based on a molecular phylogenetics-led restructuring of the family Teloschistaceae. Jan Vondrák and colleagues have suggested that ''Xanthocarpia crenulatella'' may represent an assemblage of microspecies In biology, a species complex is a group of closely related organisms that are so similar in appearance and other features that the boundaries between them are often unclear. The taxa in the complex may be able to hybridize readily with each oth ..., "because it is phenotypically quite heterogenous and other species have been describe ...
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Xanthocarpia Borysthenica
''Xanthocarpia'' is a genus of mostly crustose lichens in the family Teloschistaceae. It has 12 species with a largely Northern Hemisphere distribution. Taxonomy The genus was originally circumscribed in 1859 by Abramo Bartolommeo Massalongo and Giuseppe De Notaris, with ''Xanthocarpia ochracea'' as the type species. This species has tetralocular ascospores (i.e. divided into 4 chambers). Description ''Xanthocarpia'' has a thallus that is either crust-like (crustose) or like a shield or plate attached on the lower surface at a single central point (peltate). In some cases, the thallus is absent; in all cases, a cortex is absent. The lichen contains anthraquinones compounds. ''Xanthocarpia'' species often have apothecia, which are coloured yellow to orange. These apothecia are zeorine, meaning that the proper exciple (the ring-shaped layer surrounding the hymenium) is enclosed in the thalline exciple. Pycnidia can be present or absent; the conidia have a bacilliform to narrow ...
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Xanthocarpia Aquensis
''Xanthocarpia'' is a genus of mostly crustose lichens in the family Teloschistaceae. It has 12 species with a largely Northern Hemisphere distribution. Taxonomy The genus was originally circumscribed in 1859 by Abramo Bartolommeo Massalongo and Giuseppe De Notaris, with ''Xanthocarpia ochracea'' as the type species. This species has tetralocular ascospores (i.e. divided into 4 chambers). Description ''Xanthocarpia'' has a thallus that is either crust-like (crustose) or like a shield or plate attached on the lower surface at a single central point (peltate). In some cases, the thallus is absent; in all cases, a cortex is absent. The lichen contains anthraquinones compounds. ''Xanthocarpia'' species often have apothecia, which are coloured yellow to orange. These apothecia are zeorine, meaning that the proper exciple (the ring-shaped layer surrounding the hymenium) is enclosed in the thalline exciple. Pycnidia can be present or absent; the conidia have a bacilliform to narrow ...
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Xanthocarpia Feracissima 111755755
''Xanthocarpia'' is a genus of mostly crustose lichens in the family Teloschistaceae. It has 12 species with a largely Northern Hemisphere distribution. Taxonomy The genus was originally circumscribed in 1859 by Abramo Bartolommeo Massalongo and Giuseppe De Notaris, with ''Xanthocarpia ochracea'' as the type species. This species has tetralocular ascospores (i.e. divided into 4 chambers). Description ''Xanthocarpia'' has a thallus that is either crust-like (crustose) or like a shield or plate attached on the lower surface at a single central point (peltate). In some cases, the thallus is absent; in all cases, a cortex is absent. The lichen contains anthraquinones compounds. ''Xanthocarpia'' species often have apothecia, which are coloured yellow to orange. These apothecia are zeorine, meaning that the proper exciple (the ring-shaped layer surrounding the hymenium) is enclosed in the thalline exciple. Pycnidia can be present or absent; the conidia have a bacilliform to narrow ...
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