Lichens A-Pac (2007) - Flora of New Zealand Lichens - Revised Second Edition A-Pac
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Leptogium (Ach.) Gray

LEPTOGIUM (Ach.) Gray, 1821

Type : Tremella lichenoides L. [=Leptogium lichenoides (L.) Zahlbr.] see Jørgensen et al. (1994a: 371).

Description : Flora (1985: 248–249).

Key

1
Thallus isidiate or phyllidiate
2
Thallus without isidia or phyllidia
13
2
Thallus wrinkled (×10 lens)
3
Thallus smooth
8
3
Isidiate (isidia ±terete)
4
Phyllidiate
6
4
Upper surface finely wrinkled or wrinkled–striate
5
Upper surface strongly wrinkled, isidia mostly on ridges
5
Upper surface velvety to scurfy, isidia granular
Upper surface not scurfy, isidia larger, not granular
6
Thallus fertile
7
Thallus sterile
7
Upper surface often densely phyllidiate; [Kermadec Is]
Upper surface occasionally phyllidiate; subalpine forest to alpine grassland
8
Lower surface naked
9
Lower surface tomentose
9
Isidiate
10
Phyllidiate
11
10
Isidia simple to coralloid, not granular; thallus lead-blue or greyish; on bark, twigs or acid rocks
Isidia granular; thallus dark greenish brown; on basicolous substrata
11
Thallus lobes grey-blue, or olive green-black, not conspicuously browned
12
Thallus lobes ±browned
12
Thallus olive green-black, ±submerged or partially inundated on streamside rocks or on wetland plants
Thallus grey-blue; on bark
13
Thallus with hairs on the lower (rarely the upper) surface
14
Thallus not hairy below, rarely with fascicles of attachment hyphae
17
14
Hairs on lower surface only, never on upper surface
15
Hairs on both lower and upper (near margins) surfaces
15
Hairs to 100 μm long, with cylindrical cells
16
Hairs to 25 μm long, with spherical cells
16
Thallus greenish blue, often browned; spores 20–25 × 8–10 μm
Thallus bright blue, never browned; spores (20–)25–35(–40) × 8–12(–14) μm
17
Spores submuriform
18
Spores 1-septate
18
Lobe margins phyllidiate
19
Lobe margins entire
19
Lobes broad; thalline exciple entire, not lobulate
Lobes narrow, lacerate–ragged, microphylline; thalline exciple lobulate

Leptogium, a genus of some 180 widespread species (Jørgensen & Nash 2004), included in the family Collemataceae (Eriksson et al. 2004; Pennycook & Galloway 2004; Eriksson 2005), is most highly speciose in tropical regions (Malme 1924b), and consequently it is not surprising that northern New Zealand should have more species than elsewhere in the country. During the past 25 years, northern areas have been particularly well-collected, thanks especially to the efforts of the late John Bartlett (his collection is in AK), and more recently, of Bruce Hayward and Anthony Wright, with the result that Leptogium in New Zealand is now much better known than it was when the Flora was compiled. That work recorded nine species (L. azureum [=L. aucklandicum], L. brebissonii [=L. coralloideum], L. burgessii, L. crispatellum, L. cyanescens, L. laceroides, L. limbatum [=L. malmei], L. menziesii and L. plicatile). This was too conservative a view as additional collections and study, and the results of Doug Verdon's Australasian work, subsequently showed (Verdon 1990, 1992a; Verdon et al. 1996). Subsequent New Zealand lichen checklists recorded 10 taxa (Galloway 1992d), and 14 taxa (Malcolm & Galloway 1997), adding L. biloculare, L. coralloideum, L. pecten, L. tasmanicum (=L. limbatum) and L. victorianum to the species known from New Zealand.

Building on the secure foundations provided by recent accounts of Northern Hemisphere (Jørgensen 1996a, 1997a; Jørgensen & James 1983; Bjelland 2001; Aragón & Otálora 2004; Aragón et al. 2004); East African (Swinscow & Krog 1988); Australian (Verdon 1990, 1992a; Verdon et al. 1996; Jørgensen & Nash 2004); and temperate South American (Galloway & Jørgensen 1995) populations of Leptogium, this account discusses 20 taxa following Galloway (1999) and Galloway & Knight (1999).

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