Lichens Pan-Z (2007) - Flora of New Zealand Lichens - Revised Second Edition Pan-Z
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Umbilicaria Hoffm.

UMBILICARIA Hoffm., 1789  nom. cons. 

Type : Umbilicaria hyperborea (Ach.) Hoffm. [=Lichen hyperboreus Ach., typ. cons.  (see Jørgensen & Santesson 1993: 886)]

Description : Flora (1985: 589).

Key

1
Rhizinomorphs present on lower surface and/or at margins
2
Rhizinomorphs absent from lower surface and margins
12
2
Thallus with marginal soredia or laminal isidia
3
Thallus without marginal parasoredia or laminal isidia
4
3
Thallus with marginal parasoredia
Thallus with laminal isidia
4
Rhizinomorphs scattered below and/or at margins
5
Rhizinomorphs forming a dense, black felt below
5
Apothecia sessile to immersed; disc plane or with papillae or fissures
6
Apothecia pedicellate; disc gyrose-contorted or plane
10
6
Rhizinomorphs black
7
Rhizinomorphs pale-pinkish, concolorous with lower surface
7
Upper surface minutely roughened, coriaceous, not granular-crystalline; apothecial disc plane, never with central papillae or fissures
8
Upper surface granular-crystalline centrally; disc papillate or fissured centrally
8
Apothecia immersed to subimmersed
9
Apothecia sessile
9
Apothecia very large margins prominent, surface smooth, not dimpled or coarsely granular; medulla K+ yellow→red (norstictic acid)
Apothecia smaller, often with puckered ridges radiating from margins of disc; surface dimpled or coarsely granular; medulla K−
10
Apothecial disc gyrose-contorted
11
Apothecial disc plane
11
Lower surface smooth, not scabrid-areolate
Lower surface scabrid-areolate
12
Upper surface vermiform or reticulate-ridged
13
Upper surface smooth, not vermiform or reticulate-ridged
16
13
Upper surface pale, ivory, creamish, to greyish, papillate or covered with cracked or crystalline granules and appearing areolate
14
Upper surface black or dark-brown, continuous, dull to shining, not granular-crystalline
15
14
Lower surface pale
Lower surface black
15
Upper surface with raised, smoothly rounded, broad ridges; lower surface with sooty black thalloconidia
Upper surface with rather shallow, vermiform ridges; lower surface without sooty black thalloconidia
16
Upper surface dull, pruinose centrally with fine, thin, radial cracks; thalloconidia of lower surface simple (rarely 1-septate)
Upper surface shining, smooth, without cracks; thalloconidia of lower surface 6–10-septate

Umbilicaria, a genus of c. 70 species worldwide (Hestmark 2004), is included in the family Umbilicariaceae (Eriksson et al. 2004; Pennycook & Galloway 2004). It is a conspicuous genus on subalpine to high-alpine rocks, and is a component of the lichen mycobiota of the highest exposed rocks in New Zealand, viz. the rocks of the summit ridge of Aoraki/Mt Cook in land environment (LENZ) T (Leathwick et al. 2003). Around one-third of the known species of Umbilicaria have conspicuous, usually hypothalline, hyphomycetous anamorphs (thalloconidia) in the symbiotic state (Hasenhüttl & Poelt 1978; Hestmark 1990, 1991a, 1991b). Hestmark (1990: 548) defines thalloconidia as "the non-motile, single to aggregated, spherical to irregular, non- to multi-septate, thick-walled, dry, smooth to rugged, dark-coloured conidia developed by the mycobiont and seceded mainly from the lower cortex and/or the rhizinomorphs". Thalloconidia are now recognised as providing good taxonomic characters for species separation (see below). Chemistry in the genus is discussed by Feige et al. (1987), Posner et al. (1992) and Narui et al. (1996, 1999).

Species of Umbilicaria are quite frequently parasitised by the lichenicolous fungus * Clypeococcum grossum (Körb.) D. Hawksworth (q.v.), which has olive-brown, 1-septate ascospores with minutely verrucose walls (Hawksworth 1982; Øvstedal & Hawksworth 1986; Hawksworth & Diederich 1988; Alstrup & Hawksworth 1990; Santesson 1993), and to date, nine species of Umbilicaria in New Zealand are recorded as having infections of this lichenicolous fungus, viz. U. cylindrica, U. durietzii, U. grisea, U. hyperborea, U. nylanderiana, U. polyphylla, U. subaprina, U. umbilicarioides and U. vellea (Galloway 2002c). Material of * Clypeococcum -infected Umbilicaria from New Zealand was earlier incorrectly designated as Lasallia sp. (Galloway 1985a: 203; 1992d: 19), the conspicuous superficial galls being misinterpreted for the pustules that are a common feature of species of Lasallia, a genus not occurring in New Zealand.

Recent studies on Umbilicaria provide much valuable information on various aspects of chemistry, taxonomy, ecology and distribution of species, and the present treatment has benefitted greatly from the secure foundations provided by recent accounts of Northern Hemisphere, Asian, East African, and Antarctic populations of Umbilicaria (Hakulinen 1962; Lindsay 1969; Poelt 1977; Hasenhüttl & Poelt 1978; Seaward et al. 1983; Topham et al. 1982; Krog & Swinscow 1986; Filson 1987; Swinscow & Krog 1988; Codogno et al. 1989; Sancho & Kappen 1989; Hageman & Fahselt 1990, 1992; Hestmark 1990, 1991a, 1991b, 1993, 1997, 2004; Sancho et al. 1992, 1998; Sipman & Topham 1992; Poelt & Nash 1993; Wei & Jiang 1993; Valladares 1994; Goward et al. 1994b; Narui et al. 1996, 1999; McCune & Geiser 1997; Brodo et al. 2001; Øvstedal & Lewis Smith 2001; Romeike et al. 2002). The genus is currently under investigation (Galloway & Sancho 2005, in prep.; Galloway & Ledingham 2006). Seventeen species are recorded here.

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