Verrucaria Schrad.
Type : Verrucaria rupestris Schrad.
Descriptions : Flora (1985: 604). See also McCarthy (2001j: 176).
Key
Verrucaria is a genus of crustose pyrenocarpous lichens having a green, unicellular photobiont; discrete, scattered, immersed to superficial perithecia with a variously developed involucrellum, and clavate to cylindroclavate, fissitunicate asci containing eight colourless, simple ascospores. It is included in the family Verrucariaceae (McCarthy 2001j; Eriksson et al. 2004; Pennycook & Galloway 2004; Eriksson 2005) and c. 320 species are known worldwide (Kirk et al. 2001). The paraphyses gelatinise long before maturity though periphyses persist. The genus has no demonstrable chemistry. Most species grow in warm-temperate to alpine-subpolar climates, with all but a few being saxicolous; on calcareous and siliceous rocks, mortar, concrete, compacted sand or soil, including periodically inundated maritime and freshwater species.
Systematic studies in the Southern Hemisphere and Asia were few or non-existent until relatively recently when the work of McCarthy on Australasian taxa, where 34 species are currently known (McCarthy 1991a, 1991b, 1991c, 1991d, 1991e, 1995c, 2001j; McCarthy & Johnson 1995, McCarthy & Kantvilas 2000a; 1998), reawakened interest in the genus. Japanese taxa are discussed by Harada in a series of papers containing much useful information on the genus (Harada 1992b, 1994, 1995a, 1995b, 1996, 2000). Corticolous species are discussed by Breuss (1993b, 1994b, 1994c, 1998c), and lichenicolous taxa by Zehetleitner (1978), Breuss (1998c) and Hoffman & Hafellner (2000).
In the Flora account (Galloway 1985a) 10 species of Verrucaria were recorded from New Zealand. Since then, many aquatic species were collected by Peter Johnson who sent material to Pat McCarthy for identification. After preliminary studies of a range of New Zealand material, McCarthy (1991e: 283) wrote: "In view of the abundance of preferred habitats in New Zealand and a climatic range that would be appear to be ideal for the genus, the total number of taxa may reasonably be expected to approach 70–80." The present treatment discusses 36 taxa, emphasising the fact that undoubtedly many more taxa, from a variety of substrata, are yet to be discovered here. In identifying species of Verrucaria, Hawksworth et al. (1992: 630) point out that it is important to pay attention to the texture of the thallus, immersion of the perithecia, whether any pits are formed in the rock substratum, the nature of any involucrellum and, especially, the size of the ascospores.