Lichens (1985) - Flora of New Zealand Lichens
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Menegazzia A.Massal.

MENEGAZZIA Massal., 1854

* Account prepared by P.W. James (BM).

Thallus foliose, dorsiventral, heteromerous, lobate, ± radiate, corticolous, saxicolous or terricolous, rosette-forming to irregularly spreading, loosely to closely attached. Lobes ± inflated, hollow, upper surface corticate, perforate (two species lack perforations), with or without soredia, isidia or maculae, lower surface corticate, naked, ± uniformly attached to substrate, uneven, blackened, without rhizines, walls of internal cavity white, or pigmented or blackened. Apothecia laminal, rounded, lecanorine, often cupuliform, sessile or ± subpedicellate to distinctly pedicellate, disc concave to plane, matt, shining or pruinose, eperforate, thalline exciple well-developed. Epithecium pigmented, occasionally with granular inclusions. Hymenium colourless. Hypothecium chondroid, of thick-walled, conglutinated cells. Paraphyses anastomosing, apical cells capitate or not, ± pigmented. Asci 2- or 8-spored. Ascospores colourless, simple, ellipsoid, 20-120 × 10-50 µm, thick-walled. Pycnidia immersed, minute, punctiform, laminal, with a dark apex. Conidia short, bacilliform. Taxa in the genus show a diverse chemistry, including depsides, depsidones, fatty acids and pigments.

Key

1
Isidiate or sorediate, apothecia rare or absent
2
Without isidia or soredia, apothecia often present
9
2
Thallus without laminal perforations, isidiate, isidia elongate and ± spathulate, often decumbent
Laminal perforations sparse to numerous, sorediate
3
3
Thallus yellow-green (usnic acid), soralia vesicular, medulla C+ red
Thallus grey, green or brown, without usnic acid, soralia not vesicular, medulla C-
4
4
Thallus dark olive-brown, soralia irregular, coarse, pustular, soredia granular
Thallus pale grey or green, soralia regular, soredia fine, powdery
5
5
Lobes narrow (0.5-0.8 mm wide), lobe ends ± white-maculate, soralia granular, developed along edges of laminal, ruptured, blister-like vesicles
Lobes wider than 1 mm, lobe ends not, or indistinctly white-maculate, soralia superficial, not developing from edges of blister-like vesicles
6
6
Medulla UV+ vivid ice-blue, Pd-, KC+ pink
Medulla UV- or + orange, Pd+ orange, KC+ orange
7
7
Upper side of medulla pigmented ± ochre-yellow, UV+ orange, ends of lobes faintly white-maculate
Upper side of medulla white, UV-, ends of lobes emaculate
8
8
Soralia strictly arising from edges of perforations
Soralia not associated with perforations
9
Saxicolous or terricolous-muscicolous
10
Corticolous
11
10
Saxicolous, closely appressed, lobes regularly rosette-forming, thallus dark brown-black or olive-greenish
Terricolous or muscicolous, entangled in basal branches of subalpine shrubs or tussocks, loosely attached, straggling, irregularly branched and entangled, tubular, terete, inflated, thallus white or ± spotted or banded black
11
Margins of apothecia bright orange-red (K+ purple-black), medulla K+ red (crystals)
Margins of apothecia brown or concolorous with thallus, never orange-red, medulla K+ orange (no crystals) or K-
12
12
Upper side of medullary cavity yellow or ochre-yellow, UV+ yellow or orange, spores 8 per ascus
13
Upper side of medullary cavity not pigmented, UV-, spores 2 or 8 per ascus
14
13
Upper side of medullary cavity ochre-yellow, UV+ orange, lobe ends ± faintly white-maculate
Upper side of medullary cavity yellow, UV+ yellow, lobe ends uniformly grey
14
Medulla UV+ ice-blue, KC+ pink, spores 2
Medulla UV-, KC+ yellow-orange or -, spores 2 or 8
15
15
Apothecia, at least when young, with white-pruinose discs, medulla K+ yellow, Pd+ yellow
Apothecia epruinose, medulla K+ yellow → orange or -, Pd+ yellow → orange or -
16
16
Apothecia ± pedicellate, exciple scabrid, perforations often large (to 1.5 mm diam.), gaping, margins involute, medulla K-, Pd-
Apothecia sessile to subpedicellate, exciple smooth, perforations < 1 mm diam., medulla K+ yellow → orange, Pd+ orange
17
17
Thallus congested-convolute, dark red-brown, perforations depressed
Thallus swollen, often almost terete, not congested, lobes often zig-zag radiating, greenish or green-grey, perforations conical

Menegazzia is primarily a Southern Hemisphere genus (only one species, M. terebrata, is widely distributed in the Northern Hemisphere) of c. 45 species, possibly to be included in the family Hypogymniaceae [Elix Brunonia 2: 176 (1980)]. New Zealand is a predominant centre of speciation in the genus with at least 22 species, 17 of which are discussed here. South-eastern Australia, Tasmania and southern Chile are other areas rich in species of Menegazzia. In New Zealand, species are best developed in Nothofagus forest, and range from North Auckland to the Subantarctic Is, and from s.l. to subalpine rocks at 2000 m. Species are mainly corticolous but one species grows in subalpine grasslands and several on lowland to subalpine rocks. South American species are discussed by Santesson [ Ark. Bot. 30A (3): 1-35 (1942)] who also gives much useful information on the genus. New Zealand species are described by Krempelhuber [ Verhandl. zool.-bot. Ges. Wien 26: 451 (1876)]; Stirton [ Proc. phil. Soc. Glasg. 10: 294 (1877); Scott. Nat. 4: 253 (1878); T.N.Z.I. 32: 78 (1900)]; Hillmann [ Feddes Repert. 49: 38 (1940)]; Zahlbruckner [ Denkschr. Akad. Wiss. Wien math.-naturwiss. Kl. 104: 359-361 (1941)] and James and Galloway (in prep.).

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