Sticta cinereoglauca
≡Lobaria cinereoglauca (Hook.f. & Taylor) Kuntze, Revis. gen. pl. 2: 876 (1891).
=Sticta sinuosa var. papyracea C.Bab. in J.D. Hooker, Fl. Nov. Zel. 2: 280 (1855).
=Sticta cinereoglauca var. viridis Zahlbr., Denkschr. Akad. Wiss. Wien math.-naturwiss. Kl. 104: 288 (1941).
=Sticta cinereoglaucoides C.W.Dodge, Nova Hedwigia 19: 473 (1971) ["1970"].
=Stictina taylori C.W.Dodge, Nova Hedwigia 19: 474 (1971) ["1970"].
Sticta sinuosa var. papyracea. Type: New Zealand, "Northern and Middle Islands" [North and South Is], Colenso, Lyall – not seen.
Stictina cinereoglaucoides. Type: New Zealand. Sine loco. Comm. J.D. Hooker, 1844 – FH, not seen.
Sticta taylori. Type: New Zealand. Sine loco. Comm. J.D. Hooker, 1844 – FH, not seen.
Lectotype: New Zealand. Northland, ? Bay of Islands, J.D. Hooker – BM [fide Galloway (1985a: 554)].
Sticta cinereoglauca var. viridis. Holotype: New Zealand. Auckland. Rangitoto I., near Auckland, on Griselinia lucida, 12.iv.1936, H.H. Allan W 92 – W 2138.
Descriptions : Flora (1985: 554) and Galloway (1997: 126–127).
N: Northland (Three Kings Is) to Wellington: S: Nelson to Southland. St: [map in Galloway (1997: 129, fig. 19)]. Mainly coastal and lowland, especially in the north, although also in montane beech forest and mixed rainforest, s.l. to 600 m. On a variety of forest trees and shrubs including Avicennia marina in northern coastal habitats, Griselinia lucida, Kunzea ericoides, Metrosideros excelsa, Myrsine australis and Nothofagus solandri; also on rotting logs, rarely on rocks.
Endemic
Illustrations : Babington (1855: pl. CXXVIIC; Galloway (1997: 127, fig. 17; 128, fig. 18).
Sticta cinereoglauca is characterised by: the corticolous (rarely saxicolous) habit; broadly rounded lobes with entire margins without soredia or isidia; a green photobiont; frequent red to red-brown apothecia usually clustered towards the lobe margins; and characteristic 5–7-septate ascospores, 42–50 × 7–9.5 μm. It is distinguished from S. subcaperata, which has thicker, more coriaceous lobes and apothecia with distinctive waxy yellow or orange-yellow discs. The phyllidiate northern species. S. babingtonii also has 7-septate spores, but the spores in this species are longer (45–61 μm), and it also has characteristic orange, pinkish or mustard-yellow cyphellae on the lower surface.