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A Lichenological Legacy – Festschrift Thomas H

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CBibliotheca Lichenologica 106, 319-351<br />

Bates et al. (eds.), Biomonitoring, Ecology, and Systematics of Lichens<br />

<strong>Festschrift</strong> <strong>Thomas</strong> H. Nash III<br />

J. Cramer in der Gebr. Borntraeger Verlagsbuchhandlung, Stuttgart, April 2011<br />

The lichen genus Phyllopsora<br />

(Ramalinaceae) in the West Indies<br />

EINAR TIMDAL<br />

Natural History Museum, University of Oslo, P.O. Box 1172 Blindern, N-0318 Oslo, Norway<br />

(Einar.Timdal@nhm.uio.no)<br />

Abstract: 34 species of Phyllopsora are accepted in the West Indies.<br />

New species are: P. hispaniolae, P. imshaugii, P. teretiuscula, and P.<br />

tobagensis. New combinations are: P. cognata (Nyl.) Timdal and P.<br />

phaeobyssina (Vain.) Timdal. New to the West Indies: P. byssiseda,<br />

P. labriformis, and P. lacerata. The names P. microsperma Müll. Arg.<br />

and P. porphyromelaena (Vain.) Zahlbr. are proposed for P. glabella<br />

(Nyl.) Brako, nom. illeg., and P. albicans sensu Swinscow & Krog,<br />

respectively. The secondary compounds hyperlatolic acid, methyl<br />

barbarate, norsolorinic acid, norstictic acid, perlatolic acid, and<br />

superlatolic acid are reported from the genus for the first time.<br />

Keywords: Lecanorales, lichenized ascomycetes, Neotropics,<br />

taxonomy<br />

Introduction<br />

This study began as a revision of the material of Phyllopsora Müll. Arg. collected<br />

in the West Indies by Henry A. Imshaug and stored in MSC. The material was<br />

collected in the period 1952<strong>–</strong>1963 and consists of 159 collections (including<br />

immixtures) from 10 countries or islands. Imshaug did not publish on the material<br />

and it was identified only to the genus level.<br />

Phyllopsora is mainly a tropical and subtropical genus consisting of crustose to<br />

squamulose species growing primarily on bark in humid forests. More than 100<br />

species names exist in the literature; 15 of them, plus 8 varieties and forms, are<br />

based on material from the West Indies (Tab. 1). Many of these names are old,<br />

e.g. introduced by E. Tuckerman or W. Nylander based on C. Wright’s collections<br />

from Cuba, which makes it particularly important to understand the taxonomy of<br />

Phyllopsora in this area for the nomenclatural stability in the genus.<br />

In IMSHAUG’s (1957) catalogue of the West Indian lichens, 26 species, varieties<br />

and forms which in this study are regarded as belonging in Phyllopsora were<br />

listed under the genera Lecidea Ach., Phyllopsora, and Psorella Müll. Arg. (Tab.<br />

319<br />

eschweizerbart_xxx


2). IMSHAUG (1957) listed one additional Phyllopsora species, P. cryptocarpa<br />

Riddle, which was transferred to Fellhanera Vĕzda by BRAKO (1989) and is not<br />

treated here, and one additional Psorella species, P. triptophyllina (Nyl.) Zahlbr.,<br />

which is here regarded as belonging in Eschatogonia Trevis. (cf. TIMDAL 2008a).<br />

Table 1. Phyllopsora taxa described from the West Indies.<br />

Basionym Country/Island Current name<br />

Biatora pyrrhomelaena Tuck. Cuba P. pyrrhomelaena<br />

Lecidea breviuscula Nyl. Cuba P. breviuscula<br />

L. breviuscula var. phaeobyssina Nyl. Guadeloupe P. phaeobyssina<br />

L. canoumbrina Vain. Trinidad P. canoumbrina<br />

L. cognata Nyl. Cuba P. cognata<br />

L. corallina var. schizophylloides Vain. St. Vincent P. minor<br />

L. furfuracea var. biatorina Vain. Guadeloupe unknown<br />

L. glabella Nyl. Cuba P. microsperma<br />

L. glabriuscula Nyl. Cuba P. orchroxantha<br />

L. granulifera Fink Puerto Rico P. canoumbrina<br />

L. intermediella Nyl. Cuba P. intermediella<br />

L. leucophyllina Nyl. Cuba P. leucophyllina<br />

L. longiuscula Nyl. Cuba P. longiuscula<br />

L. microphyllina Nyl. Cuba P. microphyllina<br />

L. microphyllina var. subgranulosa Tuck. Cuba P. pertexta<br />

L. parvifolia f. corallina Tuck. Cuba P. furfuracea chemotype 2<br />

L. parvifolia f. subgranulosa Tuck. Cuba P. canoumbrina<br />

L. parvifoliella Nyl. Cuba P. parvifoliella<br />

L. pertexta Nyl. Cuba P. pertexta<br />

L. subbreviuscula Nyl. Cuba P. parvifolia<br />

Phyllopsora cryptocarpa Riddle Cuba Fellhanera cryptocarpa<br />

P. parvifolia var. glauca de Lesd. Cuba P. porphyromelaena<br />

P. parvifolia var. hirtella de Lesd. Cuba P. parvifolia<br />

In BRAKO’s (1989, 1991) revision of the neotropical species of Phyllopsora, 18<br />

species and 8 varieties were accepted, of which 13 species and 6 varieties were<br />

recorded from the West Indies (Tab. 2). My own study of Phyllopsora in Peru<br />

(TIMDAL 2008b), however, revealed 20 species in that country alone. Although<br />

my concept of the genus is broader than that of Brako’s, e.g., including most of<br />

the species placed in Psorella in ZAHLBRUCKNER (1926<strong>–</strong>1927), it soon became<br />

apparent that an examination of Brako's material was needed in order to reevaluate<br />

the circumscription of the West Indian taxa. Hence additional material<br />

was borrowed from several herbaria and I have now studied most of the<br />

specimens of Phyllopsora reported from the West Indies. Several recent<br />

collections not examined by Brako were also included in this study.<br />

320<br />

eschweizerbart_xxx


Material and methods<br />

Imshaug collected Phyllopsora in Jamaica in 1952 (11 collections, including<br />

immixtures), 1953 (18), and 1958 (3), Grenada in 1953 (6), the Dominican<br />

Republic in 1958 (7), Haiti in 1958 (33), Cuba in 1959 (15), Dominica in 1963<br />

(4), Guadeloupe in 1963 (5), Saint Lucia in 1963 (9), Saint Vincent in 1963 (2),<br />

and Trinidad and Tobago in 1963 (46). The collections from the Dominican<br />

Republic and Haiti were made together with C. M. Wetmore and those in 1963 with<br />

Table 2. Comparison of the taxonomy and nomenclature of IMSHAUG (1957) with that of<br />

BRAKO (1991) and the present study.<br />

Imshaug (1957) Brako (1991) Present study<br />

Lecidea canoumbrina Phyllopsora canoumbrina Phyllopsora canoumbrina<br />

L. furfuracea P. furfuracea P. furfuracea<br />

L. furfuracea var. biatorina unknown unknown<br />

L. glabella P. glabella P. microsperma<br />

L. granulifera P. canoumbrina P. canoumbrina<br />

L. pyrrhomelaena excluded P. pyrrhomelaena<br />

Phyllopsora breviuscula P. parvifolia var. breviuscula P. breviuscula<br />

P. breviuscula var. phaeobyssina P. corallina var. phaeobyssina P. phaeobyssina<br />

P. corallina P. corallina var. corallina P. corallina<br />

P. corallina var. schizophylloides P. minor P. minor<br />

P. intermediella P. intermediella P. intermediella<br />

P. longiuscula P. longiuscula P. longiuscula<br />

P. parvifolia P. parvifolia var. parvifolia P. parvifolia<br />

P. parvifolia f. corallina P. corallina var. corallina P. furfuracea chemotype 2<br />

P. parvifolia var. glauca P. buettneri var. glauca P. porphyromelaena<br />

P. parvifolia var. hirtella not identified P. parvifolia<br />

P. parvifolia var. subgranulosa P. canoumbrina P. canoumbrina<br />

P. parvifoliella P. parvifoliella P. parvifoliella<br />

P. subbreviuscula P. parvifolia var. parvifolia P. parvifolia<br />

Psorella cognata not treated P. cognata<br />

Ps. glabriuscula P. corallina var. ochroxantha P. ochroxantha<br />

Ps. janeirensis excluded P. cinchonarum<br />

Ps. leucophyllina not treated P. leucophyllina<br />

Ps. microphyllina not treated P. microphyllina<br />

Ps. microphyllina var. subgranulosa not treated P. pertexta<br />

Ps. pertexta not treated P. pertexta<br />

P. buettneri var. munda P. buettneri chemotype 2<br />

P. chlorophaea P. chlorophaea<br />

P. confusa P. confusa<br />

P. corallina var. glaucella P. glaucella<br />

P. corallina var. santensis P. santensis<br />

P. kalbii P. kalbii<br />

321<br />

eschweizerbart_xxx


F.A. Imshaug. See FRYDAY & PRATHER (2001) for a general overview on<br />

Imshaug's lichen collections.<br />

Additional material from the West Indies were borrowed from or examined<br />

during visits to: B (17 collections), BG (16), BM (23), FH (3), H (17), NY (171),<br />

TUR (5), UPS (15), and the private herbarium of Sergio Pérez-Ortega (5). My<br />

own collections from a trip to Tobago in 2008 are stored in O (90). Type material<br />

from outside the West Indies were borrowed from or examined in BM, G, H, O,<br />

and S.<br />

Microscopical examinations were carried out on microtome sections cut at 16<br />

μm or on squash preparations. The preparations were observed in distilled water,<br />

lactophenol cotton blue, 10 % KOH (K), and a modified Lugol’s solution (water<br />

replaced by 50 % lactic acid). Polarized light was used for locating crystals in the<br />

microtome sections. The terminology of cortex types follows SWINSCOW & KROG<br />

(1981). Spore measurements are given as X ± 1.5 × SD rounded to 0.5 μm, where<br />

X is the arithmetic mean and SD the standard deviation. With the exception of the<br />

material in UPS and some specimens where otherwise is stated, all cited<br />

specimens were subjected to thin-layer chromatography (TLC) using the standard<br />

methods of CULBERSON & KRISTINSSON (1970) and CULBERSON (1972), modified<br />

by MENLOVE (1974) and CULBERSON & JOHNSON (1982). Routine examinations<br />

were made in solvent systems B and C; for critical studies all three systems were<br />

used.<br />

Results<br />

The secondary chemistry of the West Indian species and chemotypes is given in<br />

Table 3.<br />

The West Indian species<br />

1. Phyllopsora breviuscula (Nyl.) Müll. Arg.<br />

Bull. Herb. Boissier 2, App. 1: 45 (1894). <strong>–</strong> Lecidea breviuscula Nyl., Annls Sci. nat., Bot., sér. 4,<br />

19: 339 (1863). <strong>–</strong> Type: CUBA (see SWINSCOW & KROG 1981). <strong>–</strong> Descriptions: TIMDAL & KROG<br />

(2001), ELIX (2009).<br />

Chemistry: no lichen substances (by TLC).<br />

Notes: The species is recognized by the ellipsoid to fusiform ascospores (9.5<strong>–</strong>13<br />

× 3.5<strong>–</strong>5 μm), well developed, reddish brown prothallus and large, elongate,<br />

convex, adnate squamules lacking vegetative dispersal units and lichen<br />

substances. BRAKO (1991) treated it as P. parvifolia var. breviuscula (Nyl.) Brako,<br />

but I regard the taxon as a distinct species. Phyllopsora parvifolia forms smaller,<br />

more plane squamules with phyllidia on the lobe margins in the inner part of the<br />

thallus. It may also be confused with P. microphyllina, but that species forms<br />

smaller squamules and has acicular ascospores, 27<strong>–</strong>35 ca. 2.5 μm. See also P.<br />

byssiseda and P. microsperma for discussions.<br />

322<br />

eschweizerbart_xxx


Table 3. Secondary compounds occurring in the West Indian species and chemotypes of Phyllopsora. Atr: atranorin, arg: argopsin, narg:<br />

norargopsin, pan: pannarin, vic: vicanicin, nvic: norvicanicin, phy: phyllopsorin, cphy: chlorophyllopsorin, mps: methyl 2,7dichloropsoromate,<br />

mnps: methyl 2,7-dichloronorpsoromate, parv: parvifoliellin, fur: furfuraceic acid.<br />

fur<br />

·<br />

·<br />

parv<br />

·<br />

·<br />

mnps<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

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M<br />

·<br />

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·<br />

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·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

mps<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

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·<br />

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·<br />

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·<br />

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·<br />

cphy<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

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·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

m<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

phy<br />

·<br />

M<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

nvic<br />

vic<br />

·<br />

·<br />

t/m<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

M<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

M<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

M<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

pan<br />

·<br />

M<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

narg<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

arg<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

t/M<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

M<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

atr<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·/m<br />

·<br />

·/m<br />

·<br />

·/M<br />

M<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

None<br />

x<br />

·<br />

·<br />

x<br />

x<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

x<br />

x<br />

·<br />

x<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

x<br />

x<br />

Species/Chemotype<br />

Phyllopsora breviuscula<br />

Phyllopsora buettneri 2<br />

Phyllopsora buettneri 3<br />

Phyllopsora byssiseda<br />

Phyllopsora canoumbrina<br />

Phyllopsora chlorophaea 1<br />

Phyllopsora chodatinica<br />

Phyllopsora cinchonarum<br />

323<br />

eschweizerbart_xxx<br />

Phyllopsora cognata<br />

Phyllopsora confusa<br />

Phyllopsora corallina<br />

Phyllopsora furfuracea 1<br />

Phyllopsora furfuracea 2<br />

Phyllopsora glaucella<br />

Phyllopsora hispaniolae<br />

Phyllopsora imshaugii<br />

Phyllopsora intermediella<br />

Phyllopsora kalbii


fur<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

parv<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

M<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

mnps<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

M<br />

·<br />

·<br />

mps<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

m/M<br />

·<br />

·<br />

cphy<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

S/M<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·/m<br />

·<br />

phy<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

M<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

nvic<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

vic<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

pan<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

narg<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·/t<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·/m<br />

m/M<br />

·<br />

m/S<br />

·<br />

m<br />

·<br />

arg<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·/t<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

M<br />

M<br />

·<br />

M<br />

·<br />

M<br />

·<br />

atr<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·/m<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

None<br />

·<br />

x<br />

·<br />

x<br />

x<br />

x<br />

x<br />

·<br />

x<br />

·<br />

x<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

Table 3. Secondary compounds (continued)....<br />

Species/Chemotype<br />

Phyllopsora labriformis<br />

Phyllopsora lacerata<br />

Phyllopsora leucophyllina<br />

Phyllopsora longiuscula<br />

Phyllopsora microphyllina<br />

Phyllopsora microsperma<br />

Phyllopsora minor<br />

Phyllopsora ochroxantha<br />

Phyllopsora parvifolia<br />

Phyllopsora parvifoliella<br />

Phyllopsora pertexta<br />

Phyllopsora phaeobyssina<br />

Phyllopsora porphyromelaena 1<br />

Phyllopsora pyrrhomelaena<br />

Phyllopsora santensis<br />

Phyllopsora swinscowii<br />

Phyllopsora teretiuscula<br />

Phyllopsora tobagensis<br />

324<br />

eschweizerbart_xxx


Table 3. Secondary compounds occurring in the West Indian species and chemotypes of Phyllopsora. Fpc: fumarprotocetraric acid, lob:<br />

lobaric acid, sek: sekikaic acid, hsek: homosekikaic acid, per: perlatolic acid, hper: hyperlatolic acid, sper: superlatolic acid, nor: norstictic<br />

acid, mbar: methyl barbarate, zeo: zeorin, xan: xanthones, nsol: norsolorinic acid, unk: unknown compound. M: major, m: minor, S:<br />

submajor, t: trace.<br />

unk<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

M<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

nsol<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

xan<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

M<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

zeo<br />

·<br />

M<br />

M<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

t/M<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

·<br />

mbar<br />

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Species/Chemotype<br />

Phyllopsora breviuscula<br />

Phyllopsora buettneri 2<br />

Phyllopsora buettneri 3<br />

Phyllopsora byssiseda<br />

Phyllopsora canoumbrina<br />

Phyllopsora chlorophaea 1<br />

Phyllopsora chodatinica<br />

Phyllopsora cinchonarum<br />

325<br />

eschweizerbart_xxx<br />

Phyllopsora cognata<br />

Phyllopsora confusa<br />

Phyllopsora corallina<br />

Phyllopsora furfuracea 1<br />

Phyllopsora furfuracea 2<br />

Phyllopsora glaucella<br />

Phyllopsora hispaniolae<br />

Phyllopsora imshaugii<br />

Phyllopsora intermediella<br />

Phyllopsora kalbii


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Table 3. Secondary compounds (continued)....<br />

Species/Chemotype<br />

Phyllopsora labriformis<br />

Phyllopsora lacerata<br />

Phyllopsora leucophyllina<br />

Phyllopsora longiuscula<br />

Phyllopsora microphyllina<br />

Phyllopsora microsperma<br />

Phyllopsora minor<br />

Phyllopsora ochroxantha<br />

Phyllopsora parvifolia<br />

Phyllopsora parvifoliella<br />

Phyllopsora pertexta<br />

Phyllopsora phaeobyssina<br />

Phyllopsora porphyromelaena 1<br />

Phyllopsora pyrrhomelaena<br />

Phyllopsora santensis<br />

Phyllopsora swinscowii<br />

Phyllopsora teretiuscula<br />

Phyllopsora tobagensis<br />

326<br />

eschweizerbart_xxx


Phyllopsora breviuscula is pantropical, but in the West Indies only known<br />

from Wright’s material from Cuba and Duss’ material from Guadeloupe (not<br />

examined by me). The specimen from Saint Vincent reported by VAINIO (1896)<br />

belongs in P. chodatinica (Elliot 135, BM).<br />

Specimens examined: CUBA. Wright s.n. (H-NYL 20557, holotype, TLC not performed), Wright,<br />

Lich. Cub. 181 (B, BM, UPS).<br />

2. Phyllopsora buettneri (Müll. Arg.) Zahlbr.<br />

Catal. Lich. Univers. 4 (25): 396 (1926). <strong>–</strong> Psora buettneri Müll. Arg., Engler Bot. Jahrb. 15: 506<br />

(1893). <strong>–</strong> Type: TOGO (see SWINSCOW & KROG 1981). <strong>–</strong> Descriptions: TIMDAL & KROG (2001),<br />

TIMDAL (2008b), ELIX (2009).<br />

Chemistry: chemotype 1 (paleotropical): pannarin (major) and zeorin (major);<br />

chemotype 2 (neotropical): pannarin (major), phyllopsorin (major) and zeorin<br />

(major); chemotype 3 (neotropical): vicanicin (major), norvicanicin (trace to<br />

minor) and zeorin (major); chemotype 4 (paleotropical): dechloropannarin (major)<br />

and zeorin (major); chemotype 5 (Norfolk Island, ELIX 2006a, not examined by<br />

me): argopsin, norargopsin and zeorin.<br />

Notes: The species is recognized by the large, elongated, pruinose, lacinulate<br />

squamules always containing zeorin and in addition pannarin (plus phyllopsorin in<br />

the Neotropics) or the related compounds argopsin (plus norargopsin),<br />

dechloropannarin or vicanicin. Both neotropical chemotypes occur in the West<br />

Indies. If regarded as distinct species, they should be named P. munda (Malme)<br />

Zahlbr. (chemotype 2) and P. melanoglauca Zahlbr. (chemotype 3). There are no<br />

known morphological or anatomical differences between the five chemotypes of<br />

P. buettneri, however. The holotype of P. munda (Brazil, Malme, Lich. Regnell<br />

617b, S) contains phyllopsorin (major), pannarin (submajor), and zeorin (minor),<br />

and an isotype of P. melanoglauca (Brazil, Schiffner s.n., BM) contains vicanicin<br />

and zeorin (both major).<br />

BRAKO's (1991) varieties and chemical strains of P. buettneri correspond to the<br />

following species and chemotypes in the present work: var. buettneri = P.<br />

buettneri chemotype 1; var. glauca (B. de Lesd.) Brako chemical strain I = P.<br />

porphyromelaena; strain II = P. chodatinica; strain III = P. porphyromelaena; var.<br />

munda (Malme) Brako = P. buettneri chemotype 2. See also P. hispaniolae for<br />

discussion.<br />

The species is pantropical. New to Haiti, Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago.<br />

Specimens examined: <strong>–</strong> Chemotype 2: CUBA. Harris 14444, 14559, 14592 (NY). DOMINICAN<br />

REPUBLIC. Harris 20493, 20495 (NY). <strong>–</strong> Chemotype 3: CUBA. Harris 14555 (NY), Imshaug<br />

24839, 24865 (MSC), Pérez-Ortega s.n. (hb Pérez-Ortega), Wright, Lich. Cub. 180 (BM, UPS).<br />

HAITI. Imshaug & Wetmore 2883, 3145, 3157- immixture, 22701 (MSC). DOMINICAN REPUBLIC.<br />

Buck 8348 (NY), Harris 15563 (NY), Imshaug & Wetmore 23662, 23669 (MSC). JAMAICA.<br />

Imshaug 13166, 14617 (MSC). TRINIDAD & TOBAGO. Imshaug & Imshaug 31665, 32146 (MSC).<br />

327<br />

eschweizerbart_xxx


3. Phyllopsora byssiseda (Nyl.) Zahlbr.<br />

Catal. Lich. Univers. 4 (25): 396 (1926). <strong>–</strong> Lecidea byssiseda Nyl. in Hue, Nouv. Arch. Mus. Hist.<br />

Nat., sér. 3, 3: 103 (1891). <strong>–</strong> Type: MEXICO, s. loc., Fr. Müller (H-NYL 20517, holotype) [no<br />

lichen substances (by TLC)].<br />

(Colour Plate 14A)<br />

Description: Prothallus well developed, white. Thallus effuse or incompletely<br />

circular, squamulose, with radiating marginal squamules. Squamules medium<br />

sized, up to 0.8 mm diam., adnate, elongated, deeply divided or lobed, weakly to<br />

moderately convex; upper side pale brown (old herbarium material), epruinose,<br />

glabrous; margin concolorous with upper side, pubescent. Isidia numerous,<br />

developing from the tips of the squamules or often directly from the prothallus,<br />

cylindrical, long, sometimes branched. Upper cortex of type 1, 40<strong>–</strong>50 μm thick,<br />

containing scattered crystals, these dissolving in K. Medulla not containing<br />

crystals, PD<strong>–</strong>, K<strong>–</strong>. Apothecia not common, up to 1.5 mm diam., weakly convex,<br />

medium brown, rounded, simple or more rarely conglomerate, with a paler, thin,<br />

more or less persistent margin which is pubescent on the lower side. Excipulum<br />

pale brown to colourless, K<strong>–</strong>. Hypothecium dark yellowish brown, K<strong>–</strong>.<br />

Epithecium pale brown to colourless, K<strong>–</strong>. Crystals present only in the hymenium,<br />

dissolving in K. Ascospores narrowly ellipsoid to fusiform, simple, 9<strong>–</strong>13 3<strong>–</strong>4<br />

μm (20 spores from one apothecium).<br />

Chemistry: no lichen substances (by TLC) or atranorin (trace to minor).<br />

Notes: The type material was studied by BRAKO (1991) but left uninterpreted due<br />

to its poor condition. The West Indian material now available shows a<br />

characteristic species similar to P. breviuscula but differing in having a thick,<br />

white prothallus, long, thick isidia, and in the presence of small amounts of<br />

atranorin in the thallus. In P. breviuscula, the prothallus is reddish brown,<br />

vegetative dispersal units are lacking, and no lichen substances occur. I failed to<br />

observe atranorin in the holotype of P. byssiseda (TLC), but a possible trace of<br />

this compound was reported from the same specimen by SWINSCOW & KROG<br />

(1981). In Imshaug & Wetmore 3144 and 22726 (no atranorin by TLC), crystals<br />

dissolving in K were seen in the upper cortex (polarized light), indicating that<br />

atranorin occurs in these specimens in a concentration too low for detection by<br />

standard TLC.<br />

Phyllopsora byssiseda was previously known only from the type locality in<br />

Mexico (near Orizaba, according to NYLANDER 1858).<br />

Specimens examined: HAITI. Dept. de L'Ouest, road from Foret des Pins to Savane-Zombie, 5300<br />

ft, 1958, Imshaug & Wetmore 3060-immixture in P. ochroxantha (MSC); summit of small peak at<br />

N end of ridge above (E of) Foret des Pins, 5800<strong>–</strong>5900 ft, 1958, Imshaug & Wetmore 3144, 3157<br />

(MSC); ridge N of Foret des Pins (SHADA station), near border of Dominican Republic, 5800 ft,<br />

1958, Imshaug & Wetmore 22726 (MSC). DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. Independencia, Sierra de<br />

Baoruco, 23.5 km S of Puerto Escondido, then 9 km E along road to Charco Colorado, 1816'N,<br />

7131'W, 1800 m, 1987, Harris 20547 (NY). JAMAICA. Parish of Portland or St. Andrew, Dicks<br />

Pond Trail near Hardwar Gap, Blue Mts, 3800 ft, 1952, Imshaug 13112 (MSC); Mount Horeb<br />

ridge, Blue Mts, 4400<strong>–</strong>4600 ft, 1952, Imshaug 13171 (MSC); Parish of St. <strong>Thomas</strong>, S slope of<br />

Mossmans Peak, Blue Mts., 5000 ft, 1953, Imshaug, 14671-immixture in Krogia antillarum<br />

(MSC).<br />

328<br />

eschweizerbart_xxx


4. Phyllopsora canoumbrina (Vain.) Brako<br />

Mycotaxon 35: 12 (1989). <strong>–</strong> Lecidea canoumbrina Vain, Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci. 58: 135<br />

(1923). <strong>–</strong> Type: TRINIDAD & TOBAGO (see BRAKO 1991). <strong>–</strong> Description: BRAKO (1991).<br />

Chemistry: no lichen substances (by TLC).<br />

Notes: This poorly understood species is characterized by the crustose thallus on a<br />

thin, white or partly reddish brown prothallus, the cylindrical isidia, the medium<br />

brown apothecia, the dark yellowish brown hypothecium, and the ellipsoid<br />

ascospores (5<strong>–</strong>7.5 2.5<strong>–</strong>3 μm, n = 20, my measurements in TUR-V 23680). It<br />

may be conspecific with the acid deficient chemotype of P. furfuracea, but differs<br />

apparently in having a yellowish brown hypothecium and shorter ascospores. In<br />

P. furfuracea the hypothecium is reddish brown and the ascospores 7<strong>–</strong>13 2<strong>–</strong>3<br />

μm (TIMDAL 2008b).<br />

In addition to the West Indian material, the species is known from a few<br />

collections from Guatemala, Venezuela, and Brazil (BRAKO 1991). The report<br />

from Jamaica [RIDDLE 1912, as Bacidia subgranulosa (Tuck.) Riddle], was based<br />

on a specimen of P. pertexta (Cummings 118, NY).<br />

Specimens examined: CUBA. Wright, Lich. Cub. 185 (BM, UPS, isolectotypes of Lecidea<br />

parvifolia f. subgranulosa Tuck.). PUERTO RICO. Britton & Cowell 4235 (NY, isotype of Lecidea<br />

granulifera Fink, TLC not performed). TRINIDAD & TOBAGO. Thaxter 19 (TUR-V 23680, isotype<br />

of L. canoumbrina).<br />

5. Phyllopsora chlorophaea (Müll. Arg.) Zahlbr.<br />

Denkschr. Kaiserl. Akad. Wissensch. 83: 133 (1909). <strong>–</strong> Psora chlorophaea Müll. Arg., Flora 70:<br />

320 (1887). <strong>–</strong> Type: BRAZIL (see SWINSCOW & KROG 1981). <strong>–</strong> Descriptions: TIMDAL & KROG<br />

(2001), TIMDAL (2008b).<br />

Chemistry: chemotype 1 (pantropical): no lichen substances or atranorin (trace to<br />

minor); chemotype 2 (paleotropical): furfuraceic acid and sometimes atranorin<br />

(trace).<br />

Notes: The species is recognized by the ascending, lacinulate squamules attached<br />

to a well developed, reddish brown prothallus, the dark brown apothecia, the dark<br />

reddish brown (K+ purple) hypothecium, and the narrowly ellipsoid to fusiform<br />

ascospores, 7<strong>–</strong>12.5 × 2.5<strong>–</strong>3 μm. All examined specimens from the West Indies<br />

belong in chemotype 1, as all other examined specimens from the Neotropics (cf.<br />

BRAKO 1991, TIMDAL 2008b).<br />

When sterile, it may be confused with P. longiuscula, but differs in forming a<br />

thallus consisting mainly of ascending squamules; areolae are few and mostly<br />

elongated. In P. longiuscula the thallus is dominated by isodiametrical areolae and<br />

ascending squamules are scattered. Admittedly, sterile, poorly developed material<br />

may be difficult to identify. When fertile, the two species differ in the colour of<br />

the apothecium, the colour of the hypothecium, and in the spore size. See also P.<br />

confusa for discussion.<br />

Phyllopsora chlorophaea is pantropical. New to Trinidad and Tobago.<br />

Specimens examined: CUBA. Britton et al. 15491 (B), Buck 7693 (NY), Imshaug 24749 (MSC),<br />

Johnson s.n. (NY), Pérez-Ortega s.n. (hb Pérez-Ortega). HAITI. Buck 9083 (NY), Imshaug &<br />

329<br />

eschweizerbart_xxx


Wetmore 2943, 3011, 3183, 3187, 22719, 23068 (MSC). DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. Buck 4361, 4376,<br />

8362, 14499, 14503 (NY), Harris 15367, 15367, 20473, 20480, 20487, 20489, 20670, 20671<br />

(NY), Imshaug & Wetmore 3788, 23680, 23700 (MSC). JAMAICA. Hart 34 (NY), Imshaug 13163,<br />

13301, 13758, 15610 (MSC). TRINIDAD & TOBAGO. Imshaug & Imshaug 32307-immixture<br />

(MSC).<br />

6. Phyllopsora chodatinica Elix<br />

Australasian Lichenology 59: 23 (2006). <strong>–</strong> Type: AUSTRALIA (see ELIX 2006b). <strong>–</strong> Descriptions:<br />

ELIX (2006b, 2009), TIMDAL (2008b).<br />

Chemistry: a series of xanthones (major), argopsin (trace to major) and zeorin<br />

(trace to major).<br />

Notes: The species resembles P. porphyromelaena and differs mainly in the<br />

secondary chemistry, i.e. in the presence of a series of xanthones. No attempt was<br />

made to identify the xanthones in this study. The main xanthone(s) corresponds to<br />

BRAKO's (1991) unknown B, and the species P. chodatinica corresponds to<br />

Brako’s P. buettneri var. glauca chemical strain II.<br />

Phyllopsora chodatinica is known from Australia and New Guinea, and is<br />

widely distributed in the Neotropics. New to Saint Lucia.<br />

Specimens examined: CUBA. Harris 14279, 14290, 14379 (NY), Tønsberg 37724, 37923 (BG).<br />

DOMINICA. Imshaug & Imshaug 33186 (MSC). DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. Harris 15005, 26683<br />

(NY). PUERTO RICO. Buck 4195, 4090A (NY), Harris 22248, 22447 (NY), Heller 4764 (NY),<br />

Landrón 394, 491, 502 (MSC). JAMAICA. Cummings 44 (NY), Imshaug 13101 (MSC). SAINT<br />

LUCIA. Imshaug & Imshaug 29810 (MSC). SAINT VINCENT AND THE GRENADINES. Elliott 135<br />

(BM). TRINIDAD & TOBAGO. Britton & Hazen 390 (NY), Fleming s.n. (B, NY), Imshaug &<br />

Imshaug 31472, 31664, 31689, 31710, 31892, 31982, 32338 (MSC), Rui & Timdal: 39 collections<br />

(O).<br />

7. Phyllopsora cinchonarum (Fée) Timdal<br />

The Lichenologist 40: 346 (2008). <strong>–</strong> Triclinum cinchonarum Fée, Essai crypt. écorc.: 147 (1825)<br />

<strong>–</strong> Type: PERU (see TIMDAL 2008b). <strong>–</strong> Descriptions: TIMDAL (2008b), ELIX (2009, as Triclinum<br />

cinchonarum).<br />

Chemistry: West Indian material: lobaric acid (major), unknown compound<br />

(major), atranorin (absent to major) and fumarprotocetraric acid (absent to major).<br />

See TIMDAL (2008b) for a summary of the chemical variation elsewhere.<br />

Notes: The species was treated as P. janeirensis (Müll. Arg.) Swinscow & Krog<br />

by SWINSCOW & KROG (1981). BRAKO (1989) included it in the monotypic genus<br />

Squamacidia Brako, as Squamacidia janeirensis (Müll. Arg.) Brako. TIMDAL<br />

(2008b) reduced Squamacidia to synonymy with Phyllopsora. The species may be<br />

confused mainly with P. imshaugii, see that species for discussion.<br />

Phyllopsora cinchonarum is pantropical. New to Trinidad and Tobago.<br />

Specimens examined: CUBA. Wright, Lich. Cub. 179b-immixture (BM). JAMAICA. Cummings 48<br />

(NY), Hart 320 (NY), Imshaug 13151 (MSC). TRINIDAD & TOBAGO. Fleming s.n. (NY), Imshaug<br />

& Imshaug 31726-immixture (MSC).<br />

330<br />

eschweizerbart_xxx


8. Phyllopsora cognata (Nyl.) Timdal comb. nova<br />

Lecidea cognata Nyl., Annls Sci. nat., Bot., sér 4, 19: 347 (1863). <strong>–</strong> Psorella cognata (Nyl.)<br />

Zahlbr., Catal. Lich. Univers. 4 (26): 402 (1926). <strong>–</strong> Type: CUBA, s. loc., Wright, Lich. Cub. 218<br />

(BM, lectotype selected here; BM, UPS, isolectotypes) [atranorin (major)].<br />

(Colour Plate 14B)<br />

Description: Prothallus thin, white. Thallus effuse, crustose, not radiating at the<br />

margin. Areolae small, up to 0.1 mm wide, discrete when young, soon adjoining<br />

to form a more or less continuous crust, pale green (old herbarium material), dull,<br />

epruinose, glabrous. Isidia and soredia lacking (but see below). Upper cortex<br />

poorly defined, 5<strong>–</strong>10 μm thick, containing crystals dissolving in K. Medulla<br />

containing crystals dissolving in K, K+ faintly yellow. Apothecia common, up to<br />

1.5 mm diam., plane when young, becoming weakly to moderately convex,<br />

yellowish brown, rounded to irregular, simple to conglomerate, with a thin, more<br />

or less persistent, paler, glabrous margin. Excipulum pale brown to colourless,<br />

containing crystals dissolving in K, K<strong>–</strong>. Hypothecium pale brown, not containing<br />

crystals, K<strong>–</strong>. Epithecium colourless, K<strong>–</strong>. Ascospores acicular, simple, with up to 3<br />

pseudosepta, 19<strong>–</strong>30 × ca. 1.5 μm (n = 20).<br />

Chemistry: atranorin (major).<br />

Notes: The species is known only from Wright’s collections in Cuba. No original<br />

specimens were located in H-NYL, but No. 218 in Wright’s exsiccata is assumed<br />

to be a part of the original material and a specimen in BM is here selected as the<br />

lectotype. Wright’s exsiccata No. 217 (BM, UPS) may belong in the same species<br />

but is sorediate; more material is needed to decide if the presence of punctiform<br />

soralia is a part of the variation of P. cognata. See also P. pertexta for discussion.<br />

BRAKO (1989) did not include the species in Phyllopsora because it was said to<br />

possess different tissue types in the exciple and hypothecium; thinner, less<br />

gelatinized paraphyses; and long, septate, filiform ascospores. It fits Phyllopsora<br />

in the broader concept of the genus adopted here, however (see discussion on the<br />

circumscription of Phyllopsora in TIMDAL 2008b).<br />

Specimens examined: CUBA. Wright, Lich. Cub. 218 (BM, lectotype; BM, UPS isolectotypes).<br />

9. Phyllopsora confusa Swinscow & Krog<br />

The Lichenologist 13: 229 (1981) <strong>–</strong> Type: KENYA (see SWINSCOW & KROG 1981). <strong>–</strong> Descriptions:<br />

TIMDAL & KROG (2001), ELIX (2009).<br />

(Colour Plate 14C)<br />

Chemistry: no lichen substances (by TLC).<br />

Notes: The species is characterized by the thin, white or sometimes partly reddish<br />

brown prothallus, the small to medium sized, narrow (up to 0.3 mm wide),<br />

ascending, more or less imbricate squamules which easily break off diaspores<br />

terminally (lacinules), the lack of lichen substances, the pale apothecia with pale<br />

exciple and hypothecium, and the narrowly ellipsoid to shortly bacilliform<br />

ascospores. Phyllopsora chlorophaea differs mainly in having a thicker, always<br />

331<br />

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eddish brown prothallus and darker brown apothecia with a reddish brown inner<br />

part of the exciple and hypothecium.<br />

Phyllopsora confusa is pantropical. New to the Dominican Republic, Haiti and<br />

Jamaica.<br />

Specimens examined: CUBA. Britton et al. 15491 (NY), Buck 23422 (NY), Harris 14400, 14424<br />

(NY), Johnson s.n. (NY), Pérez-Ortega s.n. (hb Pérez-Ortega), Tønsberg 37813, 37816, 37818<br />

(BG). DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. Buck 14196 (NY), Harris 15750, 19737, 15679a, 26476 (NY).<br />

HAITI. Imshaug & Wetmore 3147 (MSC). JAMAICA. s. loc., II or III. 1905, Cummings 44 p.p. (NY,<br />

immixture with P. chodatinica in two envelopes). SAINT VINCENT & THE GRENADINES. Elliot 264<br />

(TUR-V 22605), Imshaug & Imshaug 30336, 30637 (MSC). TRINIDAD & TOBAGO. Britton &<br />

Britton 684 (NY), Imshaug & Imshaug 31159, 31160 (MSC), Rui & Timdal 10736, 10788, 10789,<br />

10790, 10797, 10819, 10826, 10863 (O).<br />

10. Phyllopsora corallina (Eschw.) Müll. Arg.<br />

Engler Bot. Jahrb. 20: 264 (1894). <strong>–</strong> Lecidea corallina Eschw. in Martius, Fl. Bras. 1: 256 (1833).<br />

<strong>–</strong> Type: BRAZIL (see SWINSCOW & KROG 1981). <strong>–</strong> Descriptions: TIMDAL & KROG (2001), ELIX<br />

(2009).<br />

Chemistry: no lichen substances (by TLC).<br />

Notes: The current circumscription of P. corallina corresponds to P. corallina<br />

var. corallina in BRAKO (1991). Brako’s other varieties are here regarded as<br />

distinct species: P. glaucella, P. ochroxantha, P. phaeobyssina, P. rappiana<br />

(Brako) Elix (not known from the West Indies), and P. santensis; see each of them<br />

(except P. rappiana), and also P. intermediella and P. kalbii, for discussions.<br />

Phyllopsora corallina is mainly characterised by the medium sized squamules<br />

forming marginal, long, cylindrical isidia and the lack of lichen substances.<br />

BRAKO’s (1991) four specimens of P. corallina var. corallina from the West<br />

Indies were found to belong in P. furfuracea chemotype 2 (SIPMAN 14953,<br />

Underwood & Earle 1004, Wright Lich. Cub. 184) and P. confusa (Harris 14400).<br />

However, I have examined a specimen of P. corallina from the Dominican<br />

Republic. One of the redetermined specimens, Wright’s Lich. Cub. 184 (BM,<br />

UPS), is an isolectotype for Lecidea parvifolia var. corallina Tuck.; this name is<br />

hence a synonym of P. furfuracea, not of P. corallina as stated by BRAKO (1991).<br />

The species is pantropical. New to the Dominican Republic.<br />

Specimens examined: DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. Harris 26562 (NY).<br />

11. Phyllopsora furfuracea (Pers.) Zahlbr.<br />

Flechten. Naturl. Pflanzenfam. T. 1, Abt. 1 * , Lief. 225: 138 (1906). <strong>–</strong> Lecidea furfuracea Pers. in<br />

Gaudichaud, Voy. Uranie (5): 192 (1827). <strong>–</strong> Type: MARIANA ISLANDS (see BRAKO 1991). <strong>–</strong><br />

Lecidea parvifolia var. corallina Tuck., Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci.6: 273 (1864). <strong>–</strong> Descriptions:<br />

TIMDAL & KROG (2001), TIMDAL (2008b), ELIX (2009).<br />

Chemistry: chemotype 1: furfuraceic acid (major); chemotype 2: no lichen<br />

substances (by TLC).<br />

Notes: The species is mainly characterised by the crustose thallus and the long,<br />

cylindrical, often dominating isidia, the reddish brown hypothecium, the narrowly<br />

332<br />

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ellipsoid ascospores (7<strong>–</strong>13 2<strong>–</strong>3 μm, TIMDAL 2008b), and the presence of<br />

furfuraceic acid (chemotype 1) or no lichen substances (chemotype 2). There are<br />

several morphologically similar species, see P. canoumbrina, P. teretiuscula, and<br />

P. tobagensis for discussions. Lecidea parvifolia var. corallina Tuck. is here<br />

synonymised with P. furfuracea chemotype 2 (see P. corallina).<br />

Phyllopsora furfuracea is pantropical. New to Haiti, Netherlands Antilles (St.<br />

Eustatius), and Trinidad and Tobago. The specimen from Guadeloupe (VAINIO<br />

1915, type material of Lecidea furfuracea var. biatorina Vain.) was not examined<br />

by me (nor BRAKO 1991) as the material was not found in TUR.<br />

Specimens examined: <strong>–</strong> Chemotype 1: CUBA. Buck 23401 (NY), Harris 14453 (NY), 14547 (B,<br />

NY), 14548, 14657 (NY), Imshaug 24632, 25074 (MSC). HAITI. Imshaug & Wetmore 3199,<br />

22719-immixture (MSC). DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. Buck 14493, 14688 (NY), Harris 15009, 15345,<br />

15679, 15754, 19751, 20079, 20109, 20471, 20481, 20677, 26725 (NY), Imshaug & Wetmore<br />

3786 (MSC). JAMAICA. Buck 5646, Cummings 49, s.n. (NY), Hart 59 (NY), Imshaug 15799,<br />

15803 (MSC). TRINIDAD & TOBAGO. Imshaug & Imshaug 31256 (MSC), Rui & Timdal 10787,<br />

10794, 10795, 10799, 10809, 10852, 10859, 10866, 10869 (O). <strong>–</strong> Chemotype 2: CUBA. Imshaug<br />

24817 (MSC), Underwood & Earle 1004 (NY), Wright, Lich. Cub. 184 (BM, UPS, isolectotypes<br />

of Lecidea parvifolia var. corallina Tuck). NETHERLANDS ANTILLES. Sipman 14953, 56733 (B).<br />

TRINIDAD & TOBAGO. Fleming s.n. (NY), Imshaug & Imshaug 31169, 31327, 31765 (MSC), Rui<br />

& Timdal 10732, 10792 (O).<br />

12. Phyllopsora glaucella (Vain.) Timdal<br />

The Lichenologist 40: 349 (2008). <strong>–</strong> Lecidea breviuscula var. glaucella Vain., Dansk Bot. Arkiv 4,<br />

11: 21 (1926); <strong>–</strong> Phyllopsora corallina var. glaucella (Vain.) Brako, Mycotaxon 35: 13 (1989). <strong>–</strong><br />

Type: MEXICO (see TIMDAL 2008b). <strong>–</strong> Description: TIMDAL (2008b).<br />

(Colour Plate 14D)<br />

Chemistry: vicanicin (major) and norvicanicin (major).<br />

Notes: The species was treated as P. corallina var. glaucella in BRAKO (1991). In<br />

addition to the chemical difference (vicanicin and norvicanicin vs. no lichen<br />

substances), it differs from P. corallina in having generally larger, more adnate<br />

squamules attached to a thicker, always reddish brown prothallus.<br />

The species is neotropical. New to Cuba and Haiti.<br />

Specimens examined: CUBA. Imshaug 25061, 25064 (MSC), Johnson s.n. (NY). HAITI. Imshaug<br />

& Wetmore 22929, 22936 (MSC). DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. Buck 14757, 19349 (NY), Harris 20779<br />

(BM, NY), 20794, 26773 (NY). PUERTO RICO. Britton et al. 4398 (NY), Buck 15983 (NY), Harris<br />

22028 (NY).<br />

13. Phyllopsora hispaniolae Timdal sp. nova<br />

Phyllopsorae buettnero similis, sed squamis epruinosis, minoribus, angustioribus,<br />

ascosporis angustioribus, et thallo zeorinum destituto. <strong>–</strong> Type: DOMINICAN REPUBLIC.<br />

Prov. Independencia, Sierra de Baoruco, Charco de la Paloma, 48.4 km S of Puerto<br />

Escondito, 1800 m, ca. 18°15’N, 71°36’W, humid hardwoods around waterhole, I.<br />

1987, Harris 20672 (NY, holotype) [argopsin (major) and chlor-ophyllopsorin<br />

(minor)]; 23.5 km S of Puerto Escondido at intersection of road to Charco Colorado,<br />

ca. 18°16'N, 71°33'W, 1750 m, Harris 20455; 30.5 km S of Puerto Escondido, ca.<br />

18°14'N, 71°33'W, 1940 m, Buck 14618, 14634 (NY, paratypes).<br />

333<br />

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(Colour Plate 14E)<br />

Description: Prothallus well developed, reddish brown. Thallus effuse,<br />

squamulose, not radiating at the margin. Squamules medium sized, adnate or<br />

ascending, consisting mainly of deeply divided or coralloid, ca. 0.1 mm wide, up<br />

to 1 mm long, convex to almost terete, more or less geotropically arranged lobes;<br />

upper side pale green, slightly shiny, epruinose, finely tomentose; lobe tips paler<br />

than inner part, pubescent. Vegetative dispersal units lacking but lobe parts<br />

probably acting as lacinules. Upper cortex of type 1<strong>–</strong>2, 30<strong>–</strong>40 μm thick, not<br />

containing crystals. Medulla containing crystals not dissolving in K, PD+ orange,<br />

K<strong>–</strong>. Apothecia common, up to 1 mm diam., weakly to moderately convex,<br />

medium brown, rounded, simple to conglomerate, with an indistinct, finely<br />

pubescent margin when young. Excipulum pale brown in inner part, darker in the<br />

rim, K<strong>–</strong>. Hypothecium pale brown, K<strong>–</strong>. Epithecium pale brown to colourless, K<strong>–</strong>.<br />

Scattered crystals, not dissolving in K, occurring in the inner part of the exciple<br />

and hymenium. Ascospores narrowly ellipsoid, simple, 8<strong>–</strong>11 2.5<strong>–</strong>3 μm (n = 50).<br />

Chemistry: argopsin (major) and chlorophyllopsorin (minor).<br />

Notes: The species resembles P. buettneri but the squamules are epruinose and<br />

smaller, more narrow-lobed to almost terete, the ascospores are smaller, and the<br />

thallus lacks zeorin. In P. buettneri the lobes are up to 1 mm wide, the ascospores<br />

11<strong>–</strong>14 × 3<strong>–</strong>3.5 μm (TIMDAL 2008b), and the thallus contains other combinations<br />

of compounds, always including zeorin. The paleotropical P. africana Timdal &<br />

Krog and some specimens of P. teretiuscula contain the same combination of<br />

compounds as P. hispaniolae. The former is an isidiate, broad-lobed species with<br />

a glabrous upper side, the latter forms more densely coralloid squamules with<br />

glabrous, or at most finely pubescent, tips.<br />

Phyllopsora hispaniolae is known from three localities in the Sierra de<br />

Baoruco in the Dominican Republic, collected in humid forests from 1740 to 1990<br />

m altitude. The species is corticolous.<br />

14. Phyllopsora imshaugii Timdal sp. nova<br />

Phyllopsorae cinchonaris similis, sed squamis minoribus, cortici tenuiori,<br />

ascosporis brevioribus, et thallo acidum norsticticum continenti. <strong>–</strong> Type: JAMAICA,<br />

Parish of Portland or St. <strong>Thomas</strong>, summit of Blue Mountain Peak, 7400 ft, X. 1952,<br />

Imshaug 13037 (MSC-25550, holotype) [norstictic acid (major)]; Parish of St.<br />

<strong>Thomas</strong>, summit of Mossmans Peak, Blue Mts, 6600 ft, Imshaug 14711 (MSC-<br />

25546, paratype).<br />

(Colour Plate 14F)<br />

Description: Prothallus thin, white. Thallus effuse, crustose to squamulose.<br />

Squamules small, up to 0.2(<strong>–</strong>0.3) mm wide, adnate, isodiametrical, more or less<br />

scattered when young, later contiguous, more or less crenulate, plane to weakly<br />

convex; upper side medium green, somewhat shiny, epruinose, glabrous; margin<br />

concolorous with upper side, glabrous to pubescent. Isidia common, cylindrical,<br />

long, simple or branched. Upper cortex of type 1<strong>–</strong>2, 15<strong>–</strong>30 μm thick, containing a<br />

few scattered crystals dissolving in K. Medulla containing crystals dissolving in K<br />

334<br />

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and recrystallizing by forming acicular, red crystals, PD+ yellow, K+ red.<br />

Apothecia common, up to 2 mm diam., plane when young, soon becoming weakly<br />

to moderately convex, medium brown to dark brown, rounded to irregular, simple<br />

to conglomerate, when young with a rather thick, paler, often weakly pubescent<br />

margin. Excipulum pale brown, darker in inner part, containing crystals dissolving<br />

in K and recrystallizing by forming acicular, red crystals. Hypothecium dark<br />

yellowish brown in upper part, paler below, not containing crystals, K<strong>–</strong>.<br />

Epithecium pale brown to colourless, K<strong>–</strong>. Ascospores narrowly ellipsoid to shortly<br />

bacilliform, simple, 10.5<strong>–</strong>14.5 3<strong>–</strong>4 μm (n = 40).<br />

Chemistry: norstictic acid (major).<br />

Notes: The isidiate thallus, white prothallus, distinctly marginate apothecia (at<br />

least when young), and dark brown hypothecium make the species most similar to<br />

P. cinchonarum. It differs, however, in having smaller squamules (often just<br />

areoles), a thinner upper cortex, shorter ascospores, and in containing norstictic<br />

acid. This compound is not previously reported from Phyllopsora.<br />

The species is known from two collections from the summit area of the Blue<br />

Mountains in Jamaica (2010<strong>–</strong>2260 m). The specimens were corticolous, partly<br />

also growing over corticolous bryophytes.<br />

15. Phyllopsora intermediella (Nyl.) Zahlbr.<br />

Catal. Lich. Univers. 4 (25): 398 (1926). <strong>–</strong> Lecidea intermediella Nyl., Annls Sci. Nat., Bot., sér.<br />

4, 19: 339 (1863). <strong>–</strong> Type: CUBA (see BRAKO 1991). <strong>–</strong> Description: BRAKO (1991).<br />

(Colour Plate 15A)<br />

Chemistry: no lichen substances (by TLC).<br />

Notes: The species is characterized by the pale green, closely adnate or<br />

sometimes slightly ascending, mainly isodiametrical squamules attached to a<br />

thick, reddish brown prothallus, and the long, cylindrical to partly flattened,<br />

sometimes branched isidia. Apothecia are rare and poorly developed in the West<br />

Indian material, but according to BRAKO (1991) they are yellow-brown. The<br />

ascospores are 7<strong>–</strong>9 2.5<strong>–</strong>3.5 μm in the type material (BRAKO 1991). It may be<br />

confused mainly with P. corallina, which differs in forming darker (often<br />

brownish) green, more ascending, elongated and imbricate squamules on a<br />

thinner, often white prothallus, and in having exclusively cylindrical isidia.<br />

The species is neotropical (BRAKO 1991). New to Haiti, Netherlands Antilles,<br />

and Puerto Rico. With the exception of the material from Cuba, all West Indian<br />

specimens were saxicolous.<br />

Specimens examined: CUBA. Wright s.n. (H-NYL 20558, holotype, TLC not performed), Wright,<br />

Lich. Cub. 183 (BM, UPS). HAITI. Imshaug & Wetmore 3026, 22511 (MSC). DOMINICAN<br />

REPUBLIC. Buck 8305 (NY). JAMAICA. Buck 5883 (NY). PUERTO RICO. Harris 23942 (NY).<br />

NETHERLANDS ANTILLES. Buck 50750 (B), Sipman 14819 (B).<br />

335<br />

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16. Phyllopsora kalbii Brako<br />

Fl. Neotropica 55: 51 (1991). <strong>–</strong> Type: BRAZIL (see BRAKO 1991). <strong>–</strong> Description: TIMDAL & KROG<br />

(2001).<br />

Chemistry: no lichen substances (by TLC).<br />

Notes: The species is recognized by the pale green, squamulose thallus on a thin,<br />

white prothallus, the globose to shortly cylindrical isidia, the medium brown<br />

apothecia, the dark yellowish brown hypothecium, and the ellipsoid to bacilliform<br />

ascospores (6<strong>–</strong>10 2<strong>–</strong>3 μm). It may be confused with P. corallina, which differs<br />

in having long, cylindrical isidia and a pale brown to colourless hypothecium.<br />

The species is known from USA, the West Indies, Brazil, Kenya, and Tanzania<br />

(BRAKO 1991). New to Cuba.<br />

Specimens examined: CUBA. Pérez-Ortega s.n. (hb Pérez-Ortega). DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. Buck<br />

4631, 4634 (NY).<br />

17. Phyllopsora labriformis Timdal<br />

The Lichenologist 40: 350 (2008). <strong>–</strong> Type: PERU (see TIMDAL 2008b). <strong>–</strong> Description: TIMDAL<br />

(2008b).<br />

Chemistry: methyl barbarate (major).<br />

Notes: The unknown substance reported from P. glaucescens Timdal and P.<br />

labriformis by TIMDAL (2008b) was identified as methyl barbarate by ELIX (in<br />

litt.) based on paratype material of P. glaucescens. Phyllopsora labriformis was<br />

previously known from a single locality in the Peruvian Amazonas. New to<br />

Trinidad and Tobago.<br />

Specimens examined: TRINIDAD & TOBAGO. Parish of St. Paul, along Roxborough <strong>–</strong> Parlatuvier<br />

Road, 1117.07'N, 6035.70'W, 400<strong>–</strong>450 m, 2008, Rui & Timdal 10771 (O); Parish of St. George,<br />

along road between Mason Hall and Hillsborough Dam, 1113.81'N, 6041.07'W, 230 m, 2008,<br />

Rui & Timdal 10786 (O).<br />

18. Phyllopsora lacerata Timdal<br />

The Lichenologist 40: 352 (2008). <strong>–</strong> Type: PERU (see TIMDAL 2008b). <strong>–</strong> Description: TIMDAL<br />

(2008b).<br />

Chemistry: no lichen substances (by TLC).<br />

Notes: Previously known from Ecuador and Peru. New to Cuba and Trinidad and<br />

Tobago. The Cuban specimens and one from Tobago (Rui & Timdal 10805) are<br />

rather poorly developed, lacking the vein-like tissue at the base of the squamules.<br />

Specimens examined: CUBA. s.loc., Wright, Lich. Cub. 212 (BM, UPS); s. loc., Wright s.n. (H-<br />

NYL 17345b, d, TLC not performed). TRINIDAD & TOBAGO. Parish of St. Paul, along Roxborough<br />

<strong>–</strong> Parlatuvier Road, 1116.82'N, 6036.60 W, 500<strong>–</strong>520 m, 2008, Rui & Timdal 10759 (O);<br />

1117.01'N, 6036.39'W, 500 m, Rui & Timdal 10805 (O); 1116.84'N, 6037.32'W, 500<strong>–</strong>550 m,<br />

Rui & Timdal 10829 (O); 1116.77'N, 6037.44'W, 500<strong>–</strong>550 m, Rui & Timdal 10845 (O).<br />

336<br />

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19. Phyllopsora leucophyllina (Nyl.) Timdal<br />

The Lichenologist 40: 352 (2008). <strong>–</strong> Lecidea leucophyllina Nyl., Annls Sci. Nat., Bot., sér. 4, 19:<br />

347 (1863). <strong>–</strong> Type: CUBA (see TIMDAL 2008b). <strong>–</strong> Description: TIMDAL (2008b).<br />

Chemistry: homosekikaic acid (major) and sekikaic acid (submajor).<br />

Notes: The species is known from a few collections from Cuba, Guyana and Peru<br />

(TIMDAL 2008b).<br />

Specimens examined: CUBA. s. loc., Wright s.n. (H-NYL 17345c & e, holotype); s. loc., Wright,<br />

Lich. Cub. 213 (BM, UPS).<br />

20. Phyllopsora longiuscula (Nyl.) Zahlbr.<br />

Catal. Lich. Univers. 4 (25): 398 (1926). <strong>–</strong> Lecidea longiuscula Nyl., Annls Sci. Nat., Bot., sér. 4,<br />

19: 339 (1863). <strong>–</strong> Type: CUBA (see SWINSCOW & KROG 1981). <strong>–</strong> Description: BRAKO (1991).<br />

(Colour Plate 15B)<br />

Chemistry: no lichen substances (by TLC).<br />

Notes: The species is characterized by the reddish brown prothallus, the more or<br />

less continuous crust of small (0.1<strong>–</strong>0.3 mm) isodiametrical areolae from which<br />

develop scattered, ascending, elongated squamules, the medium brown apothecia,<br />

the yellowish brown (K<strong>–</strong>) hypothecium, the large ascospores (12.5<strong>–</strong>17.5 × 3<strong>–</strong>4<br />

μm, n = 20, from two collections), and the absence of lichen substances. BRAKO<br />

(1991) regarded the ascending squamules as isidia and discussed the species’<br />

delimitation against the isidiate P. intermediella. I regard the squamules as<br />

lacinules, and find sterile material difficult to distinguish especially from P.<br />

chlorophaea, see that species for discussion.<br />

Phyllopsora longiuscula is known from few collections. Only Wright’s<br />

material from Cuba and Imshaug 32292 from Trinidad are fertile and the basis for<br />

the spore measurements given above. In addition to the West Indian material, the<br />

species is known from Venezuela (BRAKO 1991). New to Trinidad and Tobago.<br />

Specimens examined: CUBA. Wright s.n. (H-NYL 20537, holotype, TLC not performed), Wright<br />

Lich. Cub. 179[a] (BM, UPS), Ser. 2, 121 (H-NYL 20535, TLC not performed), Wright s.n. (BM).<br />

PUERTO RICO. Britton et al. 4509 (NY). TRINIDAD & TOBAGO. Imshaug & Imshaug 31363, 31528,<br />

31606, 32292 (MSC), Rui & Timdal 10730, 10800, 10865 (O).<br />

21. Phyllopsora microphyllina (Nyl.) Swinscow & Krog<br />

The Lichenologist 13: 243 (1981). <strong>–</strong> Lecidea microphyllina Nyl., Annls Sci. Nat., Bot., sér. 4, 19:<br />

347 (1863). <strong>–</strong> Type: CUBA, “in ins. Cuba”, C. Wright s.n. (H-NYL 17345a, holotype) [too scanty<br />

for TLC].<br />

(Colour Plate 15C)<br />

Description: Prothallus indistinct. Thallus effuse, squamulose, without radiating<br />

marginal squamules. Squamules medium sized, up to 0.5 mm wide, mostly<br />

adnate, isodiametrical to elongated, plane to weakly convex, crenulate to lobed,<br />

geotropically arranged; upper side brownish green (old herbarium material),<br />

337<br />

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slightly shiny, epruinose, glabrous; margin concolorous with upper side, not<br />

pubescent. Vegetative dispersal units lacking. Upper cortex of type 1<strong>–</strong>2, 30<strong>–</strong>50<br />

μm thick, not containing crystals. Medulla not containing crystals, PD<strong>–</strong>, K<strong>–</strong>.<br />

Apothecia common, up to 1 mm diam., plane to weakly convex, medium brown,<br />

rounded, mostly simple, with an indistinct, slightly paler, glabrous, more or less<br />

persistent margin. Excipulum colourless, K<strong>–</strong>. Hypothecium colourless in lower<br />

part, pale brown in upper part, K<strong>–</strong>. Epithecium colourless, K<strong>–</strong>. No crystals in the<br />

apothecium. Ascospores acicular, simple, with up to 3 pseudosepta, 27<strong>–</strong>35 ca.<br />

2.5 μm (n = 27, from a single apothecium).<br />

Chemistry: no lichen substances (by TLC).<br />

Notes: The species is characterized by the squamulose thallus without vegetative<br />

dispersal units, the acicular ascospores, and the lack of lichen substances. See P.<br />

breviuscula for discussion.<br />

Phyllopsora microphyllina is known only from Wright’s material from Cuba<br />

and from two collections from Isle of Pines (RIDDLE 1923, material not examined<br />

by me).<br />

Specimens examined: CUBA. Wright s.n. (H-NYL 17345a, holotype, TLC not performed),<br />

Wright, Lich. Cub. 211 (BM, UPS).<br />

22. Phyllopsora microsperma Müll. Arg.<br />

Bull. Herb. Boissier 2: 89 (1894). <strong>–</strong> Type: MEXICO (see BRAKO 1991). <strong>–</strong> Phyllopsora glabella<br />

(Nyl.) Gotth. Schneid. ex Brako, Fl. Neotropica 55: 48 (1991), nom. illeg. <strong>–</strong> Lecidea glabella Nyl.,<br />

Sert. Lich. Trop.: 37 (1891), non Kremp., Verh. zool.-bot. Ges. Wien 26: 457 (1876). <strong>–</strong><br />

Description: BRAKO (1991, as P. glabella).<br />

(Colour Plate 15D)<br />

Chemistry: no lichen substances (by TLC).<br />

Notes: The species is characterized by the mostly adnate, medium sized (up to 0.6<br />

mm wide), rather thick, shiny squamules, thin, reddish brown prothallus, absence<br />

of vegetative dispersal units, short ellipsoid ascospores (4.5<strong>–</strong>6.5 2.5<strong>–</strong>3.5 μm,<br />

BRAKO 1991), and absence of lichen substances. It may be confused mainly with<br />

P. breviuscula and P. minor, but the former differs in having larger squamules (up<br />

to 1 mm wide) and the latter in having smaller squamules (up to 0.1 mm wide);<br />

both differ in having larger ascospores (9.5<strong>–</strong>13 3.5<strong>–</strong>5 μm and 7<strong>–</strong>12 × 2.5<strong>–</strong>5 μm,<br />

respectively).<br />

The species was treated as P. glabella by SWINSCOW & KROG (1981) and<br />

BRAKO (1991), but the basionym Lecidea glabella Nyl. is illegitimate, being a<br />

later homonym of Lecidea glabella Kremp. [syn. Cryptolechia myriadella (Nyl.)<br />

D. Hawksw. & Dibben].<br />

The species is known from Mexico, Honduras, Brazil, and the West Indies<br />

(BRAKO 1991). New to Haiti.<br />

Specimens examined: CUBA. Wright, Lich. Cub., Ser. 2, 142 (H-NYL 20518, holotype, TLC not<br />

performed). HAITI. Dept. de L'Ouest, summit of small peak at N end of ridge above (E of) Foret<br />

des Pins, 5800<strong>–</strong>5900 ft, 1958, Imshaug & Wetmore 23050 (MSC).<br />

338<br />

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23. Phyllopsora minor Brako<br />

Mycotaxon 35: 15 (1989). <strong>–</strong> Lecidea corallina var. schizophylloides Vain., J. Bot. 34: 106 (1896).<br />

<strong>–</strong> Type: SAINT VINCENT & THE GRENADINES (see SWINSCOW & KROG 1981). <strong>–</strong> Description:<br />

BRAKO (1991).<br />

(Colour Plates 15E)<br />

Chemistry: no lichen substances (by TLC).<br />

Notes: This poorly known species is characterized by the effuse thallus consisting<br />

of irregularly oriented, narrow (up to 0.1 m wide) squamules which are closely<br />

adnate to a well developed, reddish brown prothallus, the lack of vegetative<br />

dispersal units, the medium to dark brown apothecia, the ellipsoid (7<strong>–</strong>12 × 2.5<strong>–</strong>5<br />

μm, BRAKO 1991) ascospores, and the lack of lichen substances. It is known only<br />

from the type material. See P. microsperma for discussion.<br />

Specimens examined: SAINT VINCENT & THE GRENADINES. Elliott 261[a] (TUR-V 22612,<br />

lectotype; BM, isolectotype).<br />

24. Phyllopsora ochroxantha (Nyl.) Zahlbr.<br />

Catal. Lich. Univers. 10 (24): 377 (1939). <strong>–</strong> Lecidea ochroxantha Nyl., Annls Sci. Nat., Bot., sér.<br />

4, 11: 223 (1859). <strong>–</strong> Type: BOLIVIA (see SWINSCOW & KROG 1981). <strong>–</strong> Lecidea glabriuscula Nyl.,<br />

Sertum Lich. Trop.: 48 (1891). <strong>–</strong> Descriptions: TIMDAL (2008b), ELIX (2009).<br />

Chemistry: phyllopsorin (major), chlorophyllopsorin (minor to major), argopsin<br />

(occasional trace), norargopsin (occasional trace), and unknown compounds<br />

(occasional traces).<br />

Notes: The present circumscription of P. ochroxantha corresponds to P. corallina<br />

var. ochroxantha chemical strains I and II in BRAKO (1991). Strain III is here<br />

regarded as a distinct species, P. swinscowii, see that species for discussion.<br />

Phyllopsora ochroxantha differs from P. corallina mainly in the presence of<br />

phyllopsorin and chlorophyllopsorin, but also in having a thicker, always reddish<br />

brown prothallus, a thicker (20<strong>–</strong>30 μm vs. 15<strong>–</strong>20 μm) upper cortex which is<br />

composed of more thick-walled lumina (type 1<strong>–</strong>2 vs. type 2), and in having darker<br />

brown apothecia.<br />

In some specimens there are traces of unknown compounds below phyllopsorin<br />

and chlorophyllopsorin on the chromatograms. They are possibly identical with<br />

BRAKO’s (1991) methyl-phyllopsorate and methyl-chlorophyllopsorate. The<br />

difference between Brako’s strain I and II was based on the presence of those two<br />

compounds, but I found the occasional traces insufficient for distinguishing two<br />

chemotypes. Atranorin, methyl 2,7-dichloropsoromate, pannarin, and zeorin<br />

(reported by BRAKO 1991 and/or ELIX 2009) were not found in the West Indian<br />

material.<br />

The species is widely distributed in the Neotropics (BRAKO 1991) and also<br />

occurs in Australia (ELIX 2009). New to Guadeloupe, Haiti, and Trinidad and<br />

Tobago.<br />

Specimens examined: CUBA. Buck 7620, 7684 (NY), Harris 14181, 14190, 14282, 14285, 14350,<br />

14351, 14359, 14410, 14445, 14523, 14644, 14654 (NY), Imshaug 24843, 25111 (MSC), Wright,<br />

339<br />

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Lich. Cub., Ser. 2, 105 (H-NYL 20534, holotype of Lecidea glabriuscula Nyl.), Ser. 2, 726 (H-<br />

NYL 20533, TLC not performed). HAITI. Imshaug & Wetmore 3060, 22719, 22919 (MSC).<br />

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. Buck 14509 (NY). GRENADA: Imshaug 16268 (MSC). JAMAICA.<br />

Cummings 44 (MSC, NY), Imshaug 12974, 12982, 13389, 13769, 14099, 14213, 14976, 15515<br />

(MSC). TRINIDAD & TOBAGO. Imshaug & Imshaug 31260, 31657-immixture, 31707, 32018<br />

(MSC), Rui & Timdal 10772, 10833, 10849 (O).<br />

25. Phyllopsora parvifolia (Pers.) Müll. Arg.<br />

Bull. Herb. Boissier 2 (2): 90 (1894). <strong>–</strong> Lecidea parvifolia Pers. in Gaudichaud, Voy. Uranie (5):<br />

192 (1827). <strong>–</strong> Type: BRAZIL (see BRAKO 1991). <strong>–</strong> Phyllopsora parvifolia var. hirtella B. de Lesd.,<br />

Revue Bryol. Lichénol. 7: 60 (1934). <strong>–</strong> Description: ELIX (2009).<br />

(Colour Plate 15F)<br />

Chemistry: no lichen substances (by TLC).<br />

Notes: This species corresponds to P. parvifolia var. parvifolia in BRAKO (1991).<br />

Var. breviuscula is here treated as a distinct species, P. breviuscula, see that<br />

species for discussion.<br />

Phyllopsora parvifolia is a common neotropical species and also occurs in<br />

Africa (Tanzania; BRAKO 1991), Australia and in islands in the Pacific Ocean<br />

(ELIX 2009). The previous record from Jamaica (RIDDLE 1912, i.e., Cummings 44,<br />

five envelopes in NY) is a mixture of P. chodatinica, P. confusa, P. ochroxantha,<br />

and P. phaeobyssina. I have not examined material from the Bahamas,<br />

Guadeloupe and Martinique (cf. IMSHAUG 1957). New to Haiti, Jamaica,<br />

Netherlands Antilles (St. Eustatius), Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, and<br />

Trinidad and Tobago.<br />

Specimens examined: CUBA. Harris 14410a (NY), Hioram 9545 (NY, isolectotype of P.<br />

parvifolia var. hirtella B. de Lesd., TLC not performed) Imshaug 24603, 24734, 24907 (MSC),<br />

Johnson s.n. (NY). HAITI. Imshaug & Wetmore 3187-immixture, 22948 (MSC). DOMINICAN<br />

REPUBLIC. Buck 14655 (NY), Harris 15677, 15683, 15774, 15861, 15870, 20496, 20587, 26575<br />

(NY), Liogier 15725 (NY). PUERTO RICO. Harris 22005, 22032, 24334 (NY), Heller 448 (NY).<br />

JAMAICA. Imshaug 14105, 14205, 14380 (MSC). SAINT KITTS & NEVIS. Harris 37916, s.n. (NY).<br />

SAINT LUCIA. Imshaug & Imshaug 29624 (MSC). NETHERLANDS ANTILLES. Sipman 56790 (B).<br />

TRINIDAD & TOBAGO. Imshaug & Imshaug 31151, 31399, 31751, 31757, 31842, 32033 (MSC),<br />

Rui & Timdal 10785, 10798, 10860, 10867, 10870 (O).<br />

26. Phyllopsora parvifoliella (Nyl.) Müll. Arg.<br />

In Durand, T. & Pittier, H., Prim. Fl. Costaric., Lich., Fasc. 2: 10 (1894). <strong>–</strong> Lecidea parvifoliella<br />

Nyl., Annls Sci. Nat., Bot., sér. 4, 19: 339 (1863). <strong>–</strong> Type: CUBA (see SWINSCOW & KROG 1981,<br />

BRAKO 1991). <strong>–</strong> Description: TIMDAL (2008b).<br />

(Colour Plate 16A)<br />

Chemistry: parvifoliellin (major) and atranorin (absent to minor).<br />

Notes: The species is recognized by the medium-sized, elongated squamules, the<br />

terete to flattened isidia attached mainly terminally on the squamules, the short<br />

ascospores (5<strong>–</strong>6.5 × 2<strong>–</strong>2.5 μm), and by containing atranorin and parvifoliellin.<br />

The latter compound is elsewhere known only from P. rappiana, a species which<br />

340<br />

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seems to differ in forming marginal and laminal, globose to terete isidia and in<br />

having longer ascospores (6.5<strong>–</strong>10 × 2.5<strong>–</strong>3.5 μm; cf. ELIX 2009). See also P.<br />

phaeobyssina for discussion.<br />

Phyllopsora parvifoliella is neotropical, occurring from Florida to Brazil<br />

(BRAKO 1991). New to Haiti.<br />

Specimens examined: CUBA. Wright, Lich. Cub. 182 (H-NYL 20545, holotype; BM, UPS<br />

isotypes). HAITI. Imshaug & Wetmore 2873, 23051, 23059 (MSC). NETHERLANDS ANTILLES.<br />

Sipman 14820, 14833, 14852, 15069, 56742a (B).<br />

27. Phyllopsora pertexta (Nyl.) Swinscow & Krog<br />

The Lichenologist 13: 244 (1981). <strong>–</strong> Lecidea pertexta Nyl., Annls Sci. Nat., Bot., sér. 4, 19: 347<br />

(1863). <strong>–</strong> Type: CUBA, “in ins. Cuba”, Wright s.n. (H-NYL 17344, holotype) [no lichen<br />

substances]. <strong>–</strong> Lecidea microphyllina var. subgranulosa Tuck., Proc. Am. Acad. Arts. Sci. 6: 278<br />

(1864).<br />

(Colour Plate 16B)<br />

Description: Prothallus often well developed, white to dark brown. Thallus<br />

effuse, crustose, not radiating at the margin. Areolae small, up to 0.06 mm wide,<br />

discrete when young, soon adjoining to form a more or less continuous crust,<br />

brownish green, dull, epruinose, pubescent along the margin. Isidia and soredia<br />

lacking. Upper cortex poorly defined, resembles type 2, 5<strong>–</strong>10 μm thick, not<br />

containing crystals. Medulla not containing crystals, PD<strong>–</strong>, K<strong>–</strong>. Apothecia<br />

common, up to 1.5 mm diam., plane when young, becoming weakly to moderately<br />

convex, reddish brown, rounded to irregular, simple to conglomerate, with a thin,<br />

more or less excluding, paler, sometimes finely pubescent margin. Excipulum<br />

pale brown to colourless, patchily reddish brown, K+ purple (red pigment).<br />

Hypothecium pale brown or patchily reddish brown, K+ purple (red pigment) in<br />

upper part, pale brown to colourless in lower part. Epithecium colourless, K<strong>–</strong>. No<br />

crystals in apothecium. Ascospores acicular, simple, with up to 3 pseudosepta,<br />

28<strong>–</strong>41 × ca. 1.5<strong>–</strong>2 μm (n = 22).<br />

Chemistry: no lichen substances (by TLC).<br />

Notes: Phyllopsora cognata differs in having yellowish brown apothecia, shorter<br />

ascospores (19<strong>–</strong>30 μm long), and in containing atranorin. The paleotropical P.<br />

borbonica Timdal & Krog is closely related or perhaps synonymous with P.<br />

pertexta, but differs in having a deep reddish brown, K+ purple hypothecium.<br />

According to SWINSCOW & KROG (1981), the hypothecium of P. pertexta is<br />

colourless, but the present examination of the West Indian material showed patchy<br />

occurrences of a red, K+ purple pigment in the hypothecium of older apothecia of<br />

P. pertexta.<br />

According to EKMAN (1996), Bacidia prasinata (Tuck.) Coppins is a later<br />

synonym of P. pertexta. That species was described on material from Venezuela<br />

(not seen by me) and is the holotype of the genus Sporacestra A. Massal. If the<br />

current broad concept of Phyllopsora is adopted, the name Phyllopsora (priority<br />

1894) should be conserved against both Sporacestra (priority 1860) and Triclinum<br />

Fée (priority 1825; see TIMDAL 2008b).<br />

341<br />

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The species was previously known from Wright’s material from Cuba,<br />

Venezuela (see above), and Samoa [MÜLLER 1896, as Psorella pertexta (Nyl.)<br />

Müll. Arg.; not examined by me]. New to Jamaica and Puerto Rico.<br />

Specimens examined: CUBA. Buck 23433 (NY), Harris 14514, 14632 (NY), Hioram 12577 (NY,<br />

TLC not performed), Imshaug 24853 (MSC), Pérez-Ortega s.n. (hb Pérez-Ortega), Shafer 3359<br />

(NY), Wright s.n. (H-NYL 17344, holotype), Wright, Lich. Cub. 214, 215, 216 (BM, UPS,<br />

isotypes of Lecidea microphyllina var. subgranulosa Tuck.). PUERTO RICO. Buck 3516 (NY).<br />

JAMAICA. Buck 5697, Cummings 118 (NY), Imshaug 13800, 14202 (MSC).<br />

28. Phyllopsora phaeobyssina (Vain.) Timdal comb. et stat. nov.<br />

Lecidea breviuscula var. phaeobyssina Vain., Ann. Acad. Sci. Fenn., ser. A, 6, 7: 127 (1915). <strong>–</strong><br />

Phyllopsora corallina var. phaeobyssina (Vain.) Brako, Mycotaxon 35: 14 (1989). <strong>–</strong> Type:<br />

GUADELOUPE, Houelmont, sur un Coffea arabica, Duss 481 (TUR-V 22602, holotype) [argopsin<br />

(major)].<br />

(Colour Plate 16C)<br />

Description: Prothallus well developed, dark brown. Thallus effuse, squamulose,<br />

without radiating marginal squamules. Squamules medium sized, up to 0.5(<strong>–</strong>1)<br />

mm wide, adnate, isodiametrical to elongate, more or less scattered, plane to<br />

weakly convex, crenulate to deeply divided; upper side medium brown to dark<br />

brown, shiny, epruinose, glabrous; margin concolorous with the upper side,<br />

glabrous. Isidia common, more or less flattened, long, usually branched,<br />

sometimes coralloid. Upper cortex of type (1<strong>–</strong>)2, 40<strong>–</strong>60 μm thick, not containing<br />

crystals. Medulla containing crystals not dissolving in K, PD+ orange, K<strong>–</strong>.<br />

Apothecia common, up to 0.8(<strong>–</strong>1.2) mm diam., weakly to moderately convex,<br />

medium brown, mostly rounded and simple, with a paler, non-pubescent margin.<br />

Excipulum and hypothecium pale brown throughout, K<strong>–</strong>. Epithecium dark brown,<br />

K<strong>–</strong>. No crystals in apothecium. Ascospores ellipsoid, simple, 5.5<strong>–</strong>7.5 2.5<strong>–</strong>3 μm<br />

(n = 50).<br />

Chemistry: argopsin (major) and norargopsin (absent to minor).<br />

Notes: This species was treated as P. corallina var. phaeobyssina by BRAKO<br />

(1991), but differs from P. corallina in having darker brown, more shiny<br />

squamules with more or less flattened isidia, shorter ascospores, and in containing<br />

argopsin and often norargopsin. In P. corallina, the isidia are terete, the<br />

ascospores narrowly ellipsoid to shortly bacilliform, 6.5<strong>–</strong>14.5 2<strong>–</strong>2.5 μm, and the<br />

squamules do not contain lichen substances.<br />

Phyllopsora santensis, treated as P. corallina var. santensis (Tuck.) Brako by<br />

BRAKO (1991), differs in forming more greenish brown, often pale-edged, less<br />

shiny, more isodiametrical squamules with shorter, cylindrical isidia. The upper<br />

cortex of P. santensis is thinner (20<strong>–</strong>30 μm) and the ascospores are longer, 7.5<strong>–</strong><br />

10.5 2.5<strong>–</strong>3 μm. Phyllopsora santensis always contains norargopsin in addition<br />

to argopsin, but this compound is often missing in P. phaeobyssina.<br />

Phyllopsora parvifoliella has mostly flattened isidia and short ascospores like<br />

P. phaeobyssina, but differs in being green to greenish brown and less shiny,<br />

342<br />

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having a thinner upper cortex (15<strong>–</strong>30 μm) of type 1, and in containing atranorin<br />

and parvifoliellin.<br />

The species is neotropical. New to Dominica, the Dominican Republic,<br />

Grenada, Haiti, Jamaica, Saint Lucia, and Trinidad and Tobago.<br />

Specimens examined: HAITI. Imshaug & Wetmore 2945-immixture, 3179 (MSC). DOMINICAN<br />

REPUBLIC. Imshaug & Wetmore 3732 (MSC). PUERTO RICO. Harris 21987 (NY), 27320 (NY, O).<br />

JAMAICA. Cummings 44 (NY), Imshaug 14030, 14647 (MSC). GUADELOUPE. Duss 481 (TUR-V<br />

22602, holotype). DOMINICA. Imshaug & Imshaug 33192 (MSC). SAINT LUCIA. Imshaug &<br />

Imshaug 29802, 29857, 30025, 30181 (MSC). SAINT VINCENT & THE GRENADINES. Elliott 261bimmixture<br />

(BM, TUR-V 22612). GRENADA. Imshaug 16081, 16265 (MSC). TRINIDAD & TOBAGO.<br />

Imshaug & Imshaug 31441, 31452, 31657, 32021-immixture (MSC), Rui & Timdal 10756, 10872,<br />

10876, 10882 (O).<br />

29. Phyllopsora porphyromelaena (Vain.) Zahlbr.<br />

Catal. Lich. Univers. 4 (26): 401 (1926). <strong>–</strong> Lecidea porphyromelaena Vain., Acta Soc. Sci.<br />

Fennicae 15: 113 (1920). <strong>–</strong> Type: THE PHILIPPINES, prov. Bataan, Luzon, Mount Mariveles, XII.<br />

1908, Merrill 6273 (TUR-V 22619, lectotype selected by SWINSCOW & KROG 1981, not seen),<br />

6256 (syntype, BM) [TLC not performed]. <strong>–</strong> Phyllopsora albicans sensu SWINSCOW & KROG<br />

(1981), TIMDAL & KROG (2001), ELIX (2009), non Müll. Arg. <strong>–</strong> Phyllopsora buettneri var. glauca<br />

B. de. Lesd., Revue Bryol. Lichénol. 7: 60 (1934). <strong>–</strong> Descriptions: TIMDAL & KROG (2001), ELIX<br />

(2009), both as P. albicans.<br />

Chemistry: chemotype 1 (pantropical): argopsin (major), norargopsin (minor to<br />

major) and zeorin (absent to major, always present in the West Indies); chemotype<br />

2 (paleotropical): argopsin (major) and pannarin (major).<br />

Notes: The species is recognized by the large, elongated, ascending, epruinose<br />

squamules breaking off lacinules at the tips and by containing argopsin and<br />

additional compounds.<br />

This species was called P. albicans Müll. Arg. by SWINSCOW & KROG (1981),<br />

TIMDAL & KROG (2001), and ELIX (2009). BRAKO (1991), however, placed P.<br />

albicans in synonymy with P. santensis, and my recent examination of the<br />

holotype of P. albicans (Costa Rica, Pitt 5474, G) showed that this is correct.<br />

BRAKO (1991) treated P. porphyromelaena as P. buettneri var. glauca (B. de<br />

Lesd.) Brako chemical strains I and III. Strain I was characterized by argopsin,<br />

norargopsin, vicanicin, norvicanicin, and ± zeorin, and strain III by argopsin and ±<br />

zeorin. My re-examination of the West Indian material showed a constant<br />

presence of norargopsin but did not confirm the presence of vicanicin or<br />

norvicanicin in any specimen of P. porphyromelaena (including the isolectotype<br />

of P. parvifolia var. glauca B. de Lesd., Hioram 9098, NY). A distinction<br />

between two chemotypes of P. porphyromelaena in the Neotropics is hence not<br />

supported here. Probably the report of vicanicin and norvicanicin in this species<br />

was based on erroneously identified material of the taxon here called P. buettneri<br />

chemotype 3.<br />

Brako's chemical strain II is here treated as P. chodatinica, see that species for<br />

discussion. For P. melanoglauca, listed by BRAKO (1991) as a synonym of P.<br />

buettneri var. glauca, see P. buettneri.<br />

343<br />

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The species is pantropical and here reported as new to Dominica, Guadeloupe<br />

and Saint Lucia. BRAKO's (1991) six specimens from the Dominican Republic<br />

belong in P. buettneri (Buck 8348, Harris 15563) and P. hispaniolae (Buck<br />

14618, Harris 14634, 20455, 20672).<br />

Specimens examined: <strong>–</strong> Chemotype 1: CUBA. Harris 14325, 14379, 14656 (NY), Hioram 9098<br />

(NY, isolectotype of P. parvifolia var. glauca B. de Lesd.), Imshaug 24680 (MSC), Leon et al.<br />

10232 (NY). PUERTO RICO. Harris 22217, 22234, 22495 (NY). JAMAICA. Imshaug 14051 (MSC).<br />

GUADELOUPE. Imshaug & Imshaug 33592, 33593, 33594, 33609, 33613 (MSC). DOMINICA.<br />

Imshaug & Imshaug 32953, 33086 (MSC). SAINT LUCIA. Imshaug & Imshaug 29832, 29926,<br />

30250 (MSC). GRENADA. Broadway s.n. (NY), Imshaug 16101, 16121, 16263 (MSC). TRINIDAD<br />

& TOBAGO. Fleming s.n. (NY), Imshaug & Imshaug 31709, 31726, 31887, 31890, 31918, 32171<br />

(MSC), Rui & Timdal 10753 (O).<br />

30. Phyllopsora pyrrhomelaena (Tuck.) Swinscow & Krog<br />

The Lichenologist 13: 244 (1981). <strong>–</strong> Biatora pyrrhomelaena Tuck., Am. J. Sci. Arts, ser. 2, 28:<br />

205 (1859). <strong>–</strong> Type: CUBA (see SWINSCOW & KROG 1981).<br />

(Colour Plate 16C)<br />

Description: Prothallus thick, dark brown at the periphery, reddish brown in<br />

inner part. Thallus circular to effuse, crustose to almost squamulose. Areolae/<br />

squamules small, up to 0.2 mm wide, adnate, scattered to contiguous or fusing,<br />

isodiametrical, rounded to crenulate; upper side pale green (old herbarium<br />

material), dull, epruinose, glabrous; margin paler than or concolorous with the<br />

upper side, pubescent. Vegetative dispersal units absent. Upper cortex of type 2,<br />

5<strong>–</strong>10 μm thick, not containing crystals. Medulla (mainly lower part) containing<br />

orange crystals dissolving in K, PD<strong>–</strong>, K+ purple. Apothecia common, up to 0.8<br />

mm diam., plane to weakly convex, brownish black, rounded to crenulate or<br />

lobate, simple to conglomerate, with a persistent, shiny, castaneous brown,<br />

pubescent margin. Excipulum dark reddish brown (dark olivaceous brown after<br />

orange pigments are dissolved), containing orange crystals dissolving in K with a<br />

strong K+ purple effusion. Hypothecium olivaceous brown, not containing<br />

crystals, K<strong>–</strong>. Epithecium colourless, K<strong>–</strong>. Ascospores narrowly ellipsoid, simple,<br />

6<strong>–</strong>8 2.5<strong>–</strong>3 μm (n = 20).<br />

Chemistry: norsolorinic acid (major) and at least three additional pink pigments<br />

(minor to trace).<br />

Notes: Phyllopsora nigrocincta Timdal, described from Peru (TIMDAL 2008b), is<br />

closely related or perhaps a chemical strain of this species. It differs in containing<br />

fumarprotocetraric acid in addition to norsolorinic acid. The latter compound,<br />

reported as an unknown orange pigment by TIMDAL (2008b), was identified by<br />

ELIX (in litt.) in paratype material of P. nigrocincta.<br />

Phyllopsora pyrrhomelaena is known only from Wright's material from Cuba<br />

and from one collection from Isle of Pines, Cuba (RIDDLE 1923, material not<br />

examined by me). According to ZAHLBRUCKNER [1924<strong>–</strong>1925, as Lecidea<br />

pyrrhomelaena (Tuck.) Tuck.], Lecidea circumpurpurans Nyl. is synonymous<br />

with this species (described from Brazil, not examined by me).<br />

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Specimens examined: CUBA. Monte Verde Woods, on trunks of trees near the ground, Wright,<br />

Lich. Cub. 178 (FH 286104, holotype; FH 197468, UPS isotypes, TLC not performed); s. loc.,<br />

Wright, Lich. Cub. Ser. 2: 124 (FH 28102, H-NYL 20498); ad truncos in montib. Cubae, Wright<br />

s.n. (H-NYL 20500, TLC not performed).<br />

31. Phyllopsora santensis (Tuck.) Swinscow & Krog<br />

The Lichenologist 13: 236 (1981). <strong>–</strong> Lecidea santensis Tuck., Am. J. Sci. Arts, ser. 2, 25: 428<br />

(1858). <strong>–</strong> Type: U.S.A., South Carolina (see SWINSCOW & KROG 1981). <strong>–</strong> Phyllopsora albicans<br />

Müll. Arg., Bull. Soc. R. Bot. Belg. 32: 132 (1893). <strong>–</strong> Descriptions: TIMDAL (2008b), ELIX (2009).<br />

Chemistry: argopsin (major) and norargopsin (minor to submajor).<br />

Notes: This species was treated as P. corallina var. santensis (Tuck.) Brako by<br />

BRAKO (1991). She accepted two chemical strains, one with argopsin,<br />

norargopsin, ±atranorin, and ±zeorin, and one with argopsin only. I found<br />

argopsin and norargopsin in the three West Indian specimens, but no atranorin or<br />

zeorin.<br />

The species differs from P. corallina mainly in the presence of argopsin and<br />

norargopsin. Phyllopsora santensis generally forms rather discrete, pale-edged<br />

squamules, often with only a few isidia, and medium brown to dark brown<br />

apothecia with a darker margin, whereas P. corallina generally forms more<br />

contiguous or imbricate squamules with a concolorous margin and numerous<br />

isidia, and pale to medium brown apothecia with a paler margin. See also P.<br />

phaeobyssina for taxonomic discussion. BRAKO (1991) correctly included<br />

Phyllopsora albicans in P. santensis, see discussion under P. porphyromelaena.<br />

Phyllopsora santensis is widely distributed in the Americas (BRAKO 1991) and<br />

also occurs in Asia and Australia (ELIX 2009). BRAKO’s (1991) specimen from the<br />

Dominican Republic (Harris 20779) belongs in P. glaucella, whereas that from<br />

Jamaica (Wight 10, FH) was not examined by me. New to Cuba.<br />

Specimens examined: BAHAMAS. Britton 6633 (NY). CUBA. Buck 23555 (NY), Ranker &<br />

Lemieux 1702 (NY).<br />

32. Phyllopsora swinscowii Timdal & Krog<br />

Mycotaxon 77: 88 (2001). <strong>–</strong> Type: MAURITIUS (see TIMDAL & KROG 2001). <strong>–</strong> Descriptions:<br />

TIMDAL & KROG (2001), TIMDAL (2008b), ELIX (2009).<br />

Chemistry: methyl 2,7-dichloronorpsoromate (major) and 2,7-dichloropsoromate<br />

(minor to major).<br />

Notes: This species corresponds to P. corallina var. ochroxantha chemical strain<br />

III in BRAKO (1991). It differs from P. ochroxantha apparently only in the<br />

secondary chemistry and is perhaps merely a chemotype of that species.<br />

Phyllopsora swinscowii is pantropical (BRAKO 1991, TIMDAL & KROG 2001, ELIX<br />

2009).<br />

Specimens examined: BAHAMAS. Brace 6881 (NY). CUBA. Britton et al. 15586 (NY), Tønsberg<br />

37719, 37746, 37815, 37817, 37831, 37848, 37947 (BG). DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. Harris 15383<br />

(BM, NY). TRINIDAD & TOBAGO. Fleming s.n. (NY), Imshaug & Imshaug 31449, 31450, 31488,<br />

32021 (MSC), Rui & Timdal 10766 (O).<br />

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33. Phyllopsora teretiuscula Timdal sp. nova<br />

Phyllopsorae furfuraceae et P. tobagensi similis, sed squamis majoribus,<br />

teretiusculis, hypothecio pallidiori, et thallo argopsinum, norargopsinum et<br />

interdum chlorophyllopsorinum continenti. <strong>–</strong> Type: CUBA, Pinar del Río, Reserva de<br />

la Biosfera Sierra del Rosario, N of and near lake “La Palma”, near river,<br />

downstream from the path/road, 22°51.31’N, 82°56.25’W, 140−145 m, over mosses<br />

on trunk of Roystonea regia in mixed hardwood forest, III. 2007, Tønsberg 37814<br />

(BG-L-87831, holotype); Tønsberg 37848b, 37850, 37980 (BG, paratypes)<br />

[argopsin (major) and norargopsin (minor)].<br />

(Colour Plate 16E)<br />

Description: Prothallus thin, reddish brown. Thallus effuse, crustose to<br />

squamulose, without radiating marginal squamules. Areolae small, up to 0.2(<strong>–</strong>0.3)<br />

mm diam., adnate and circular when young, soon proliferating into a mat of richly<br />

branched, narrow to almost terete, coralloid, up to 0.1 mm wide squamules; upper<br />

side pale green, patchily stained reddish brown, slightly shiny, epruinose,<br />

glabrous; margin concolorous with upper side, glabrous or finely pubescent. Isidia<br />

and soredia lacking. Upper cortex of type 2, 30<strong>–</strong>40 μm thick, not containing<br />

crystals. Medulla containing crystals which are not dissolving in K, PD+ orange,<br />

K<strong>–</strong>. Apothecia not common (only immature seen), up to 0.5 mm diam., weakly<br />

convex, medium brown to dark brown, rounded, simple, with a darker, thin, finely<br />

pubescent, soon excluded margin. Excipulum reddish brown, K+ purple in the<br />

rim, pale brown, K<strong>–</strong> in inner part. Hypothecium pale brown, K<strong>–</strong>. Epithecium pale<br />

brown, K<strong>–</strong>. No crystals in the apothecium. Asci and ascospores not seen.<br />

Chemistry: argopsin (major), norargopsin (minor), and chlorophyllopsorin<br />

(absent to minor).<br />

Notes: The species is recognized by the coralloid thallus containing argopsin,<br />

norargopsin, and sometimes low amounts of chlorophyllopsorin. It may be<br />

confused with P. furfuracea and P. tobagensis, but differs in the secondary<br />

chemistry, in having a pale (not reddish brown) hypothecium, and in forming<br />

larger areolae and thicker, not fully terete squamules. The terete thallus parts are<br />

called isidia in P. furfuracea and P. tobagensis and squamules in P. teretiuscula,<br />

but this does not infer a basic structural difference. It seems likely that thallus<br />

fragments function as vegetative diaspores in P. teretiuscula. See also P.<br />

hispaniolae for discussion.<br />

The species is known from three sites within 350 m in one locality in Cuba.<br />

The species is corticolous or growing over corticolous bryophytes.<br />

34. Phyllopsora tobagensis Timdal sp. nova<br />

Phyllopsora furfuracea et speciebus affinibus similis, sed ascosporis acicularibus et<br />

thallo acidum hyperlatolicum, acidum perlatolicum et acidum superlatolicum<br />

continenti. <strong>–</strong> Type: TRINIDAD & TOBAGO, Tobago, Parish of St. Paul, along<br />

Roxborough <strong>–</strong> Parlatuvier Road, 11°16.80’N, 60°36.66’W, 500<strong>–</strong>520 m, on tree<br />

trunk in rainforest, III. 2008, Rui & Timdal 10764 (O-L152061, holotype; CANB,<br />

isotype); Rui & Timdal 10747, 10757, 10768, 10839, 10873, 10877 (O-L152044,<br />

L152054, L152065, L152136, L152170, L152174). [hyperlatolic acid (major),<br />

perlatolic acid (minor), and superlatolic acid (minor); according to ELIX in litt.].<br />

346<br />

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(Colour Plate 16F)<br />

Description: Prothallus thin or indistinct, white to dark brown. Thallus effuse,<br />

formed partly by minute areolae and partly by isidia developing directly from the<br />

prothallus, not radiating at the margin; isidia often dominating. Areolae up to 0.06<br />

mm wide, adnate, isodiametrical, plane to weakly convex, medium to dark green,<br />

more or less shiny, epruinose, glabrous. Isidia abundant, cylindrical, long, 0.03<strong>–</strong><br />

0.05 mm wide, medium to dark green, simple to slightly branched. Upper cortex<br />

poorly defined, 5<strong>–</strong>10 μm thick, not containing crystals. Medulla containing<br />

crystals dissolving in K; PD<strong>–</strong>, K<strong>–</strong>. Apothecia not common (seen in the type only),<br />

up to 1 mm diam., plane when young, later weakly to moderately convex, dark<br />

brown, shiny, rounded, mostly simple, with a distinct, brownish black, not<br />

pubescent margin when young, later more or less immarginate. Excipulum dark<br />

reddish brown in inner part, paler in the rim, containing colourless crystals dissolving<br />

in K. Hypothecium reddish brown in lower part, deeper pigmented in upper<br />

part, containing some scattered colourless crystals dissolving in K. Epithecium<br />

colourless. Reddish brown pigment in apothecium K+ purple. Ascospores<br />

acicular, simple, usually with 3 pseudosepta, 27<strong>–</strong>42 ca. 1.5 μm (n = 20).<br />

Chemistry: hyperlatolic acid (major), perlatolic acid (minor) and superlatolic acid<br />

(minor).<br />

Notes: The species is morphologically and anatomically similar to P. furfuracea<br />

and the paleotropical P. dolichospora Timdal & Krog, P. foliatella Elix, P.<br />

homosekikaica Elix, and P. methoxymicareica Elix, but differs from them all both<br />

in chemistry and in ascospore size. In P. furfuracea, the ascospores are narrowly<br />

ellipsoid, 7<strong>–</strong>13 2<strong>–</strong>3 μm, and the thallus contains furfuraceic acid or no lichen<br />

substances; in P. dolichospora the spores are bacilliform, 16<strong>–</strong>25 2<strong>–</strong>3 μm, and<br />

the thallus contains methyl furfuraceiate (major), methyl homofurfuraceiate<br />

(major), and furfuraceic acid (minor); in P. foliatella the spores are 11<strong>–</strong>18 μm<br />

long and the thallus does not contain lichen substances; in P. homosekikaica the<br />

spores are narrow-ellipsoid, 7<strong>–</strong>11 2<strong>–</strong>3 μm, and the thallus contains<br />

homosekikaic acid (major) and hyperhomosekikaic acid (major); and in P.<br />

methoxymicareica the spores are ellipsoid, 10<strong>–</strong>14 3<strong>–</strong>5 μm, and the thallus<br />

contains methoxymicareic acid (major) and hydroxymicareic acid (trace) (TIMDAL<br />

& KROG 2001, ELIX 2006b, 2006c, 2008). See also P. teretiuscula for discussion.<br />

Phyllopsora tobagensis is known from seven collections along three trails in<br />

the Main Ridge rainforest in Tobago, collected at altitudes of about 400<strong>–</strong>520 m.<br />

The species is corticolous or growing over corticolous bryophytes.<br />

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Key to the West Indian species of Phyllopsora<br />

(Chemical character states are restricted to the West Indian chemotypes)<br />

1 Thallus sorediate .............................................................................................. 2<br />

1' Thallus not sorediate ........................................................................................ 3<br />

2 Soralia labriform; squamules rounded, containing methyl barbarate .................<br />

...................................................................................................... P. labriformis<br />

2' Soralia starting from the lower side near the tip of ascending squamules, later<br />

spreading to the upper side; squamules elongated, containing homosekikaic<br />

and sekikaic acids .................................................................... P. leucophyllina<br />

3 Thallus with globose, cylindrical or slightly flattened isidia ........................... 4<br />

3' Thallus with lacinules or phyllidia, or vegetative diaspores lacking ............. 18<br />

4 Thallus crustose, often consisting only of isidia on the prothallus .................. 5<br />

4' Thallus squamulose .......................................................................................... 7<br />

5 Ascospores acicular, 27<strong>–</strong>42 ca. 1.5 μm; thallus containing hyperlatolic acid<br />

and related compounds ................................................................. P. tobagensis<br />

5' Ascospores ellipsoid, up 13 μm long; hyperlatolic acid lacking ..................... 6<br />

6 Ascospores 7<strong>–</strong>13 × 2<strong>–</strong>3 μm; hypothecium dark reddish brown; thallus<br />

containing furfuraceic acid or lacking lichen substances ............. P. furfuracea<br />

6' Ascospores 5<strong>–</strong>7.5 2.5<strong>–</strong>3 μm; hypothecium dark yellowish brown; thallus<br />

lacking lichen substances ........................................................ P. canoumbrina<br />

7 Thallus effuse or incompletely circular, with radiating marginal squamules on<br />

a thick, white prothallus ................................................................. P. byssiseda<br />

7' Thallus effuse; squamules not radiating; prothallus white or reddish brown .. 8<br />

8 Thallus lacking lichen substances .................................................................... 9<br />

8' Thallus containing lichen substances ............................................................. 11<br />

9 Isidia globose to shortly cylindrical; hypothecium dark yellowish brown;<br />

prothallus thin, white ............................................................................ P. kalbii<br />

9' Isidia long, cylindrical to partly flattened; hypothecium medium brown to<br />

colourless; prothallus variable ........................................................................ 10<br />

10 Squamules pale green, closely adnate or sometimes slightly ascending, mainly<br />

isodiametrical; prothallus thick, reddish brown; isidia cylindrical to partly<br />

flattened .................................................................................... P. intermediella<br />

10' Squamules medium to brownish green, mainly ascending, elongated and partly<br />

imbricate; prothallus variable; isidia cylindrical ............................. P. corallina<br />

11 Ascospores bacilliform to acicular (more than 25 μm long); thallus containing<br />

i.a. lobaric acid ........................................................................ P. cinchonarum<br />

11' Ascospores ellipsoid to shortly bacilliform (up to15 μm long); thallus not con-<br />

taining lobaric acid) ........................................................................................ 12<br />

12 Medulla K+ red (norstictic acid) ................................................... P. imshaugii<br />

12' Medulla K<strong>–</strong> ..................................................................................................... 13<br />

13 Medulla PD<strong>–</strong> .................................................................................................. 14<br />

13' Medulla PD+ yellow or orange ...................................................................... 15<br />

14 Thallus containing vicanicin and norvicanicin; isidia cylindrical; squamules<br />

mostly adnate; ascospores narrowly ellipsoid, 6.5<strong>–</strong>9 μm long ...... P. glaucella<br />

14' Thallus containing atranorin and parvifoliellin; isidia cylindrical to flattened;<br />

squamules adnate to ascending; ascospores broadly ellipsoid, 5<strong>–</strong>6.5 μm long ..<br />

.................................................................................................... P. parvifoliella<br />

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15 Medulla PD+ yellow (2,7-dichloropsoromate and 2,7-dichloronorpsoromate) ..<br />

....................................................................................................... P. swinscowii<br />

15' Medulla PD+ orange ...................................................................................... 16<br />

16 Thallus containing mainly phyllopsorin and chlorophyllopsorin .......................<br />

................................................................................................... P. ochroxantha<br />

16' Thallus containing argopsin and often norargopsin ....................................... 17<br />

17 Squamules medium brown to dark brown, shiny, with a concolorous margin;<br />

isidia more or less flattened; ascospores 5.5<strong>–</strong>7.5 μm long; norargopsin<br />

sometimes absent .................................................................... P. phaeobyssina<br />

17' Squamules greenish brown, often with a paler margin; isidia cylindrical;<br />

ascospores 7.5<strong>–</strong>10.5 μm long; norargopsin always present ........... P. santensis<br />

18 Thallus crustose, apothecia common, vegetative diaspores absent ............... 19<br />

18' Thallus squamulose, apothecia and vegetative diaspores present or absent .......<br />

......................................................................................................................... 21<br />

19 Ascospores narrowly ellipsoid, 6<strong>–</strong>8 2.5<strong>–</strong>3 μm; exciple and lower part of<br />

medulla containing orange crystals dissolving in K, K+ purple (norsolorinic<br />

acid) ...................................................................................... P. pyrrhomelaena<br />

19' Ascospores acicular, more than 19 μm long; exciple and medulla not<br />

containing orange crystals .............................................................................. 20<br />

20 Apothecia yellowish brown; ascospores 19<strong>–</strong>30 μm long; thallus containing<br />

atranorin ........................................................................................... P. cognata<br />

20' Apothecia reddish brown; ascospores 28<strong>–</strong>41 μm long; thallus lacking lichen<br />

substances ......................................................................................... P. pertexta<br />

21 Thallus lacking lichen substances .................................................................. 22<br />

21' Thallus containing lichen substances ............................................................. 30<br />

22 Ascospores acicular, more than 19 µm long .................................................. 23<br />

22' Ascospores ellipsoid to bacilliform, up to 18 µm long .................................. 24<br />

23 Squamules ascending, deeply incised or divided, often with vein-like<br />

supportive tissue ............................................................................... P. lacerata<br />

23' Squamules mostly adnate, crenulate to lobed, without vein-like tissue ..............<br />

................................................................................................. P. microphyllina<br />

24 Thallus with phyllidia in inner part and elongated, more less radiating<br />

marginal squamules ....................................................................... P. parvifolia<br />

24' Thallus without phyllidia (but sometimes with lacinules, i.e. apical sections of<br />

squamules breaking off), marginal squamules of various shapes .................. 25<br />

25 Squamules mostly adnate, without lacinules ................................................. 26<br />

25' Squamules mostly ascending, lacinulate ........................................................ 28<br />

26 Ascospores ellipsoid, up to 6.5 µm long .................................. P. microsperma<br />

26' Ascospores ellipsoid to fusiform, more than 7 µm long ................................ 27<br />

27 Thallus composed of large, up 0.5(<strong>–</strong>1) mm wide squamules ..... P. breviuscula<br />

27' Thallus composed of small, up to 0.1 mm wide squamules ................ P. minor<br />

28 Hypothecium evenly dark reddish brown, K+ purple ............... P. chlorophaea<br />

28' Hypothecium colourless to yellowish brown, K<strong>–</strong> .......................................... 29<br />

29 Thallus consisting of squamules ascending from a more or less continuous<br />

crust of adnate areolae; prothallus thick, reddish brown ............ P. longiuscula<br />

29' Thallus consisting of ascending squamules only; prothallus white or reddish<br />

brown, thin or thick .......................................................................... P. confusa<br />

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30 Thallus pruinose, containing i.a. pannarin or vicanicin .................. P. buettneri<br />

30' Thallus not pruinose, not containing pannarin and vicanicin ........................ 31<br />

31 Thallus containing i.a. xanthones ............................................... P. chodatinica<br />

31' Thallus not containing xanthones ................................................................... 32<br />

32 Squamules plane, containing i.a. zeorin ........................... P. porphyromelaena<br />

32' Squamules convex to terete, not containing zeorin ........................................ 33<br />

33 Tips of squamules paler than inner part, roughly pubescent; thallus containing<br />

argopsin and chlorophyllopsorin ................................................ P. hispaniolae<br />

33' Tips of squamules concolorous with inner part, glabrous or finely pubescent;<br />

thallus containing argopsin, norargopsin and sometimes chlorophyllopsorin …<br />

..................................................................................................... P. teretiuscula<br />

Acknowledgements<br />

I am grateful to Alan M. Fryday for suggesting the study of Imshaug’s Phyllopsora<br />

material and for arranging the loan from MSC, to John A. Elix for identification of lichen<br />

substances in selected specimens, and to Sergio Pérez-Ortega and the curators of the<br />

herbaria B, BG, BM, FH, G, H, NY, S, TUR, and UPS for loan of material or for access<br />

to the collections at visits.<br />

References<br />

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BRAKO, L. (1991): Phyllopsora (Bacidiaceae). <strong>–</strong> Flora Neotropica Monograph 55. <strong>–</strong> New<br />

York Botanical Garden, New York.<br />

CULBERSON, C.F. (1972): Improved conditions and new data for the identification of<br />

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CULBERSON, C.F. & JOHNSON, A. (1982): Substitution of methyl tert.-butyl ether for<br />

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North America. <strong>–</strong> Opera Botanica 127: 1<strong>–</strong>148.<br />

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ELIX, J. A. (2009): Phyllopsoraceae. <strong>–</strong> Flora of Australia 57: 41<strong>–</strong>59.<br />

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Jamaica. Science series 6: 1<strong>–</strong>153<br />

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MENLOVE, J.E. (1974): Thin-layer chromatography for the identification of lichen<br />

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23: 291<strong>–</strong>299.<br />

NYLANDER, W. (1858): Lichenes collecti in Mexico a Fr. Müller. <strong>–</strong> Flora 41: 377<strong>–</strong>381.<br />

RIDDLE, L.W. (1912): An enumeration of lichens collected by Clara Eaton Cummings in<br />

Jamaica I. <strong>–</strong> Mycologia 4: 125<strong>–</strong>140.<br />

RIDDLE, L.W. (1923): The lichens of the Isle of Pines. <strong>–</strong> Mycologia 15: 68<strong>–</strong>88.<br />

SCHNEIDER, G. (1980): Die Flechtengattung Psora sensu Zahlbruckner. <strong>–</strong> Bibliotheca<br />

Lichenologica 13: 1<strong>–</strong>291.<br />

SWINSCOW, T.D.V. & KROG, H. (1981): The genus Phyllopsora, with a report on the East<br />

African species. <strong>–</strong> The Lichenologist 12: 203<strong>–</strong>247.<br />

TIMDAL, E. & KROG, H. (2001): Further studies on African species of the lichen genus<br />

Phyllopsora (Lecanorales). <strong>–</strong> Mycotaxon 77: 57<strong>–</strong>89.<br />

TIMDAL, E. (2008a): Studies on Eschatogonia (Ramalinaceae) in Peru. <strong>–</strong> The<br />

Lichenologist 40: 31<strong>–</strong>38.<br />

TIMDAL, E. (2008b): Studies on Phyllopsora (Ramalinaceae) in Peru. <strong>–</strong> The<br />

Lichenologist 40: 337<strong>–</strong>362.<br />

VAINIO, E.A. (1896): Lichenes Antillarum a W.R. Elliot collecti. <strong>–</strong> The Journal of Botany<br />

34: 31<strong>–</strong>36, 66<strong>–</strong>72, 100<strong>–</strong>107, 204<strong>–</strong>210, 258<strong>–</strong>266, 292<strong>–</strong>297.<br />

VAINIO, E.A. (1915): Additamentum ad lichenographiam Antillarum illustrandam. <strong>–</strong><br />

Annales Academiae Scientiarum Fennicae. Serie A. 6, 7: 1<strong>–</strong>226.<br />

ZAHLBRUCKNER, A. (1924<strong>–</strong>1925): Catalogus lichenum universalis. Band III. <strong>–</strong> Gebrüder<br />

Borntraeger, Leipzig.<br />

ZAHLBRUCKNER, A. (1926<strong>–</strong>1927): Catalogus lichenum universalis. Band IV. <strong>–</strong> Gebrüder<br />

Borntraeger, Leipzig.<br />

351<br />

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Colour Plate 14. AF, Thalli of Phyllopsora species from the West Indies (all<br />

scalebars = 1 mm). A, Phyllopsora byssiseda (Imshaug 3157 & Wetmore, MSC).<br />

B, P. cognata (Wright, Lich. Cub. 218; BM lectotype). C, P. confusa (Cummings 44,<br />

NY). D, P. glaucella (Imshaug 25064, MSC). E, P. hispaniolae (Harris 20672,<br />

NY holotype). F, P. imshaugii (Imshaug 13037, MSC holotype).<br />

Colour Plate 15. AF, Thalli of Phyllopsora species from the West Indies (all scalebars<br />

= 1 mm). A, Phyllopsora intermediella (Wright s.n., H<strong>–</strong>NYL 20558 holotype).<br />

B, P. longiuscula (Timdal 10730 & Rui s.n., O). C, P. microphyllina (Wright, Lichenes<br />

Cubensis 211, BM). D, P. microsperma (Wright, Lichenes Cubensis Ser. 2, 142, H<strong>–</strong><br />

NYL 20518, holotype of Lecidea glabella Nyl.). E, P. minor (Elliott 261, TUR<strong>–</strong>V<br />

22612[a], holotype). F, P. parvifolia (Timdal 10867 & Rui, O).<br />

Colour Plate 16. AF, Thalli of Phyllopsora species from the West Indies (all<br />

scalebars = 1 mm). A, Phyllopsora parvifoliella (Sipman 14852, B). B, P. pertexta<br />

(Wright s.n., H<strong>–</strong>NYL 17344 holotype). C, P. phaeobyssina (Duss 481, TUR<strong>–</strong><br />

V 22602 holotype). D, P. pyrrhomelaena (Wright, Lichenes Cubensis Ser. 2, 124, H<strong>–</strong><br />

NYL 20498). E, P. teretiuscula (Tønsberg 37814, BG holotype). F, P. tobagensis<br />

(Timdal 10764 & Rui, O holotype).<br />

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14<br />

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15<br />

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16<br />

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