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Acolium

Acolium ( Anglèis )

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Acolium is a genus of lichenized fungi in the family Caliciaceae.[1] The genus has a widespread distribution and contains six species. These lichens are found on bark and wood, occasionally on rocks, or growing on other lichens.[2]

The genus was originally proposed as a subdivision of Calicium by Erik Acharius in 1808,[3] and promoted to generic status by Samuel Frederick Gray in 1821.[4]

Description

Acolium is characterized by a crustose thallus that can vary in appearance from a rough, warty surface to a cracked, mosaic-like pattern. The thallus can be thick or thin, and its colour ranges from grey to brownish. However, in species that live on other lichens, the thallus is absent. The cortex of these lichens is composed of interwoven hyphae, and they have a trebouxioid photobiont.[2]

Acolium lichens produce apothecia, which are black, and can be either sessile or partially immersed. The true exciple is consistently thick, particularly at the base, and has a blackish-brown hue, occasionally displaying a white or grey powdery appearance. The hamathecium, which is not easily visible, consists of simple, unbranched paraphyses. Asci develop individually from ascogenous hyphae with croziers and are cylindrical in shape. They possess a single functional wall layer and disintegrate early on, releasing spores into a dry, black, powdery mass called a mazaedium.[2]

The ascospores of Acolium lichens have a single septum; they have shapes ranging from broadly cylindrical to ellipsoidal. They exhibit a slight or pronounced constriction at the septum and have a thick, dark brown wall adorned with unique ornamentation such as irregular cracks, warts, or parallel ridges. The conidiomata, or pycnidia, are spherical or slightly flattened, measuring 50–200 μm in diameter, and initially semi-immersed in the thallus. The conidiophores are branched, and the conidia are aseptate and colourless, existing in two types: cylindrical and tapering at one end or ellipsoidal. Chemically, Acolium lichens contain pulvinic acid derivatives, which are yellow pigments, along with unidentified compounds.[2]

Species

As of April 2023, Species Fungorum (in the Catalogue of Life) accepts 6 species of Acolium.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b "Acolium". Species 2000 & ITIS Catalogue of Life. Species 2000: Naturalis, Leiden, the Netherlands. Retrieved 20 April 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d Cannon, Paul; Prieto, Maria; Coppins, Brian; Sanderson, Neil; Scheidegger, Christoph; Simkin, Janet (2021). "Caliciales: Caliciaceae, including the genera Acolium, Amandinea, Buellia, Calicium, Diploicia, Diplotomma, Endohyalina, Monerolechia, Orcularia, Pseudothelomma, Rinodina and Tetramelas". Revisions of British and Irish Lichens. 15: 1–35 [3–5]. doi:10.34885/174. open access
  3. ^ Acharius, E. (1808). "Förteckning på de i Sverige våxande arter af Lafvarnas Familj". Kongliga Vetenskaps Academiens Nya Handlingar. 2 (in Latin). 29: 259–283 [277].
  4. ^ Gray, S.F. (1821). A Natural Arrangement of British Plants. Vol. 1. London: Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy. p. 482.
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Acolium: Brief Summary ( Anglèis )

fornì da wikipedia EN

Acolium is a genus of lichenized fungi in the family Caliciaceae. The genus has a widespread distribution and contains six species. These lichens are found on bark and wood, occasionally on rocks, or growing on other lichens.

The genus was originally proposed as a subdivision of Calicium by Erik Acharius in 1808, and promoted to generic status by Samuel Frederick Gray in 1821.

licensa
cc-by-sa-3.0
drit d'autor
Wikipedia authors and editors
original
visité la sorgiss
sit compagn
wikipedia EN