Arthoniaceae

Frisch, Andreas, Grube, Martin, Kashiwadani, Hiroyuki & Ohmura, Yoshihito, 2018, Arthoniaceae with reddish, K + purple ascomata in Japan, Phytotaxa 356 (1), pp. 19-33 : 28

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.356.1.2

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C487F7-FF96-FF9D-F4CE-FD03FA29FB94

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Arthoniaceae
status

 

Key to Arthoniaceae View in CoL with reddish, K+ purple ascomata in Japan

1 Ascomata distinctly convex, adnate; disc covered by a bright red pruina; spores 1-septate, not brownish with age; unidentified quinoid pigments; Hokkaido, on bark of old Picea sp ............................................... Coniarthonia eos View in CoL ( Frisch et al. 2014; Fig. 3F View FIGURE 3 )

1′ Ascomata not convex, often lobed to lirellate; orange to red pruina concentrated along the ascomatal margin or an amorphous dark red pigmentation in the ascomata present; ascospores> 1-septate....................................................................................................2

2 Parasitic on Graphis spp. at least when young; apothecia lirellate, in stellate clusters; parietin and ± psoromic acid........................ ............................................................................................................................................................................ Arthonia lopingensis

2′ Not parasitic on Graphis spp. ; parietin absent...................................................................................................................................3

3 Ascomata covered by red to orange-red pruina at least along the margins; ascospores 4–5-septate with enlarged apical cell, 22–28 × 7–9 μm, brown with age; pigments A1, A2, A3................................................................................... Coniocarpon cinnabarinum View in CoL

3′ Ascomata lacking red to orange-red pruina; pigment amorphous in the hymenial gels....................................................................4

4 Ascospores 26–35 × 9–12 μm, hyaline but brown with granular ornamentation in the perispore at late maturity; pigments A4, A5, A6 solvable in K but not in LCB.................................................................................................................................. Arthonia picea

4′ Ascospores 15–21 × 5–7 μm, hyaline; pigments A7 not solvable in K, but solving in LCB by forming clusters of needle-like, prismatic crystals; confluentic and ± psoromic acids........................................................................................ Arthonia sanguinaria

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