Sticta riparia Merc.- Diaz
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https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.105.120810 |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FC3B9382-EDB5-5388-9CB2-575B1BFDBEE4 |
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Sticta riparia Merc.- Diaz |
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Sticta riparia Merc.- Diaz View in CoL
Fig. 7 View Figure 7
Description.
For the description, see Mercado-Díaz et al. (2020).
Habitat and distribution.
The record of S. riparia presented here is the first one from Bolivia and South America, as the species has been previously known only from Puerto Rico ( Mercado-Díaz et al. 2020). In Bolivia, the species was found on tree bark in semi-natural Sub-Andean Amazon forest in the Cochabamba Department.
Notes.
Sticta riparia has a strongly branched thallus, with undulate lobes, the margins of which are covered with branched, abundant, palmate, grey to dark brown phyllidia. The lower surface is greyish-brown, with the primary tomentum absent towards the margins. In addition, cyphellae are abundant, with a density of 41-60 per cm2 towards the centre and more than 100 per cm2 towards the margins ( Mercado-Díaz et al. 2020). It is similar to S. densiphyllidiata as, in both species, the lobe margins are abundantly covered by phyllidia, but in S. densiphyllidiata , these are dispersed, coralloid and darker than the thallus. Furthermore, the lower surface of the latter taxon is reddish with a dense tomentum. The abundance of the cyphellae towards the margins and centre is also a feature common to both taxa. However, in S. densiphyllidiata , the membrane reacts with K+ weakly pink, whereas in S. riparia , it is K+ pale yellow ( Mercado-Díaz et al. 2020). Both species belong to clade III of the Sticta tree (Fig. 1 View Figure 1 ). Sticta densiphyllidiata is only known from Puerto Rico ( Mercado-Díaz et al. 2020).
Recently, a new phyllidiate species, S. cerradensis T.D. Barbosa, J.-M. Torres, Kitaura & A.P. Loren, phylogenetically similar to S. riparia , has been described. However, it has larger lobes and the lower surface is light brown to dark. Sticta cerradensis is only known from Brazil ( Torres et al. 2021).
Specimens examined.
Bolivia. Dept. Cochabamba; Prov. Chaparre, Parque Nacional Carrasco, Guacharos, 17°03'50"S, 65°28'31"W, elev. 445 m, semi-natural Sub-Andean Amazon forest , corticolous, 10 Nov 2016, M. Kukwa 18724 (LPB, UGDA) GoogleMaps .
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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