[go: up one dir, main page]
More Web Proxy on the site http://driver.im/

Parmotrema

Genus of fungi From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Parmotrema

Parmotrema is a genus of lichen belonging to the family Parmeliaceae.[1] It is a large genus, containing an estimated 300 species,[2] with a centre of diversity in subtropical regions of South America and the Pacific Islands.[3]

Quick Facts Scientific classification, Type species ...
Parmotrema
Thumb
Parmotrema hypotropum
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Lecanoromycetes
Order: Lecanorales
Family: Parmeliaceae
Genus: Parmotrema
A.Massal. (1860)
Type species
Parmotrema perforatum
(Wulfen) A.Massal. (1860)
Synonyms
  • Canomaculina Elix & Hale (1987)
  • Concamerella W.L.Culb. & C.F.Culb. (1981)
  • Parmelaria D.D.Awasthi (1987)
  • Rimelia Hale & A.Fletcher (1990)
  • Rimeliella Kurok. (1991)
Close

Members of the genus are commonly called ruffle lichens or scatter-rag lichens.[4]:83

Description

Parmotrema is characterized by its typically large, moderately to loosely-attached foliose thallus with broad lobes that are usually more than 5 mm wide. There is a broad, naked zone around the margin of the lower surface, an epicortex with pores and an upper cortex with a palisade-plectenchymatous arrangement of hyphae. Ascospores are thick-walled and ellipsoid.[5]

Taxonomy

Parmotrema was proposed as a genus by Italian lichenologist Abramo Bartolommeo Massalongo in 1860, with Parmotrema perforatum as the type species.[6] The genus name, composed of the Greek parmos (cup) and trema (perforation), refers to the perforate apothecia. Parmotrema was largely ignored as a genus,[7] and its species were usually grouped in section Amphigymnia of the large genus Parmelia.[8] Several genera previously segregated from Parmotrema have since been folded back in owing to molecular phylogenetic evidence, including Canomaculina, Concamerella, Parmelaria, and Rimelia.[3][9]

Uses

Some species of Parmotrema can be used as a vegetable dye, such as P. crinitum. When mixed with pine sap or with water, or when first burnt to ash, lichens can provide a variety of colors such as yellow, brown, green, orange, purple, and red.[10]

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.