Rusavskia, S.Y.Kondr. & Kärnefelt, 2003

Vondrák, Jan, Frolov, Ivan, Davydov, Evgeny A., Yakovchenko, Lidia, Malíček, Jiří, Svoboda, Stanislav & Kubásek, Jiří, 2019, The lichen family Teloschistaceae in the Altai-Sayan region (Central Asia), Phytotaxa 396 (1), pp. 448-450 : 448-450

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.396.1.1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039D87D1-1A28-FF81-B2CB-1EC8CA42E24E

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Rusavskia
status

 

Rusavskia View in CoL View at ENA (including Zeroviella ) ( Figs 11 View FIGURE 11 , 12A–C View FIGURE 12 )

At least 5 species recorded in the region occurring on various inorganic substrates, but rarely also on bark, organic soil or bryophytes. Thallus is foliose or crustose with marginal lobes. Vegetative dispores are present in two species (blastidia in R. sorediata , lobules in R. dasanensis ). Apothecia are known in all species, but sometimes not developed. Taxonomy is not settled and our species delimitation is provisional, reflecting ITS tree topology ( Fig. 11 View FIGURE 11 ) and phenotypic variability. Literature: Arup et al. (2013), Khodosovtsev et al. (2004), Kondratyuk & Kärnefelt (2003), Kondratyuk et al. (2013b, 2015).

Rusavskia dasanensis : 24 localities at altitudes 250–3140 m in arid (rarely humid) habitats. Substrate: sun-lit limestone and siliceous rocks. Hardly distinguished from R. papillifera , R. digitata , and R. domogledensis . ITS sequences from Altai specimens are close to available R. dasanensisis sequences. The Mediterranean R. papillifera belongs to a different clade. Lichens from Altai-Sayan region are morphologically variable; with flat thallus outgrowths (characteristic for R. papillifera ) or with coralloid isidia ( R. dasanensis ). Identities of European R. digitata , and R. domogledensis are not clear.

Rusavskia elegans sensu lato (specimens with small thalli), Fig. 12A View FIGURE 12 right: 34 localities at altitudes 220–2900 m in all ecological categories. Substrate: limestone and siliceous rocks.

Rusavskia elegans sensu lato (specimens with large thalli), Fig. 12A View FIGURE 12 left: 4 localities at altitudes 1400–1800 m mostly in arid or humid alpine habitats. Substrate: siliceous or calcareous rocks exposed to sun.

Rusavskia sorediata : 4 localities at altitudes 220–1800 m in all ecological categories except arid alpine. Substrate: base-rich siliceous and calcareous rocks.

Rusavskia sp. 1 , Fig. 12B View FIGURE 12 : 8 localities at altitudes 250–1400 m in arid, rarely humid, non-alpine habitats. Substrate: limestone. Easily distinguished from other Rusavskia in the region by flat yellow lobes resembling species of Xanthoria . It is common on limestone in forest-steppe zone at northern slopes of Altai.

Rusavskia sp. 2 , Fig. 12C View FIGURE 12 : Single specimen recorded at altitude 1570 m in arid non-alpine habitat (Vondrák 18161). Substrate: siliceous rock (schist). In the ITS tree ( Fig. 11 View FIGURE 11 ), its sequence MG954150 groups with R. elegans , but it is distinguished by lobes tightly appressed to substrate, and cortex and algal layer modified into algal and fungal stacks (see Vondrák & Kubásek 2013).

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