Cenozosia cava Jung & Werner, 2023

Jung, Patrick, Werner, Lina, Briegel-Williams, Laura, Emrich, Dina & Lakatos, Michael, 2023, Roccellinastrum, Cenozosia and Heterodermia: Ecology and phylogeny of fog lichens and their photobionts from the coastal Atacama Desert, MycoKeys 98, pp. 317-348 : 317

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.98.107764

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E06B29C0-13D2-5FBD-A3FC-374343ACFD5F

treatment provided by

MycoKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Cenozosia cava Jung & Werner
status

sp. nov.

Cenozosia cava Jung & Werner sp. nov.

Fig. 4 View Figure 4

Type.

Chile. Atacama Desert , Pan de Azucar National Park (25°59'03"S, 70°36'55"W; 764 m a.s.l.) specimen HBG-025793 (Herbarium Hamburgense, Hamburg, GoogleMaps Germany).

Diagnosis.

Similar to Niebla ceruchis , but this species has not been verified from the Atacama Desert. C. cava also forms smaller and rarer apothecia.

Etymology.

Epithet ' Cenozosia cava ' refers to the hollow thallus.

Description.

Thallus white to gray and strongly wrinkled or folded in the dry state, gray-green and significantly less wrinkled if hydrated, divided into many long, uniformly narrow cylindrical-teretiform, flexuous branches from a pale brown to blackened base, up to 7.0 cm long and 0.5 cm thick. Mostly made of primary, fastigiate branches, sometimes dichotomously divided. Cortex present, gray, 40-60 μm thick. Medulla white, very loose, with single hyphal strands crisscrossing the hollow interior of the thalli. Apothecia, round, flat, bowl-shaped when young, pale brown to slightly orange with a pale, concave, pink disc, mostly emerging lateral, sometimes terminal, up to 0.8 cm in diameter. Spores two-celled, divided by a septum. Pycnidia black, forming conspicuous, conical protrusions throughout the thallus. Trebouxioid photobiont arranged in nests throughout the loose medulla network.

Secondary metabolites.

Decarboxynorstenosporic acid, decarboxydivaricatic acid, zeorin, fatty acids. UV-, K-, C+ red, KC-, P-.

Distribution and ecology.

Epiphytically directly on cacti stems, preferably on Eulychnia sp., in the fog zones together with C. excorticata and various Ramalina species.

Notes.

The species is similar to Niebla ceruchis but can clearly be differentiated from the latter based on its phylogeny and the smaller, less pronounced formation of apothecia.