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Cresponea

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Cresponea
Cresponea chloroconia
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Arthoniomycetes
Order: Arthoniales
Family: Opegraphaceae
Genus: Cresponea
Egea & Torrente (1993)
Type species
Cresponea premnea
(Ach.) Egea & Torrente (1993)

Cresponea is a genus of lichens in the family Opegraphaceae. The genus, circumscribed in 1993, contains species that were formerly classified in Lecanactis. Cresponea is widely distributed, but most species are found in tropical and subtropical regions.[1] The genus is named in honor of the Spanish lichenologist Ana Crespo.[2]

Description

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Cresponea spreads as a thin, paint-like crust that merges with the surface of bark or, less often, rock. The thallus can be smooth or cracked into an irregular mosaic, and on rare occasions it breaks into tiny, discrete areoles. Colours range from chalk-white through pale grey to a muted green; some specimens show a narrow, dark brown margin where the fungal threads alone grow out beyond the algal layer. Because there is no separate cortex, the fungal tissue lies directly over the photobiont, usually the filamentous green alga genus Trentepohlia, which gives a faint orange tint when the surface is scratched. The lichen never produces isidia or soralia, so it relies on its sexual and asexual fruit bodies for dispersal.[3]

The sexual structures are small, button-like apothecia that sit on the thallus with a pinched base. They lack a rim of thallus tissue, instead showing a glossy, often crenulated rim (the exciple) that is conspicuously dark brown to black and remains free of the powdery bloom that coats many related genera. The disc starts flat, may become gently domed, and is dusted with a fine white or bluish pruina, especially in young apothecia. Inside, the clear hymenium stains blue or reddish in iodine and houses slender paraphysoid filaments whose club-shaped tips carry a dark brown cap; together these caps form a granular epithecium that turns yellow in potassium hydroxide solution. Each ascus releases eight long, spindle-shaped ascospores divided by three to nineteen cross-walls (septa); the walls are thick, and the spores stay colourless. Asexual reproduction occurs in tiny pycnidia embedded in the crust; these produce short, rod-shaped conidia. Most species show no detectable lichen products in chemical tests.[3]

Ecology

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Generally epiphytic, Cresponea lichen prefer mature, humid woodlands and are sometimes used as an indicator of old-growth conditions, though a few species tolerate rock surfaces in sheltered sites.[3]

Species

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As of June 2025, Species Fungorum (in the Catalogue of Life) accepts 23 species of Cresponea.[4]

References

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  1. ^ Egea, J.M.; Torrente, P. (1993). "Cresponea, a new genus of lichenized fungi in the order Arthoniales (Ascomycotina)". Mycotaxon. 48: 301–31.
  2. ^ Divakar, Pradeep K. "IAL - Acharius Medallists". www.lichenology.org. Archived from the original on 2 April 2016. Retrieved 28 February 2019.
  3. ^ a b c Cannon, P.; Aptroot, A.; Coppins, B.; Ertz, D.; Sanderson, N.; Simkin, J.; Wolseley, P. (2023). Arthoniales: Roccellaceae [revision 1], including the genera Cresponea, Dendrographa, Dirina, Enterographa, Gyrographa, Lecanactis, Ocellomma, Pseudoschismatomma, Psoronactis, Roccella, Schismatomma and Syncesia (PDF). Revisions of British and Irish Lichens. Vol. 32. p. 5.
  4. ^ "Cresponea". Catalogue of Life. Species 2000: Leiden, the Netherlands. Retrieved 16 June 2025.
  5. ^ Menezes, Aline Anjos; de Lima, Edvaneide Leandro; Xavier-Leite, Amanda Barreto; Maia, Leonor Costa; Aptroot, André; Cáceres, Marcela Eugenia da Silva (2013). "New species of Arthoniales from NE Brazil". The Lichenologist. 45 (5): 611–617. doi:10.1017/s0024282913000236.
  6. ^ a b Cáceres, M.E.S.C.; Aptroot, A.; Ertz, D. (2014). "Species of Arthoniales from the Amazon, Rondônia, Brazil". The Lichenologist. 46 (4): 573–588. doi:10.1017/S0024282914000036.
  7. ^ a b Kantvilas, Gintaras (2020). "Contributions to the lichen genus Cresponea (Roccellaceae)". The Lichenologist. 52 (4): 279–285. doi:10.1017/S0024282920000262.
  8. ^ Elix, J.A. (2007). "Four new crustose lichens (lichenized Ascomycota) from Australia". Australasian Lichenology. 60: 14–19.
  9. ^ Aptroot, André; de Souza, Maria Fernanda; dos Santos, Lidiane Alves; Junior, Isaias Oliveira; Barbosa, Bruno Micael Cardoso; da Silva, Marcela Eugenia Cáceres (2022). "New species of lichenized fungi from Brazil, with a record report of 492 species in a small area of the Amazon Forest". The Bryologist. 125 (3): 435–467. doi:10.1639/0007-2745-125.3.433.
  10. ^ Aptroot, André; dos Santos, Lidiane Alves; da Silva Cáceres, Marcela Eugenia (2021). "Saxicolous lichens in the semi-arid caatinga in Brazil show substratum shifts" (PDF). Cryptogamie, Mycologie. 42 (11): 181–189. doi:10.5252/cryptogamie-mycologie2021v42a11.