Chaenothecopsis ochroleuca, Haematomma ochroleucum, and Multiclavula vernalis Reported for the First Time from Maine

@article{Paquette2020ChaenothecopsisOH,
  title={Chaenothecopsis ochroleuca, Haematomma ochroleucum, and Multiclavula vernalis Reported for the First Time from Maine},
  author={Hayley A. Paquette and Kenya Gates and Richard Troy McMullin},
  journal={Northeastern Naturalist},
  year={2020},
  volume={27},
  pages={N34 - N39},
  url={https://api.semanticscholar.org/CorpusID:222002527}
}
Abstract We report Chaenothecopsis ochroleuca, Haematomma ochroleucum, and Multiclavula vernalis for the first time from Maine. These species are infrequently reported in North America. Our findings are a direct result of lichenology seminars hosted by the Eagle Hill Institute in Steuben, ME. 
2 Citations

Chaenothecopsis xishuiensis sp. nov. to Science and Lecanora pseudargentata Newly Reported from China

Chaanora pseudargentata is reported for the first time as a new record from China, characterised by red-brown to dark brown apothecial discs, eight-spored asci, nonseptate, hyaline spores, and the presence of atranorin and gangaleoidin.

Revised distribution of the lichen species Haematomma ochroleucum in Poland.

The distribution of Haematomma ochroleucum (Neck.) J. R. Laundon in Poland is presented, indicating that it is very rare, known from only a few localities in the Carpathians, Sudety Mts and northeastern Poland.

LICHENIZED AND NON-LICHENIZED CALICIOID FUNGI FROM NORTH AMERICA

taxonomy, distribution, and ecology of nineteen species in Jive calicioid genera from the United States and Canada are described, and keys are presented to the North American species of Chaenotheca,

Revision of species of Chaenothecopsis with short stalks

The taxonomy, distribution and ecology of eight short-stalked species of Chaenothecopsis are described. The species are parasitic, parasymbiotic on lichens or free-living algae or saprophytic and a

Notes on Clavarioid Fungi. VII. Redefinition of the Clavaria vernalis - C. mucida Complex

Thirteen species of clavarioid lichenoid fungi are grouped into a new genus, Multiclavula, emphasizing hyphal morphology as a unifying characteristic, and only M. constans is free-living: the others are associated with algae, mosses, or allegedly associated with a slime mold.

The calicioid lichens and fungi of the Acadian Forest ecoregion of northeastern North America, II. The rest of the story

    S. Selva
    Environmental Science, Biology
  • 2014
A key to genera and keys to species that include all 89 known taxa in the Acadian Forest are followed by short narratives highlighting the similarities and differences among them, as well as information on substrates and distribution within and outside the ecoregion.

Haematomma (Lecanoraceae) in North and Central America, Including The West Indies

The North American, Central American and West Indian species of the lichen genus Haematomma are revised, with special emphasis given to the chemistry and distribution of the taxa, and the presence of fatty acids are reported for the first time for the genus.

Checklist of Lichen-Forming, Lichenicolous and Allied Fungi of Eagle Hill and Its Vicinity, Maine

Of the 682 taxa listed, 331 have been recorded within the Eagle Hill Institute's boundary, of which 27 were not found elsewhere in the vicinity; a further 66 taxa recorded but lacking voucher material are listed.

Haematomma Chemotypes form Fused Thalli

Bowler and Rundel (1975) give an excellent review of knowledge on lichens, to which must be added the work of James and Henssen (1976) on morphotypes induced by differing algae, and speculated on the possibilities of genetic change resulting from the fusion of two thalli.

Phylogeny and Taxonomy of an Enigmatic Sterile Lichen

The utility of a systematic methodology that combines molecular and non-molecular characters to place and circumscribe species of asexually reproducing lichens that are typically sterile is demonstrated.

Using calicioid lichens and fungi to assess ecological continuity in the Acadian Forest Ecoregion of the Canadian Maritimes

    S. Selva
    Environmental Science, Biology
  • 2003
The ecological continuity of 28 northern hardwoods, spruce–fir (Picea–Abies), eastern hemlock (Tsuga canadensis L. Carriere), and eastern white-cedar (Thuja occidentalis L.), stands in the Canadian Maritimes has been assessed and the sites ranked using an index of ecological continuity based on the total number of calicioid lichens and fungi collected at each site.