A new lichen species to look for on the PNW coast

Sticta torii
Keep an eye out for this new lichen species on the coast. It is so far known from only 5 sites, including 3 in Oregon: Cape Lookout, Cape Perpetua & Rock Creek (Lane County). All occurrences were on the outermost branches of trees on the beach fringe, exposed to ocean storms.

From afar it may look like a small Sticta fuliginosa (<2cm across), but up close you can see that the isidia are richly branched and clustered near the margins. The mature isidia are tree-like, supported by a basal stalk. There is a dichotomous key to the genus in the paper linked below.

The first iNaturalist observation of Sticta torii was recently submitted by one of the authors of the original paper.

Free full-text at:
Simon, A., Goward, T., Di Meglio, J., Dillman, K., Spribille, T., & Goffinet, B. (2018). Sticta torii sp. nov., a remarkable lichen of high conservation priority from northwestern North America. Graphis Scripta, 30(6).

Publicado el 07 de marzo de 2023 a las 04:21 PM por lumenal lumenal

Comentarios

@augustjackson @brucen @chyroptera @deanwalton @ellement @harsiparker @metsa @mikepatterson @rerobertsjr @sedgequeen @space_coyote @stewartwechsler @wweellll

Please share with anyone who may be looking for lichens on the PNW coast

Anotado por lumenal hace cerca de un año

A timely post, as I was just going over how to distinguish Sticta fulginosa yesterday! I can now picture a variation on that with richly branched isidia better than I might have 2 days ago!

Anotado por stewartwechsler hace cerca de un año

Thank you for bringing this to our attention.

Anotado por ellement hace cerca de un año

Thanks!

Anotado por sedgequeen hace cerca de un año

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