Cinder Lichen

Aspicilia cinera

''Aspicilia cinera'' is a gray to almost white, 1.5 – 15 cm wide, crustose areolate lichen with large apothecia that mostly grows on rock in the mountains. It grows in variable forms, from having a continuous surface to being areolate. It grows in Eurasia, and North America on siliceous rock, schist or igneous rock in habitats exposed to sunlight, also rarely on calciferous rock. It is common in Arizona, and rare in California and Baja California at elevations of 1,700 to 3,300 metres.
Cinder Lichen - Aspicilia cinerea Habitat: Growing on a rock slab bench at the edge of a meadow Aspicilia cinera,Aspicilia cinerea,Geotagged,Spring,United States,cinder lichen,lichen

Appearance

Flat to almost convex areoles are angular to irregular, and 0.2 – 2 mm in diameter. They are contiguous but clearly separated by well defined cracks. It usually lacks a prothallus. It may be rimose toward the outer edges. Each areole has 1 – 10, round to angular or irregular, 0.1 -1.6 mm apothecia that may be confluent when numerous. Apothecia have usually black concave discs, with exciple margins of thallus tissue. Asci are club shaped , with 8 ellipsoid ascospores.

Lichen spot tests on the cortex and medulla are K+ red, KC-, P+ yellow:224 or P+ orange, with the medulla sometimes testing K+ yellow and P+ orange.:224 Secondary metabolites include norstictic acid and often connorstictic acid in traces, and more rarely hyposalazinic acid.

The photobiont is a chlorococcoid.

References:

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Taxonomy
KingdomFungi
DivisionAscomycota
ClassLecanoromycetes
OrderPertusariales
FamilyMegasporaceae
GenusAspicilia
SpeciesA. cinera