Biology:Burrowsia
Burrowsia is a genus of the lichen family Caliciaceae.[1] It is monospecific, containing the single crustose lichen Burrowsia cataractae. Both the species and the genus were newly described to science in 2020 by Alan Fryday and Ian Medeiros. Burrowsia cataractae is known from only a single location in Mpumalanga, South Africa. The lichen forms grey to greenish-brown crusty patches on permanently moist quartzite rocks in the spray zone of Calodendrum Falls, where it occupies a cool, humid microhabitat within shaded ravine forest. Molecular analysis confirms that Burrowsia represents a distinct evolutionary lineage within the Caliciaceae, separated from other related genera by its unusual ascospore structure and distinctive ascus features.
Taxonomy
The genus Burrowsia was erected in 2020 by Alan Fryday and Ian Medeiros to accommodate the single species B. cataractae. The species epithet honours John and Sandie Burrows, long-time managers of Buffelskloof Nature Reserve, where the type collection was made.[2] Burrowsia was collected in February 2016 during a four-week survey of Mpumalanga's neglected lichen funga.[3] As the genus is monospecific, the authors considered a separate generic diagnosis superfluous, but they stressed its diagnostic combination of pigmented, somewhat [[Glossary of lichen terms#{{biology:{1}}}|{{Biology:{1}}}]] (chambered) ascospores and an ascus with a distinctive tube-like apical apparatus.[2]
Subsequent multilocus molecular phylogenetics analysis placed Burrowsia within the family Caliciaceae yet on a long, well-supported branch separate from Buellia and other [[Glossary of lichen terms#{{biology:{1}}}|{{Biology:{1}}}]] genera. This molecular isolation, together with the unusual ascus structure and spore morphology, underpins its recognition as a new genus rather than an aberrant species of an existing taxon.[2] The popular account of the expedition notes that B. cataractae is the first genus of lichen-forming fungi described from South Africa for almost three decades, underscoring just how under-explored the country's crustose lichens remain.[3]
Description
The thallus—the main lichen body—is crustose and spreads as a grey- to greenish-brown rind that becomes cracked and [[Glossary of lichen terms#{{biology:{1}}}|{{Biology:{1}}}]] (broken into tiny plates) with age. A thin black [[Glossary of lichen terms#{{biology:{1}}}|{{Biology:{1}}}]] sometimes rims its margin. Sectioning shows a thin hyaline upper [[Glossary of lichen terms#{{biology:{1}}}|{{Biology:{1}}}]] overlying a [[Glossary of lichen terms#{{biology:{1}}}|{{Biology:{1}}}]] layer dominated by Trebouxia (a green algal genus). Beneath this lies a brown, vertically orientated medulla up to 250 micrometres (μm) deep.[2]
Apothecia, the spore-bearing [[Glossary of lichen terms#{{biology:{1}}}|{{Biology:{1}}}]], are frequent, black to dark brown and initially half-sunken before becoming [[Glossary of lichen terms#{{biology:{1}}}|{{Biology:{1}}}]] and up to 0.8 mm across. They are [[Glossary of lichen terms#{{biology:{1}}}|{{Biology:{1}}}]]—that is, they lack an algal rim—and possess a persistent, slightly paler margin. The hymenium reaches 130 μm tall and stains blue in iodine, while the asci are cylindrical and display a pale-blue staining [[Glossary of lichen terms#{{biology:{1}}}|{{Biology:{1}}}]] with a darker axial tube. Each ascus bears four to eight submuriform (partly chambered) ascospores, 23 × 12 μm on average, with a brown pigment but no transparent [[Glossary of lichen terms#{{biology:{1}}}|{{Biology:{1}}}]]. Immersed pycnidia produce slender [[Glossary of lichen terms#{{biology:{1}}}|{{Biology:{1}}}]] conidia. Standard spot tests give K+ (red) reactions, and thin-layer chromatography detects norstictic acid plus two unidentified substances.[2]
Another lichen with a similar morphology to Burrowsia cataractae is Rhizocarpon lavatum, which also occurs in similar damp habitats in the Northern Hemisphere and in New Zealand. This species, however, does not have pigmented ascospores and differs from B. cataractae in both the structure and chemistry of the ascus.[2]
Habitat and distribution
Burrowsia cataractae is known only from its type locality at 1500 m elevation in Buffelskloof Nature Reserve, Mpumalanga Province, South Africa. It colonises permanently moist quartzite boulders in the splash zone at the base of Calodendrum Falls, within a shaded ravine forest.[2]
The surrounding vegetation biome is classified as Eastern Dry Afrotemperate Forest but the species occupies a cool, humid microhabitat kept damp by spray from the waterfall. Field surveys elsewhere in Mpumalanga, including other ultramafic and quartzitic sites, have not relocated the lichen.[2]
References
- ↑ "Burrowsia". Species 2000: Leiden, the Netherlands. https://www.catalogueoflife.org/data/taxon/9YLNY.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 Fryday, Alan M.; Medeiros, Ian D.; Siebert, Stefan J.; Pope, Nathaniel; Rajakaruna, Nishanta (2020). "Burrowsia, a new genus of lichenized fungi (Caliciaceae), plus the new species B. cataractae and Scoliciosporum fabisporum, from Mpumalanga, South Africa". South African Journal of Botany 132: 471–481. doi:10.1016/j.sajb.2020.06.001. Bibcode: 2020SAJB..132..471F.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Fryday, Alan; Siebert, Stefan; Rajakaruna, Nishanta (2021). "Scoring a lichen hat-trick". Veld & Flora 107 (2): 26–31.
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