Biology:Calopadia
Calopadia is a genus of foliicolous (leaf-dwelling) lichens in the family Ectolechiaceae. The genus was established by the Czech lichenologist Antonín Vězda in 1986 and contains around 24 species found primarily in tropical regions. These lichens form thin, pale brownish to greyish crusts on leaf surfaces and produce small brown disc-shaped fruiting bodies. They are distinguished from similar genera by their non-black fruiting structures and characteristic curved or coiled asexual spores. The genus has its greatest diversity in the Neotropics, though species have also been recorded from tropical Africa, Asia, and Australasia.
Taxonomy
Calopadia was circumscribed by the Czech lichenologist Antonín Vězda in 1986. Calopadia was one of five new genera (alongside Badimia, Barubria, Loflammia, and Logilvia) established by Vězda in 1986 when he divided his informal "Lobaca" assemblage on the basis of ascus structure. Species with a Sporopodium-type ascus were transferred to the newly delimited Ectolechiaceae, within which Vězda placed Calopadia together with the previously known genera Tapellaria and Lasioloma because of their shared [[Glossary of lichen terms#{{biology:{1}}}|{{Biology:{1}}}]] (specialised conidiomata derived from apothecia)[1]
Description
Calopadia forms a thin, continuous or occasionally patchy thallus (the body of the lichen), usually smooth and pale brownish to greyish in colour. The apothecia (fruiting bodies) are constricted at the base and brown to dark brown, but not black; their margins are prominent when young, later fading or disappearing. The [[Glossary of lichen terms#{{biology:{1}}}|{{Biology:{1}}}]]—the tissue forming the rim around the apothecial disc—is [[Glossary of lichen terms#{{biology:{1}}}|{{Biology:{1}}}]] (composed of small, brick-like cells), while the [[Glossary of lichen terms#{{biology:{1}}}|{{Biology:{1}}}]] (the layer beneath the spore-bearing tissue) does not react with potassium hydroxide (K–). The hymenium contains [[Glossary of lichen terms#{{biology:{1}}}|{{Biology:{1}}}]] or only slightly branched paraphyses (filamentous supporting cells). The asci are cylindric-[[Glossary of lichen terms#{{biology:{1}}}|{{Biology:{1}}}]] (cylindrical to club-shaped) with a blue-staining (J+) [[Glossary of lichen terms#{{biology:{1}}}|{{Biology:{1}}}]], showing the ascus structure characteristic of Sporopodium. The ascospores are [[Glossary of lichen terms#{{biology:{1}}}|{{Biology:{1}}}]] (divided by both transverse and longitudinal walls) and variable in number, from one to eight per ascus.[1]
The asexual reproductive structures, or [[Glossary of lichen terms#{{biology:{1}}}|{{Biology:{1}}}]], are grey to dark brown and produce conidia (asexual spores) that are [[Glossary of lichen terms#{{biology:{1}}}|{{Biology:{1}}}]] (needle-shaped), curved or spirally coiled, and multi-septate (divided by many cross-walls). The conidia arise in association with small algal cells near the thallus surface. In overall appearance and spore type, Calopadia resembles Tapellaria, but differs in having non-black apothecia, a K– hypothecium, and a continuous rather than patchy thallus.[1]
A field study of Calopadia puiggarii documented the full life cycle of a Calopadia species on living leaves and showed how sexual and asexual reproduction can both contribute to thallus formation. In that study, campylidia contained photobiont cells among the conidiogenous tissue, and the filiform, septate macroconidia were released together with algal cells that they often encircled; the macroconidia could then germinate and lichenize those dispersed photobionts. The same work reported pycnidia in Calopadia for the first time; these minute structures produce microconidia that were interpreted as likely spermatia (male gametes).[2]
Chemistry
Chemical studies using thin-layer chromatography and high-performance liquid chromatography have reported a range of secondary metabolites in Calopadia, including pannarin and atranorin, along with several chlorinated xanthones (lichexanthone derivatives). In some species, discrete chemotypes have been reported; for example, C. perpallida and C. subcoerulescens have been described with more than one "chemical race" based on their detected compounds.[3]
Species
As of February 2026[update], Species Fungorum (in the Catalogue of Life) accept 24 species of Calopadia.[4]
- Calopadia aurantiaca Lücking (2008)[5]
- Calopadia bonitensis M.Cáceres & Lücking (2007)[6]
- Calopadia chacoensis (Malme) Kalb & Vězda (1987)[7] (= Lopadium chacoensis, MycoBank[8])
- Calopadia cinereopruinosa Bungartz & Lücking (2011)[9]
- Calopadia editiae Vězda ex Chaves & Lücking (2011)[9]
- Calopadia erythrocephala Farkas, Elix & Flakus (2012)[10]
- Calopadia floridana Hodges & Lücking (2011)[11]
- Calopadia foliicola (Fée) Vězda (1986)[1]
- Calopadia fusca (Müll.Arg.) Vězda (1986)[1]
- Calopadia granulosa Aptroot & M.Cáceres (2014)[12] – Brazil
- Calopadia imshaugii Common & Lücking (2011)[11]
- Calopadia lucida Lücking & R.Sant. (2001)[13]
- Calopadia nymanii (R.Sant.) Vězda (1986)[1]
- Calopadia perpallida (Nyl.) Vězda (1986)[1]
- Calopadia phyllogena (Müll.Arg.) Vězda (1986)[1]
- Calopadia puiggarii (Müll.Arg.) Vězda (1986)[1]
- Calopadia ruiliensis H.X.Wu (2021)[14] – China
- Calopadia saxicola Gumboski (2015)[15]
- Calopadia schaeferi Vězda (2004)[16]
- Calopadia schomerae Seavey & J.Seavey (2011)[17]
- Calopadia subcoerulescens (Zahlbr.) Vězda (1988)[18]
- Calopadia subfusca Kalb & Vězda (1987)[7]
- Calopadia turbinata (Tuck.)[19] Sérus. & Lücking (2005)[20]
- Calopadia vermiculifera (Vain.) Sérus. (1997)[21]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 Vězda A. (1986). "Neue Gattungen der Familie Lecideaceae s. lat. (Lichenes)" (in de). Folia Geobotanica et Phytotaxonomica 21 (2): 199–219. doi:10.1007/BF02854668. Bibcode: 1986FolGe..21..199V.
- ↑ Sanders, William B. (2014). "Complete life cycle of the lichen fungus Calopadia puiggarii (Pilocarpaceae, Ascomycetes) documented in situ: Propagule dispersal, establishment of symbiosis, thallus development, and formation of sexual and asexual reproductive structures". American Journal of Botany 101 (11): 1836–1848. doi:10.3732/ajb.1400272. PMID 25366850. Bibcode: 2014AmJB..101.1836S.
- ↑ Elix, John A.; Øvstedal, Dag O. (2009). "Lichen phytochemistry II: some species of Calopadia". Australasian Lichenology (65): 7–9. https://openresearch-repository.anu.edu.au/server/api/core/bitstreams/51f36371-14c5-461b-9db3-5e65ce5b36d0/content.
- ↑ "Calopadia". Species 2000: Leiden, the Netherlands. https://www.catalogueoflife.org/data/taxon/3FVV.
- ↑ Lücking, Robert (2008). Foliicolous Lichenized Fungi. Flora Neotropica. 103. New York Botanical Garden Press. p. 745. ISBN 978-0-89327-491-7.
- ↑ Cáceres, M.E.S. (2007). Corticolous crustose and microfoliose lichens of northeastern Brazil. Libri Botanici. 22. p. 46.
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 Kalb, K.; Vězda, A. (1987), "Einige nicht-foliicole Arten der Familie Ectolechiaceae (Lichenes) aus Brasilien", Folia Geobotanica et Phytotaxonomica 22 (3): 287–312, doi:10.1007/BF02854629
- ↑ "Calopadia chacoensis". MycoBank. https://www.mycobank.org/page/Name%20details%20page/193451.
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 Lumbsch, H.T.; Ahti, T.; Altermann, S.; De Paz, G.A.; Aptroot, A.; Arup, U. et al. (2011). "One hundred new species of lichenized fungi: a signature of undiscovered global diversity". Phytotaxa 18 (1): 27–28. doi:10.11646/phytotaxa.18.1.1. Bibcode: 2011Phytx..18....1L. http://www.mapress.com/phytotaxa/content/2011/f/p00018p127f.pdf.
- ↑ Farkas, Edit; Elix, John A.; Flakus, Adam (2012). "Calopadia erythrocephala, a new foliicolous lichenized fungus from Brazil". The Lichenologist 44 (3): 395–399. doi:10.1017/S0024282911000831. Bibcode: 2012ThLic..44..395F.
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 Lücking, Robert; Seavey, Frederick; Common, Ralph S.; Beeching, Sean Q.; Breuss, Othmar; Buck, William R. et al. (2011). "The lichens of Fakahatchee Strand Preserve State Park, Florida: Proceedings from the 18th Tuckerman Workshop". Bulletin of the Florida Museum of Natural History 46 (4): 127–186. doi:10.58782/flmnh.sofw5435. Bibcode: 2011BFMNH..49..127L. https://www.fs.fed.us/global/iitf/pubs/ja_iitf_2011_Lucking001.pdf.
- ↑ Aptroot, André; Cáceres, Marcela Eugenia da Silva (2014). "A key to the corticolous microfoliose, foliose and related crustose lichens from Rondônia, Brazil, with the description of four new species". The Lichenologist 46 (6): 783–799. doi:10.1017/S0024282914000358. Bibcode: 2014ThLic..46..783A. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/278393075.
- ↑ Lücking, Robert; Santesson, Rolf (2001). "New species or interesting records of foliicolous lichens. VIII. Two new taxa from tropical Africa, with a key to sorediate Fellhanera species". The Lichenologist 33 (2): 111–116. doi:10.1006/lich.2001.0312. Bibcode: 2001ThLic..33..111L.
- ↑ Wu, Hai-Xia; Ren, Wei-Bin; Li, Xin-Hao; Yang, Zi-Xiang (2021). "A new species of foliicolous lichenized fungi from southwest China: Calopadia ruiliensis sp. nov.". Turkish Journal of Botany 45 (4): 371–377. doi:10.3906/bot-2101-32. Bibcode: 2021TJBot..45..371W.
- ↑ Gumboski, Emerson Luiz (2015). "Calopadia saxicola (Pilocarpaceae, Ascomycota), a new saxicolous species growing on rocky seashores in southern Brazil". The Lichenologist 47 (2): 137–141. doi:10.1017/s0024282914000619. Bibcode: 2015ThLic..47..137G.
- ↑ Vezda, A. (2004). "Neue foliicole Flechten III" (in de). Acta Musei Richnoviensis 11 (2): 57–72.
- ↑ Seavey, F.; Seavey, J.L. (2011). "Calopadia schomerae (Pilocarpaceae), a lichen from Everglades National Park". Opuscula Philolichenum 9: 39–43. doi:10.5962/p.382028.
- ↑ Vězda, Sched. Lichenes Selecti Exsiccati Fascicle 88: 3, no. 2185, 1988
- ↑ Tuckerman, E. (1864). "Observations on North American and other lichens". Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 6: 263–287.
- ↑ Lücking, Robert; Buck, William R.; Sérusiaux, Emmanuël; Ferraro, Lidia I. (2005). "Gomphillus caribaeus belongs in the new genus Bryogomphus (Lecanorales: Pilocarpaceae)". The Bryologist 108 (4): 481–486. doi:10.1639/0007-2745(2005)108[0481:GCBITN2.0.CO;2].
- ↑ Aptroot, André; Diederich, Paul; Sérusiaux, Emmanuel; Sipman, Harrie J.M. (1997). Lichens and lichenicolous fungi from New Guinea. Bibliotheca Lichenologica. 64. Berlin/Stuttgart: J. Cramer. p. 42. ISBN 978-3-443-58043-8.
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Wikidata ☰ Q5023183 entry
