Calicium
Calicium is a genus of leprose lichens.[1]: 234 It is in the family Caliciaceae.
Calicium | |
---|---|
Calicium viride | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Fungi |
Division: | Ascomycota |
Class: | Lecanoromycetes |
Order: | Caliciales |
Family: | Caliciaceae |
Genus: | Calicium Pers. (1794) |
Type species | |
Calicium viride Pers. (1794) |
The sexual reproduction structures are a mass of loose ascospores that are enclosed by a cup shaped exciple sitting on top of a tiny stalk, having the appearance of a dressmaker's pin (called a mazaedium), hence the common name pin lichen.[1]: 15 They are also commonly called stubble lichens.[1]: 234
They have been used as indicator species for old growth redwood forests.[1]: 234
Evolutionary history
The discovery of a Calicium-like fossil in Baltic amber dating back 55–35 myr indicates that the main distinguishing characteristics of this genus have persisted for at least tens of millions of years.[2] A fossil-calibrated phylogeny that includes this fossil suggests that the family Caliciaceae diversified from its most recent common ancestor 103–156 Myr ago in the early Cretaceous.[3]
Species
As of August 2023, Species Fungorum (in the Catalogue of Life) accepts 40 species in Calicium:[4]
- Calicium abietinum Pers. (1797)
- Calicium adspersum Pers. (1798)
- Calicium atronitescens F.Wilson (1891)
- Calicium brachysporum (Nádv.) K.Knudsen, Kocourk. & Lendemer (2020)
- Calicium carolinianum (Tuck.) M.Prieto & Wedin (2016)
- Calicium chlorosporum F.Wilson (1891)
- Calicium contortum F.Wilson (1889)
- Calicium corynellum (Ach.) Ach. (1803)
- Calicium diploellum Nyl. (1868)
- Calicium episcalare L.Tibell & T.Knutsson (2016)
- Calicium glaucellum Ach. (1803)
- Calicium glebosum Müll.Arg. (1887)
- Calicium hyperelloides Nyl. (1860)
- Calicium indicum Tibell (2006)
- Calicium laevigatum Tibell (2006)
- Calicium lecideinum (Nyl.) M.Prieto & Wedin (2016)
- Calicium lenticulare Ach. (1816)
- Calicium lucidum (Th.Fr.) M.Prieto & Wedin (2016)
- Calicium lutescens Tibell (2001)
- Calicium martinii Js.Murray (1960)
- Calicium muriformis Tibell (2003)
- Calicium nobile Tibell (2006)
- Calicium notarisii (Tul.) M.Prieto & Wedin (2016)
- Calicium parvum Tibell (1975)
- Calicium pinicola (Tibell) M.Prieto & Wedin (2016)
- Calicium pleuriseptatum Tibell & Frisch (2010)
- Calicium pyriforme Tibell (2006)
- Calicium quercinum Pers. (1797)
- Calicium robustellum Nyl. (1861)
- Calicium salicinum Pers. (1794)
- Calicium sequoiae C.B.Williams & Tibell (2008)
- Calicium sperlingiae Selva & Tibell (2023)[5] – Oregon, USA
- Calicium succini (Casp.) Rikkinen & A.R.Schmidt (2018)
- Calicium tenuisporum Tibell (2006)
- Calicium tigillare (Ach.) Pers. (1810)
- Calicium trabinellum (Ach.) Ach. (1810)
- Calicium trachylioides (Nyl. ex Branth & Rostr.) M.Prieto & Wedin (2016)
- Calicium tricolor F.Wilson (1889)
- Calicium verrucosum Tibell (2006)
- Calicium victorianum (F.Wilson) Tibell (1987)
- Calicium viride Pers. (1794)
References
- Field Guide to California Lichens, Stephen Sharnoff, Yale University Press, 2014, ISBN 978-0-300-19500-2
- Rikkinen, Jouko (2003). "Calicioid lichens from European Tertiary amber". Mycologia. 95 (6): 1032–1036. doi:10.1080/15572536.2004.11833019. PMID 21149012. S2CID 36366954.
- Prieto, Maria; Wedin, Mats (2016). "Phylogeny, taxonomy and diversification events in the Caliciaceae". Fungal Diversity. 82 (1): 221–238. doi:10.1007/s13225-016-0372-y.
- Species Fungorum. "Calicium". Catalogue of Life. Retrieved 2 August 2023.
- Selva, Steven B.; Tibell, Leif; Gordon, Matthew; McMullin, R. Troy (2023). "Calicium sperlingiae, (Caliciaceae), a new species of calicioid lichen from Douglas County, Oregon, U.S.A." The Bryologist. 126 (2): 236–241. doi:10.1639/0007-2745-126.2.236. S2CID 259223535.