Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-ndw9j Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T12:56:29.872Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The genera Brianaria (Psoraceae) and Micarea (Pilocarpaceae) in Japan, with reports on other interesting species in Asia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 March 2021

Brian J. Coppins*
Affiliation:
Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, 20A Inverleith Row, Edinburgh EH3 5LR, UK
Hiroyuki Kashiwadani
Affiliation:
Department of Botany, National Museum Nature and Science, Amakubo 4-1-1, Tsukuba 305-0005, Japan
Kwang Hee Moon
Affiliation:
National Institute of Biological Resources, Incheon 22689, South Korea
Toby Spribille
Affiliation:
Biological Sciences CW405, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2R3, Canada
Göran Thor
Affiliation:
Department of Ecology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, P.O. Box 7044, SE-750 07 Uppsala, Sweden
*
Author for correspondence: Brian J. Coppins. E-mail: lichensel@btinternet.com

Abstract

An examination of collections from Japan has increased the number of Brianaria and Micarea species known from that country from eight to 19, including one new species, M. rubioides Coppins (also from Malaysia and the Philippines). Eleven species are reported as new to Japan (M. botryoides (Nyl.) Coppins, M. denigrata (Fr.) Hedl., M. erratica (Körb.) Hertel et al., M. hedlundii Coppins, M. lithinella (Nyl.) Hedl., M. micrococca (Körb.) Gams ex Coppins and M. misella (Nyl.) Hedl.) or new to Asia: M. byssacea (Th. Fr.) Czarnota et al., M. deminuta Coppins and M. xanthonica Coppins & Tønsberg (new to Asia; Japan); M. nitschkeana (J. Lahm ex Rabenh.) Harm. (new to Asia; South Korea). The presence of Micarea prasina s. str. from Japan needs to be confirmed; no collection was found in this study. Additional collections from South Korea and Sri Lanka are also reported, including the new species M. ceylanica Coppins from Sri Lanka. The identity of M. synotheoides (Nyl.) Coppins, originally described from Japan, has been resolved, resulting in the renaming of Western European material, previously under that name, as M. longispora Coppins. Micarea coreana Lőkös et al. is reported here as a synonym of M. erratica. The type of Lecidea inopinula Nyl. requires the new combination Micarea inopinula (Nyl.) Coppins & T. Sprib. to replace Micarea prasinella (Jatta) I. M. Lamb.

Type
Standard Papers
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the British Lichen Society

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Acharius, A (1803) Methodus qua omnes detectos Lichenes secundum organa carpomorpha ad genera, species et varietates redigere atque observationibus illustrare tentavit Erik Acharius (Methodus Lichenum). Stockholm: Ulrich.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andersen, HL and Ekman, S (2005) Disintegration of the Micareaceae (lichenized Ascomycota): a molecular phylogeny based on mitochondrial rDNA sequences. Mycological Research 109, 2130.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Andreev, M, Kotlov, Y and Makarova, I (1996) Checklist of lichens and lichenicolous fungi of the Russian Arctic. Bryologist 99, 137169.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aptroot, A (1990) Lichens of Madagascar: new and interesting records. Cryptogamie, Bryologie et Lichenologie 11, 401408.Google Scholar
Aptroot, A and Feijen, FJ (2002) Annotated checklist of the lichens and lichenicolous fungi of Bhutan. Fungal Diversity 11, 2148.Google Scholar
Aptroot, A and Moon, KH (2015) New lichen records from Korea, with the description of the lichenicolous Halecania parasitica. Herzogia 28, 193203.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aptroot, A and Sparrius, LB (2003) New microlichens from Taiwan. Fungal Diversity 14, 150.Google Scholar
Aptroot, A, Diederich, P, Sérusiaux, E and Sipman, H (1997) Lichens and lichenicolous fungi from New Guinea. Bibliotheca Lichenologica 64, 1220.Google Scholar
Arup, U, Ekman, S, Lindblom, L and Mattsson, J-E (1993) High performance thin layer chromatography (HPTLC), an improved technique for screening lichen substances. Lichenologist 25, 6171.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brand, AM, van den Boom, PPG and Sérusiaux, E (2014) Unveiling a surprising diversity in the lichen genus Micarea (Pilocarpaceae) in Réunion (Mascarenes archipelago, Indian Ocean). Lichenologist 46, 413439.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Calvelo, S and Fryday, AM (2006) New reports of lichens from Argentine Tierra del Fuego and the Falkland Islands (Islas Malvinas). Bryologist 109, 372380.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coppins, BJ (1983) A taxonomic study of the lichen genus Micarea in Europe. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History), Botany Series 11, 17214.Google Scholar
Coppins, BJ (1995) Two new, diminutive Micarea species from western Europe. Bibliotheca Lichenologica 58, 5762.Google Scholar
Coppins, BJ (2008) Micarea prasinella. Bulletin of the British Lichen Society 103, 45.Google Scholar
Coppins, BJ (2009) Micarea. In Smith, CW, Aptroot, A, Coppins, BJ, Fletcher, A, Gilbert, OL, James, PW and Wolseley, PA (eds), The Lichens of Great Britain and Ireland. London: British Lichen Society, pp. 583606.Google Scholar
Coppins, BJ and Tønsberg, T (2001) A new xanthone-containing Micarea from Northwest Europe and the Pacific Northwest of North America. Lichenologist 33, 9396.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Czarnota, P (2007) The lichen genus Micarea (Lecanorales, Ascomycota) in Poland. Polish Botanical Studies 23, 1199.Google Scholar
Czarnota, P and Guzow-Krzemińska, B (2009) [‘2010’] A phylogenetic study of the Micarea prasina group shows that Micarea micrococca includes three distinct lineages. Lichenologist 42, 721.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ekman, S and Svensson, M (2014) Brianaria (Psoraceae), a new genus to accommodate the Micarea sylvicola group. Lichenologist 46, 285294.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fryday, AM and Coppins, BJ (2007) Micarea. In Nash, TH III, Gries, C and Bungartz, F (eds), Lichen Flora of the Greater Sonoran Desert Region, Vol. III. Tempe, Arizona: Lichens Unlimited, Arizona State University, pp. 246250.Google Scholar
Gowan, SP and Brodo, IM (1988) The lichens of Fundy National Park, New Brunswick, Canada. Bryologist 91, 255325.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guzow-Krzemińska, B, Sérusiaux, E, van den Boom, PPG, Brand, AM, Launis, A, Łubek, A and Kukwa, M (2019) Understanding the evolution of phenotypical characters in the Micarea prasina group (Pilocarpaceae) and descriptions of six new species within the group. MycoKeys 57, 130.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hermansson, J, Pystina, TN and Kudrycheva, DI (1998) Preliminary List of Lichens of the Komi Republic. Syktyvkar: Institute of Biology. (In Russian).Google Scholar
Hertel, H (1977) Gesteinsbewohnende Arten der Sammelgattung Lecidea (Lichenes) aus Zentral-, Ost- und Südasien. Khumbu Himal, Ergebnisse des Forschungsunternehmens Nepal Himalaya 6, 145378.Google Scholar
Inoue, M and Moon, K-H (1998) Notes on some lecideoid lichens of Mts. Shirakami new to Japan. Hikobia 12, 293297.Google Scholar
Joshi, Y, Nguyen, TT, Wang, XY, Lõkös, L, Koh, YJ and Hur, J-S (2011) Contribution to the lichen mycota of South Korea. Mycotaxon 116, 6174.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kantvilas, G and Coppins, BJ (2019) Studies on Micarea in Australia II. A synopsis of the genus in Tasmania, with the description of ten new species. Lichenologist 51, 431481.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kashiwadani, H and Gradstein, SR (1982) Notes on Baeomyces sanguineus Asah. and Gymnoderma coccocarpum Nyl. Miscellanea Bryologica et Lichenologica 9, 7981.Google Scholar
Kashiwadani, H, Kobayashi, K and Moon, KH (2011) Checklist of lichens of Shiga Prefecture, Japan. Bulletin of the Shiga Society of Naturalists 9, 122.Google Scholar
Kondratyuk, S, Lőkös, L, Tschabanenko, S, Haji Moniri, M, Farkas, E, Wang, XY, Oh, S-O and Hur, J-S (2013) New and noteworthy lichen-forming and lichenicolous fungi. Acta Botanica Hungarica 55, 275349.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Konoreva, LA, Chesnokov, SV and Poryadina, LN (2018) Lichen genus Micarea Fr. in Asian part of Russia. Sakha Republic (Yakutia) and Trans-Baikal Territory. Turczaninowia 21, 102120.Google Scholar
Lamb, IM (1953) New, rare or interesting lichens from the Southern Hemisphere II. Lilloa 26, 401438.Google Scholar
Launis, A and Myllys, L (2014) Micarea byssacea new to North America and Micarea hedlundii new to Maine, Michigan and Quebec. Opuscula Philolichenum 13, 8490.Google Scholar
Launis, A, Pykälä, J, van den Boom, PPG, Sérusiaux, E and Myllys, L (2019 a) Four new epiphytic species in the Micarea prasina group from Europe. Lichenologist 51, 725.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Launis, A, Malíček, J, Svensson, M, Tsurykau, A, Sérusiaux, E and Myllys, L (2019 b) Sharpening species boundaries in the Micarea prasina group, with a new circumscription of the type species M. prasina. Mycologia 111, 574592.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McCarthy, PM and Elix, JA (2020 a) A new species of Micarea (Pilocarpaceae) from soil in New Zealand. Australasian Lichenology 87, 2629.Google Scholar
McCarthy, PM and Elix, JA (2020 b) New species and new records of Micarea (Pilocarpaceae) from Australia. Australasian Lichenology 87, 6271.Google Scholar
Nylander, W (1890) Lichenes Japoniae. Accedunt observationibus lichenes insulae Labuan. Paris: P. Schmidt.Google Scholar
Nylander, W (1900) Lichenes Ceylonenses et Additamentum ad Lichenes japoniae. Acta Societatis Scientiarum Fennicae 26, 133.Google Scholar
Ohmura, Y and Kashiwadani, H (2018) Checklist of lichens and allied fungi of Japan. National Museum of Nature and Science Monographs 49, 1143.Google Scholar
Ohmura, Y, Thor, G, Frisch, A, Kashiwadani, H and Moon, KH (2014) Increase of lichen diversity in the Imperial Palace Grounds, Tokyo, Japan. Memoirs of the National Science Museum, Tokyo 49, 193217.Google Scholar
Schubert, R and Klement, O (1977) Beitrag zur Flechtenflora der Mongolischen Volksrepublik. Feddes Repertorium 82, 187262.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spribille, T, Pérez-Ortega, S, Tønsberg, T and Schirokauer, D (2010) Lichens and lichenicolous fungi of the Klondike Gold Rush National Historic Park, Alaska, in a global biodiversity context. Bryologist 113, 439515.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spribille, T, Fryday, AM, Pérez-Ortega, S, Svensson, M, Tønsberg, T, Ekman, S, Holien, H, Resl, P, Schneider, K, Stabentheiner, E, et al. (2020) Lichens and associated fungi from Glacier Bay National Pak, Alaska. Lichenologist 52, 61181.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thor, G, Kashiwadani, H and Moon, KH (2005) Lichens of the garden of the Institute for Nature Study, National Science Museum, Shiroganedai, Tokyo. Journal of Japanese Botany 80, 7683.Google Scholar
Tibell, L and Thor, G (2003) Calicioid lichens and fungi of Japan. Journal of the Hattori Botanical Laboratory 94, 205259.Google Scholar
van den Boom, PPG, Brand, AM, Coppins, BJ and Sérusiaux, E (2017) Two new species in the Micarea prasina group from Western Europe. Lichenologist 49, 1325.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
van den Boom, PPG, Guzow-Krzemińska, B and Kukwa, M (2020) Two new Micarea species (Pilocarpaceae) from Western Europe. Plant and Fungal Systematics 65, 189199.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yildiz, A, John, V and Yurdakulol, E (2002) Lichens from the Cangal Mountains (Sinop, Turkey). Cryptogamie, Mycologie 23, 8188.Google Scholar
Yoshimura, I (1982) Distribution of Gymnoderma coccocarpum Nyl. and G. insulare Yoshim. & Sharp. Bulletin of Kochi Gakuen Junior College 13, 8386.Google Scholar
Zhurbenko, MP, Frisch, A, Ohmura, Y and Thor, G (2015) Lichenicolous fungi from Japan and Korea: new species, new records and a first synopsis for Japan. Herzogia 28, 762789.CrossRefGoogle Scholar