Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-mlc7c Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-13T03:38:05.917Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The troublesome genus Thamnolia (lichenized Ascomycota)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 June 2019

Per M. JØRGENSEN*
Affiliation:
Department of Natural History, University Museum of Bergen, Allégt. 41, Box 7800, N-5020 Bergen, Norway. Email: per.jorgensen@bm.uib.no

Abstract

A new neotypus is designated for Thamnolia vermicularis in accordance with the protologue. The taxonomy is best reflected by molecular evidence which recognizes three subspecies: the widespread subsp. vermicularis, and the geographically more restricted subsp. taurica (in the eastern Alps) and subsp. tundrae (in the Arctic region). The nomenclatural consequences resulting from these changes require that two new combinations are made.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © British Lichen Society 2019 

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

Asahina, Y. (1937) Lichenologische Notizen IX. Journal of Japanese Botany 13: 315321.Google Scholar
Culberson, W. L. (1963) The lichen genus Thamnolia. Brittonia 15: 140144.Google Scholar
Ehrhart, C. (1788) Beiträge zur Naturkunde und den damit Verwandten Wissenschafter III. Hannover: Schmidtische Buchhandlung.Google Scholar
Gray, S. F. (1821) A Natural Arrangement of British Plants, Vol. I. London: C. Baldwin.Google Scholar
Hoffmann, G. F. (1794) Descriptio et Adumbratio Plantarum e Classe Cryptogamica Linnaei Lichenes Dicuntur II. Leipzig: Crusium.Google Scholar
Jacquin, N. J. von (1789) Collectanea ad Botanicam, Chemiam et Historiam Naturalem II. Wien: Wappleriana.Google Scholar
Kärnefelt, I. & Thell, A. (1995) Genotypic variation and reproduction in natural populations of Thamnolia. Bibliotheca Lichenologica 58: 213234.Google Scholar
Keissler, K. von (1960) Thamnolia. In Dr. L. Rabenhorst's Kryptogamen-Flora von Deutschland, Österreich und der Schweiz. 2. Aufl., Band 9, Abt. 4: 700716. Leipzig: Akademische Verlagsgesellschaft.Google Scholar
Körber, W. (1855) Systema Lichenum Germaniae. Breslau: Trewendt & Granier.Google Scholar
Lücking, R., Hodkinson, B. P. & Leavitt, S. D. (2016) The 2016 classification of lichenized fungi in the Ascomycota and Basidiomycota – approaching one thousand genera. Bryologist 119: 361416.Google Scholar
Minks, A. (1874) Thamnolia vermicularis, eine Monographie. Flora 57: 337347.Google Scholar
Onut-Brännström, I., Johanneson, H. & Tibell, L. (2018) Thamnolia tundrae sp. nov., a cryptic species and putative glacial relict. Lichenologist 50: 5075.Google Scholar
Platt, J. L. & Spatafora, J. W. (2000) Evolutionary relationships of nonsexual lichenized fungi: molecular phylogenetic hypotheses for the genera Siphula and Thamnolia from SSU and LSU rDNA. Mycologia 92: 475487.Google Scholar
Sato, M. (1959) Mixture ratio of the genus Thamnolia collected in Japan and adjacent regions. Miscellanea Bryologica et Lichenologica 1(22): 16.Google Scholar
Sayre, G. (1969) Cryptogamae exsiccatae – an annotated bibliography of published exsiccatae of Algae, Lichens, Hepaticae and Musci. Memoirs of the New York Botanical Garden 19: 1174.Google Scholar
Schaerer, L. E. (1850) Enumeratio Critica Lichenum Europaeorum quos ex Nova Methodo Digerit. Bernae: Sumtibus auctoris excudebat Officina Staempfliana.Google Scholar
Swartz, O. P. (1781) Methodus Muscorum Illustrata. Uppsala: J. Edman.Google Scholar
Villars, D. (1789) Histoire des Plantes de Dauphiné. Tome Troisième. Grenoble: Société Royale de Médecine.Google Scholar
Zahlbruckner, A. (1926) Lichenes (Flechten). B. Spezieller Teil. In Die Natürlichen Pflanzenfamilien 2nd edition, Vol. 6 (Engler, A. & Prantl, K., eds): 61270. Leipzig: W. Engelmann.Google Scholar