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Anaptychia ciliaris

Anaptychia ciliaris, commonly known as the great ciliated lichen or eagle's claws, is a species of fruticose lichen in the family Physciaceae.[2] It is predominantly found in Northern Europe, with its range extending to European Russia, the Caucasus, Central and Southern Europe, the Canary Islands, and some parts of Asia. First mentioned in botanical literature by Italian botanist Fabio Colonna in 1606, the species was formally described by Carl Linnaeus in 1753, who highlighted its unique physical characteristics such as its grey colour, its unusual leafy form with linear fringe-like segments, and the presence of hair-like structures (cilia). This lichen is adaptable in its choice of substrates, mostly growing on tree barks, and less commonly on rocks.

Anaptychia ciliaris
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Lecanoromycetes
Order: Caliciales
Family: Physciaceae
Genus: Anaptychia
Species:
A. ciliaris
Binomial name
Anaptychia ciliaris
(L.) Flot. (1850)
Synonyms[1]
List
  • Lichen ciliaris L. (1753)
  • Lichenoides ciliaris (L.) Hoffm. [as 'ciliare'] (1789)
  • Lobaria ciliaris (L.) Hoffm. (1796)
  • Parmelia ciliaris (L.) Ach. (1803)
  • Parmelia ciliaris var. melanosticta Ach. (1803)
  • Physcia ciliaris (L.) DC. (1805)
  • Platyphyllum ciliare L.) J.St.-Hil. (1805)
  • Borrera ciliaris (L.) Ach. (1810)
  • Borrera ciliaris var. melanosticta (Ach.) Ach. (1810)
  • Platisma ciliare (L.) Frege (1812)
  • Borrera melanosticta (Ach.) Röhl. (1813)
  • Hagenia ciliaris (L.) W.Mann (1825)
  • Physcia obscura var. ciliaris (L.) Fürnr. (1839)
  • Parmelia mamillata Taylor (1847)
  • Dimelaena ciliaris (L.) Norman (1852)
  • Physcia ciliaris var. saxicola Nyl. (1860)
  • Borrera ciliaris var. saxicola (Nyl.) Mudd (1861)
  • Physcia ciliaris var. melanosticta (Ach.) Grognot (1863)
  • Physcia ciliaris f. melanosticta (Ach.) Th.Fr. (1871)
  • Physcia ciliaris f. saxicola (Nyl.) Th.Fr. (1871)
  • Anaptychia ciliaris h saxicola (Nyl.) Arnold (1884)
  • Anaptychia ciliaris f. melanosticta (Ach.) Boberski (1886)
  • Parmelia ciliaris var. saxicola (Nyl.) Jatta (1889)
  • Xanthoria ciliaris (L.) Horw. (1912)
  • Xanthoria ciliaris var. saxicola (Nyl.) Horw. (1912)
  • Anaptychia ciliaris f. saxicola (Nyl.) de Lesd. (1924)
  • Anaptychia ciliaris subsp. melanosticta (Ach.) Lynge (1935)
  • Anaptychia ciliaris var. melanosticta (Ach.) Boistel (1903)
  • Anaptychia ciliaris var. saxicola (Nyl.) Pit. & Harm. (1911)
  • Cyphelium inquinans f. saxicola (Nyl.) Vain. (1926)
  • Anaptychia melanosticta (Ach.) Trass (1969)
  • Anaptychia mamillata (Taylor) D.Hawksw. (1973)
  • Anaptychia ciliaris subsp. mamillata (Taylor) D.Hawksw. & P.James (1980)

Throughout history, the lichen has played been used in early scientific investigations about lichen structure and development. Early botanists like Joseph Pitton de Tournefort and Johann Hedwig made observations about the lichen's structure. More recent studies have investigated its potential biological activities, including antibacterial, insecticidal, and antioxidant properties. A. ciliaris has been used in research to monitor atmospheric pollution, including detecting air pollution following the Chernobyl disaster. Beyond its scientific implications, the lichen has had various practical applications. For example, in the 17th century, it was one of several lichen ingredients in "Cyprus Powder", used as a personal grooming and cosmetic product.

Anaptychia ciliaris is readily recognisable by its fruticose (bushy) thallus that varies in colour from greyish-white to brownish-grey, to greenish when wet, and its large and distinctive cilia. The lichen can form extensive colonies made of neighbouring lichens each attached to the substrate at a single point, all with narrow lobes, known as laciniae, growing outwards. These laciniae, which are covered in fine hairs, split repeatedly into equal branches. Circular reproductive structures (apothecia) with brown discs occur on the thallus surface. The internal anatomy of A. ciliaris makes it sensitive to air pollutants, leading to observable changes in its form when exposed to these conditions. Two species of green algae in the genus Trebouxia have been shown to serve as the photobiont partners of this lichen.

Taxonomy edit

 
Illustration of "Parmelia ciliaris" by Dutch botanist Jan Kops

According to Annie Lorrain Smith, Anaptypia ciliaris was first mentioned in the botanical literature in 1606 by the Italian botanist Fabio Colonna in his Ekphrasis, a work known for its detailed illustrations of plants using copperplate engravings.[3] It was formally described as a new species in 1753 by Carl Linnaeus, as Lichen ciliaris. Linnaeus described it as a somewhat erect, leafy, grey lichen with linear, fringe-like segments that are ciliate (having hair-like structures, or cilia). He said it resembled a tree moss with hairy edges, and with small shield-like structures (apothecia), and cited multiple references that described the lichen in similar ways, emphasizing its larger size, hairy characteristics, and shielded appearance. Linnaeus noted that this lichen is found on trees in Europe.[4] Julius von Flotow is credited with the transfer of the taxon to the genus Anaptychia in 1850.[5] A specimen illustrated by Johann Jacob Dillenius in 1742 was selected as the lectotype by Syo Kurokawa in his 1962 monograph on the genus Anaptychia.[6]

Anaptychia ciliaris is the type species of Anaptychia.[7] This genus was proposed by Gustav Wilhelm Körber in 1848 as a replacement for the name Hagenia, suggested by Franz Gerhard Eschweiler in 1824, but already being used for a plant genus. Körber described genus Anaptychia as follows (translated from Latin): "Apothecia bordered by a resupinate thallus (ascending thallus is channelled)".[8] Although he did not assign a type species himself, A. ciliaris was later designated as type by Louis Pfeiffer in 1872.[7]

Vernacular names that have been used for Anaptychia ciliaris include "great ciliated lichen"[9] and "eagle's claws".[10]

Subtaxa edit

Several subspecies (subsp.), varieties (v.), and forms (f.) of the lichen have been described; Index Fungorum lists 45 of these subtaxa.[11] This following list is representative, but not exhaustive:

  • f. ciliaris
This is the nominate form, in which pycnidia (asexual fruiting bodies) are rare or absent, and the margins of apothecia are distinctly lacinulate (i.e., fringed or tattered).[6]
  • f. agropia (Ach.) Boist. (1903)[12]
In this form, pycnidia are rare or absent, and the margins of apothecia are crenate (scalloped) or almost entire (i.e., smooth and not lobed or toothed).[6]
  • f. verrucosa (Ach.) Boist. (1903)[12]
In this form, pycnidia are numerous; the verrucae (small wart-like protuberances) are the same colour as the thallus or somewhat darker.[6]
  • f. melanosticta (Ach.) Boberski (1886)
In this form, pycnidia are numerous; the verrucae are dark brown to blackish brown.[6]
  • f. nigrescens (Bory) Zahlbr. (1931)[13]
In this form the laciniae are less than 2 mm wide.[6]
  • subspecies mamillata (Taylor) D.Hawks. & P.James (1980)[14]
Compared to the nominate variety, subsp. mamillata has narrower lobes (about 2 mm wide), and a colouration that ranges from dark grey to brown when dry, to dark-olive green when wet, and its lacks and pruina on the thallus surface.[15]
  • var. melanosticta (Ach.) Boisel (1903)[12]
This variety is dark brown with a sparsely hairy upper surface and is mainly found on seaside rocks, especially rocks visited by birds.[16]

In 1962, Kurokawa identified five forms of Anaptychia ciliaris.[6] However, by 1973, he believed these distinctions were merely character variations caused by different environmental conditions, thus deeming them taxonomically insignificant. He subsequently grouped them as synonyms.[17] This perspective is shared by Species Fungorum, which does not recognize these subtaxa as having individual taxonomic importance and categorizes them under a collective synonymy.[1] Most of these classifications have not been assessed using contemporary molecular phylogenetics. One exception is A. ciliaris var. melanosticta from coastal regions. DNA analysis revealed it might be distinct enough to be considered its own species, as it emerged as a sister taxon to other tested A. ciliaris samples.[18]

Description edit

 
Anaptychia ciliaris is greenish when wet and has prominent cilia at the margins of its lobes, or laciniae.

The growth form of Anaptychia ciliaris merges characteristics of both foliose (leafy) and fruticose (bushy) lichens. Like many fruticose species, this lichen attaches to its substrate at a single point. Its fronds, akin to lobes of foliose lichens, lie close to the substrate with distinct upper and lower structures in a dorsiventral organization. This structure comprises an upper fibrous cortex of tightly packed hyphae and an algal layer with interspersed photobionts between the cortex and the medulla's looser hyphae. Its lower cortex is made of hyphae that are aligned more or less parallel to the surface. The lichen's upper surface is greyish, and the underside can be greyish or whitish,[19] with both sides turning green when wet.[20]

The loose attachments this lichen forms with its substrate contributes to the development of extensive colonies that can span up to 15 cm (6 in) or more in diameter. These colonies comprise neighbouring individuals each with elongated, linear structures (laciniae) that repeatedly branch dichotomously (into roughly equally sized parts). The laciniae generally have an upward, somewhat ascending orientation. Their width is up to about 2 mm (116 in), and they are about 300 μm thick. They appear either flat or somewhat convex and are covered in soft, fine hairs (pubescence).[6] The fibrous outer cortex imparts some structural strength to the laciniae, which contributes to their ability to maintain an upright orientation.[21] Numerous pale, lateral cilia lie along the margins of the laciniae.[15] They are dark grey to black, and up to 15 mm (35 in) long.[16] Sometimes, these long cilia form hapters—aerial attachment organs with highly adhesive hyphae. Upon contact with nearby surfaces, often another lobe of its own thallus, these hapters induce branching and create a spreading sheath, leading to entanglement.[22]

On the undersurface of the laciniae, the thallus is decorticate (i.e., it lacks a cortex) and appears paler than its upper surface. The lower surface features irregular veining and is adorned with rhizines (attachment structures) along the margins, which are the same colour as the thallus. These rhizines measure between 1 and 6 mm (116 and 14 in) in length and may be either simple or occasionally branched towards the tips. The upper cortex of the laciniae has irregular thickening, and its lower surface has flexuous contours, occasionally extending downward to the lower surface of the thallus. The photobiont layer, housing cells measuring 10–15 μm in diameter, is frequently interrupted by the upper cortex, resulting in a discontinuous pattern. The medullary layer is typically very thin and may even be evanescent in some regions.[6]

 
Cluster of apothecia with dark brown discs

Apothecia, the reproductive structures, are found on the thallus. These structures are usually laminal (spread over the thallus surface), and either stipitate (with a stipe), or somewhat sessile (directly on the thallus). Their diameters range from 2 to 5 millimetres (116 to 316 in). Their margins are lacinulate (tattered), with ciliate lacinules along the edges. The disc of the apothecia is brown or dark brown, initially covered in a white pruina that may fade. The receptacle's hymenium, 150–200 μm tall, turns blue when stained with iodine. Its cortex is irregularly thickened and resistant to iodine staining. The cylindrical or clavate asci measure about 120 by 30 μm and usually contain between four and eight spores. Spores are dark brown, ellipsoid with rounded tips, and somewhat constricted at the centre. They measure 17–23 by 28–43 μm, with thin, uniformly thickened walls.[6] Initially, spores are oval, and filled with granular and mucous substances. Eventually, a central partition (septum) forms, dividing the contents and leading to a two-cell state.[23]

No lichen products have been identified from Anaptychia ciliaris, and it does not react with any of the standard chemical spot tests used to help identify lichens.[6]

The morphology of A. ciliaris changes when exposed to adverse concentrations of ambient levels of air pollutants. It stops producing cilia, and the lobes become shorter and develop a warty upper surface.[24]

Photobiont edit

The green algal species Trebouxia arboricola was the first photobiont of Anaptychia ciliaris to be identified.[25] A concurrent study corroborated this association and suggested the nonspecific nature of A. ciliaris in incorporating algae from adjacent lichens. The A. ciliaris specimen studied was sourced from tree bark near Xanthoria parietina and Pleurosticta acetabulum. The internal transcribed spacer ribosomal DNA of the photobiont closely matched the sequences from the photobionts of these neighbouring lichens, suggesting they share the same algae.[26] Anaptychia ciliaris undergoes sexual reproduction through the production of meiotic spores. In lichens, this reproductive mode disperses individual symbionts separately, leading to new symbiotic formations. Such a process facilitates genetic diversity and potential symbiotic shifts among different species.[27]

In 2014, a different member of Trebouxia was shown to partner with Anaptychia ciliata. Trebouxia decolorans is a common and widespread symbiotic haploid green alga known for forming symbiotic associations with various lichen-forming fungi. Microsatellite primers, designed specifically to probe the genetic structure and diversity of this photobiont,[28] were used to elucidate the intra-thallus genetic diversity of T. decolorans. This revealed the presence of multiple, genetically distinct photobiont strains within the thalli of the fungi. Particularly in A. ciliata, the predominant source of photobiont diversity seems to be intrathalline somatic mutations, possibly due to the longer lifespan of the fungus compared to the mycobiont, allowing ample time for mutations to accumulate.[27]

Similar species edit

The moss-dwelling African species Anaptychia ethiopica closely resembles A. ciliata, so much so that its authors consider it a sorediate version of that species. It is only known to occur in the mountains of Ethiopia at altitudes over 3,500 m (11,500 ft).[29]

Habitat and distribution edit

 
Dry individual on the bark of an old deciduous tree

Anaptychia ciliaris, primarily found in Northern Europe, extends eastward to European Russia, the Caucasus,[6] and northeastern Russia (Murmansk).[30] It is also present in Central and Southern Europe, and the Canary Islands. In Africa, it is established across Morocco,[31] and has been reported from Sudan.[32] The lichen has sporadic records in Asia.[33] In China, specimens have been collected from Xinjiang, Gansu, Shaanxi, and Hebei, at altitudes above 1,800 m (5,900 ft).[34] Anaptychia ciliaris was among the top three most abundant lichens in Turkey's Lake Abant Nature Park 2018 biodiversity survey.[35] In contrast, northern Germany[36] and the UK have seen a decline in sightings. It is rare in Ireland, and nearly extinct in North East England.[15] By 2010, Scotland recorded A. ciliaris in only four locations, with its scarcity attributed to air pollution and the declining elm tree population, impacted by Dutch elm disease.[37] A century ago, it was more common in the UK, typically found thriving on trees in parklands and along cultivated roadsides.[38] Widely distributed in Finland, it is abundant in populated areas, present in parks, alleys, and field edges, and also occurs on seashore cliffs.[16]

Anaptychia ciliaris has adapted to growth on various substrates. Growing on bark, the lichen has been recorded frequently on Quercus rotundifolia, Q. pyrenaica, and Ulmus. Less commonly, it is found on Pinus sylvestris, P. nigra, Juniperus oxycedrus,[39] Acer pseudoplatanus (sycamore) and Fagus sylvatica (beech).[40] In Denmark, its usual hosts are Fraxinus and Tilia.[24] Less frequently, it is found on calcareous and acidic rocks, and gravestones.[15] A key characteristic of A. ciliaris is its preference for diffuse light.[41]

In Poland, Anaptychia ciliaris is among six endangered species listed on the National red list.[42] In Moscow's East European Plain area, it is an uncommon species and listed in the 2018 Red Data Book of the Moscow Region. It mostly found in the area's birch grass-marsh forests, with its limited presence attributed to the air pollution from Moscow.[43] Austria's Regional Red List also classifies A. ciliaris as endangered.[40] Once common sight in Upper Austria, its decline is due to less availability of preferred substrate like mature, moss-covered, fertilised and dust-impregnated barks. Contemporary practices often result in the removal of trees before their bark matures to a consistency suitable for A. ciliaris.[44]

Historical North American literature occasionally mentions the presence of A. ciliaris, but such references are misinterpretations. These instances refer to A. setifera, and A. ciliaris is not native to the continent.[45]

Biomonitoring edit

 
Illustration of gross morphological features

Anaptychia ciliaris is used in biomonitoring due to its sensitivity to air pollution. This lichen serves as an indicator of environmental health, reflecting changes in air quality and pollutant levels.

In Denmark and North Germany, a method was developed to gauge SO2 emissions using the health and fertility of indicator lichens like A. ciliaris.[24] Similarly, England and Wales adopted a scale rating zones from 0 (most polluted) to 10 (least polluted), with A. ciliaris typically found in zones above 7, corresponding to SO2 levels around 40 micrograms per cubic metre.[46] Historically common in 19th-century Netherlands, A. ciliaris experienced a significant decline throughout the 20th century. However, healthy specimens were unexpectedly found in 2010 on young ash trees in Brabant, a resurgence attributed to reduced air pollution and climate warming.[47]

Monitoring the breakdown of chlorophyll into phaeophytin in A. ciliaris has proven effective for detecting air pollution. The species' ability to grow on different substrates enhances its utility in biomonitoring. In France, A. ciliaris was used to measure lead and cadmium emissions from a municipal solid waste incinerator.[48] It has also been employed in Greece to assess the levels of heavy metals in polluted areas[49] and near a lignite power plant.[50]

In Sweden, A. ciliaris has a history of being used for monitoring atmospheric pollution.[51] Following the Chernobyl disaster, it played a significant role in the biomonitoring of airborne radioactive fallout, with detected caesium-137 activity in Anaptychia ciliaris reaching as high as 14560 becquerels per kilogram.[52]

Uses edit

In the 17th Century, "Cyprus Powder" was used as a toilette powder (a fine powder, often fragranced, that was used for personal grooming and cosmetic purposes) to whiten, scent, and cleanse the hair. It was a blend of oakmoss, Anaptychia ciliaris, and species of Usnea, and was fragranced with ambergris or musk, combined with the essences of roses, jasmine, or orange blossoms.[53]

In the Erkowit region of eastern Sudan, the lichen, known locally as bakour, was mixed with other plants and burned to repel insects.[32]

Research edit

 
Vertical section of developing ascogonium in Anaptychia ciliaris, illustrated by German botanist Wilhelm Baur in 1904. a: paraphyses; b: ascogonial hyphae; c: ascogonial cells.[54]

Historically, the lichen Anaptypia ciliaris has played a significant role in various scientific explorations of lichen structure and physiology. Early on, the French botanist Joseph Pitton de Tournefort reportedly first observed the lichen's distinctive large, dark-coloured spores.[55] In 1849,[56] Holle detailed the development of hyphae from lichen spores, using A. ciliaris as the subject of his study.[57] In 1850 and 1851, the lichen was used by the German botanist Hermann Itzigsohn to demonstrate the existence of "spermagones" (conidia).[23] In 1853,[58] Julius Ferdinand Speerschneider, another German botanist, reported the division of the lichen's photobiont cells (then referred to as gonidia) in moist thallus sections.[59] He found that in humid air, hyphae decomposed within two months, while algae thrived, growing and dividing rapidly. Subsequently, small, light green structures emerged in the decomposing thallus centre, evolving into lichen primordia.[60]

Further insights into lichen structure came when Reginald Heber Howe, Jr. presented the lichen's cortex as an exemplar of the "fibrous" cortex — a tissue type characterised by long, slender, infrequently branched hyphae growing parallel to the surface.[61] The German bryologist Johann Hedwig, in the eighteenth century, expanded on these findings. In his 1784 work Fundamentum Historiae Naturalis Muscorum Frondosorum, he described and depicted Anaptypia ciliaris apothecia, dark septate spores, and pycnidia. He identified tiny bodies associated with the organism, measuring approximately 50 μm long and 24 μm thick, as "semina"[62] — a term Acharius later replaced with "spores" in 1803.[63]

In the following century, research on Anaptypia ciliaris advanced further. Pierre Augustin Dangeard, in 1894, studied the origin and development of asci in lichens, using Anaptypia ciliaris as a model.[64] René Maire explored cellular biology by observing nuclear division in an ascospore prior to septum formation.[38] The lichen's practical applications were also investigated. In 1825, Joseph Placide Alexandre Léorier documented Roy of Tonnerre's pioneering technique to produce alcohol from lichens, notably Anaptypia ciliaris. This innovation was remarkable as lichens, unlike fruits or grains, generally lack the abundant sugars usually employed as feedstock in traditional alcohol production.[65]

More recent research on Anaptychia ciliaris has uncovered various potential biological activities. Its extracts, tested for antibacterial and insecticidal effects against certain pathogenic bacteria and the Culiseta longiareolata mosquito larvae, showed moderate larvicidal properties.[66] In tests against fish bacterial pathogens, A. ciliaris demonstrated antibacterial effects, particularly towards Aeromonas hydrophila, Streptococcus agalactiae, Enterococcus faecalis, and Lactococcus garvieae.[67] The active metabolites in A. ciliaris, including various antioxidants, vary in presence and concentration depending on its tree substrate.[68]

Growth in culture edit

The mycobiont of Anaptychia ciliaris can be cultivated in axenic (pure) culture. More than 100 years ago, the Finnish phycologist Harry Warén described the fungal partner of A. ciliaris (then known as Physcia ciliaris) grown from spores, noting its compact mycelia and large globular cells, mistakenly believed to contain chlorophyll.[69][70] To initiate spore growth, researchers place apothecia from the lichen in proximity to the underside of an inverted petri dish; if the asci and ascospores are mature, the spores will be ejected onto the petri dish and begin germinating.[71] Further research into A. ciliaris showed that its spores have a unique dispersal behaviour, where they often adhere to the growth medium as single, isolated units, rather than being discharged in clusters or small packets, which then attach to the growth medium as groups. This pattern of individual spore attachment is also seen in other lichen species and is characteristic of certain lichen families. Anaptychia ciliaris is known for its consistent spore release in laboratory conditions, a trait not commonly observed in many other lichens. Researchers often encounter challenges such as lack of spore discharge or germination when working with other lichen species in vitro. The reliable sporulation of A. ciliaris under laboratory conditions signifies its suitability for scientific studies, particularly those focused on lichen reproduction and development in aposymbiotic culture settings, where the fungus component of the lichen is grown separately from its algal partner to better understand its individual characteristics and behaviour. On average, these spores took six to seven days to begin germination.[72]

Anaptychia ciliaris shows variability in spore production from its similarly sized apothecia, reflecting differences in both the quantity of spores and their stages of development. This variation emphasises the impact of its heterothallic life cycle, which facilitates cross-fertilization and genetic recombination, leading to genetic diversity. In the early stages of growth, the presence of carbon sources enhances the filamentous development of the mycobiont. These findings align with the lichen's characteristic slow growth rate and its ability to support apothecia of different ages on a single thallus, further contributing to genetic variation. The morphology, metabolism, and pigmentation of Anaptychia ciliaris are particularly influenced by sugars and sugar alcohols, and show significant variation when grown in different culture media.[72]

Species interactions edit

Anaptychia ciliaris interacts with various lichenicolous organisms, which are species that live on, and often parasitise, lichens. Among the fungi that parasitise A. ciliaris is Tremella anaptychiae, a species described in 2017. This fungus produces spherical or tuberculate fruit bodies, ranging in colour from cream to pinkish, brownish, or blackish, and is found in Italy, Macedonia, Spain (including the Canary Islands), Sweden,[33] and Greece. Catillaria mediterranea, a lichen with a reduced thallus,[73] and Monodictys anaptychiae, a rare hyphomycete, also grow on A. ciliaris. Monodictys anaptychiae may exclusively target A. ciliaris; infection leads to thallus surface damage and discolouration.[74][75] In the UK, the Anaptychia ciliaris subspecies mamillata often shows tiny black dots on its lobes, a result of Stigmidium hageniae parasitism.[15] Additionally, A. ciliaris is subject to infection by other lichenicolous fungi such as Pronectria tincta.[76]

References edit

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Cited literature edit

  • Smith, Annie Lorrain (1921). Lichens. Cambridge Botanical Handbooks. London: Cambridge University Press.

anaptychia, ciliaris, commonly, known, great, ciliated, lichen, eagle, claws, species, fruticose, lichen, family, physciaceae, predominantly, found, northern, europe, with, range, extending, european, russia, caucasus, central, southern, europe, canary, island. Anaptychia ciliaris commonly known as the great ciliated lichen or eagle s claws is a species of fruticose lichen in the family Physciaceae 2 It is predominantly found in Northern Europe with its range extending to European Russia the Caucasus Central and Southern Europe the Canary Islands and some parts of Asia First mentioned in botanical literature by Italian botanist Fabio Colonna in 1606 the species was formally described by Carl Linnaeus in 1753 who highlighted its unique physical characteristics such as its grey colour its unusual leafy form with linear fringe like segments and the presence of hair like structures cilia This lichen is adaptable in its choice of substrates mostly growing on tree barks and less commonly on rocks Anaptychia ciliarisScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom FungiDivision AscomycotaClass LecanoromycetesOrder CalicialesFamily PhysciaceaeGenus AnaptychiaSpecies A ciliarisBinomial nameAnaptychia ciliaris L Flot 1850 Synonyms 1 List Lichen ciliaris L 1753 Lichenoides ciliaris L Hoffm as ciliare 1789 Lobaria ciliaris L Hoffm 1796 Parmelia ciliaris L Ach 1803 Parmelia ciliaris var melanosticta Ach 1803 Physcia ciliaris L DC 1805 Platyphyllum ciliare L J St Hil 1805 Borrera ciliaris L Ach 1810 Borrera ciliaris var melanosticta Ach Ach 1810 Platisma ciliare L Frege 1812 Borrera melanosticta Ach Rohl 1813 Hagenia ciliaris L W Mann 1825 Physcia obscura var ciliaris L Furnr 1839 Parmelia mamillata Taylor 1847 Dimelaena ciliaris L Norman 1852 Physcia ciliaris var saxicola Nyl 1860 Borrera ciliaris var saxicola Nyl Mudd 1861 Physcia ciliaris var melanosticta Ach Grognot 1863 Physcia ciliaris f melanosticta Ach Th Fr 1871 Physcia ciliaris f saxicola Nyl Th Fr 1871 Anaptychia ciliaris h saxicola Nyl Arnold 1884 Anaptychia ciliaris f melanosticta Ach Boberski 1886 Parmelia ciliaris var saxicola Nyl Jatta 1889 Xanthoria ciliaris L Horw 1912 Xanthoria ciliaris var saxicola Nyl Horw 1912 Anaptychia ciliaris f saxicola Nyl de Lesd 1924 Anaptychia ciliaris subsp melanosticta Ach Lynge 1935 Anaptychia ciliaris var melanosticta Ach Boistel 1903 Anaptychia ciliaris var saxicola Nyl Pit amp Harm 1911 Cyphelium inquinans f saxicola Nyl Vain 1926 Anaptychia melanosticta Ach Trass 1969 Anaptychia mamillata Taylor D Hawksw 1973 Anaptychia ciliaris subsp mamillata Taylor D Hawksw amp P James 1980 Throughout history the lichen has played been used in early scientific investigations about lichen structure and development Early botanists like Joseph Pitton de Tournefort and Johann Hedwig made observations about the lichen s structure More recent studies have investigated its potential biological activities including antibacterial insecticidal and antioxidant properties A ciliaris has been used in research to monitor atmospheric pollution including detecting air pollution following the Chernobyl disaster Beyond its scientific implications the lichen has had various practical applications For example in the 17th century it was one of several lichen ingredients in Cyprus Powder used as a personal grooming and cosmetic product Anaptychia ciliaris is readily recognisable by its fruticose bushy thallus that varies in colour from greyish white to brownish grey to greenish when wet and its large and distinctive cilia The lichen can form extensive colonies made of neighbouring lichens each attached to the substrate at a single point all with narrow lobes known as laciniae growing outwards These laciniae which are covered in fine hairs split repeatedly into equal branches Circular reproductive structures apothecia with brown discs occur on the thallus surface The internal anatomy of A ciliaris makes it sensitive to air pollutants leading to observable changes in its form when exposed to these conditions Two species of green algae in the genus Trebouxia have been shown to serve as the photobiont partners of this lichen Contents 1 Taxonomy 1 1 Subtaxa 2 Description 2 1 Photobiont 2 2 Similar species 3 Habitat and distribution 4 Biomonitoring 5 Uses 5 1 Research 6 Growth in culture 7 Species interactions 8 References 8 1 Cited literatureTaxonomy edit nbsp Illustration of Parmelia ciliaris by Dutch botanist Jan KopsAccording to Annie Lorrain Smith Anaptypia ciliaris was first mentioned in the botanical literature in 1606 by the Italian botanist Fabio Colonna in his Ekphrasis a work known for its detailed illustrations of plants using copperplate engravings 3 It was formally described as a new species in 1753 by Carl Linnaeus as Lichen ciliaris Linnaeus described it as a somewhat erect leafy grey lichen with linear fringe like segments that are ciliate having hair like structures or cilia He said it resembled a tree moss with hairy edges and with small shield like structures apothecia and cited multiple references that described the lichen in similar ways emphasizing its larger size hairy characteristics and shielded appearance Linnaeus noted that this lichen is found on trees in Europe 4 Julius von Flotow is credited with the transfer of the taxon to the genus Anaptychia in 1850 5 A specimen illustrated by Johann Jacob Dillenius in 1742 was selected as the lectotype by Syo Kurokawa in his 1962 monograph on the genus Anaptychia 6 Anaptychia ciliaris is the type species of Anaptychia 7 This genus was proposed by Gustav Wilhelm Korber in 1848 as a replacement for the name Hagenia suggested by Franz Gerhard Eschweiler in 1824 but already being used for a plant genus Korber described genus Anaptychia as follows translated from Latin Apothecia bordered by a resupinate thallus ascending thallus is channelled 8 Although he did not assign a type species himself A ciliaris was later designated as type by Louis Pfeiffer in 1872 7 Vernacular names that have been used for Anaptychia ciliaris include great ciliated lichen 9 and eagle s claws 10 Subtaxa edit Several subspecies subsp varieties v and forms f of the lichen have been described Index Fungorum lists 45 of these subtaxa 11 This following list is representative but not exhaustive f ciliarisThis is the nominate form in which pycnidia asexual fruiting bodies are rare or absent and the margins of apothecia are distinctly lacinulate i e fringed or tattered 6 f agropia Ach Boist 1903 12 In this form pycnidia are rare or absent and the margins of apothecia are crenate scalloped or almost entire i e smooth and not lobed or toothed 6 f verrucosa Ach Boist 1903 12 In this form pycnidia are numerous the verrucae small wart like protuberances are the same colour as the thallus or somewhat darker 6 f melanosticta Ach Boberski 1886 In this form pycnidia are numerous the verrucae are dark brown to blackish brown 6 f nigrescens Bory Zahlbr 1931 13 In this form the laciniae are less than 2 mm wide 6 subspecies mamillata Taylor D Hawks amp P James 1980 14 Compared to the nominate variety subsp mamillata has narrower lobes about 2 mm wide and a colouration that ranges from dark grey to brown when dry to dark olive green when wet and its lacks and pruina on the thallus surface 15 var melanosticta Ach Boisel 1903 12 This variety is dark brown with a sparsely hairy upper surface and is mainly found on seaside rocks especially rocks visited by birds 16 dd In 1962 Kurokawa identified five forms of Anaptychia ciliaris 6 However by 1973 he believed these distinctions were merely character variations caused by different environmental conditions thus deeming them taxonomically insignificant He subsequently grouped them as synonyms 17 This perspective is shared by Species Fungorum which does not recognize these subtaxa as having individual taxonomic importance and categorizes them under a collective synonymy 1 Most of these classifications have not been assessed using contemporary molecular phylogenetics One exception is A ciliaris var melanosticta from coastal regions DNA analysis revealed it might be distinct enough to be considered its own species as it emerged as a sister taxon to other tested A ciliaris samples 18 Description edit nbsp Anaptychia ciliaris is greenish when wet and has prominent cilia at the margins of its lobes or laciniae The growth form of Anaptychia ciliaris merges characteristics of both foliose leafy and fruticose bushy lichens Like many fruticose species this lichen attaches to its substrate at a single point Its fronds akin to lobes of foliose lichens lie close to the substrate with distinct upper and lower structures in a dorsiventral organization This structure comprises an upper fibrous cortex of tightly packed hyphae and an algal layer with interspersed photobionts between the cortex and the medulla s looser hyphae Its lower cortex is made of hyphae that are aligned more or less parallel to the surface The lichen s upper surface is greyish and the underside can be greyish or whitish 19 with both sides turning green when wet 20 The loose attachments this lichen forms with its substrate contributes to the development of extensive colonies that can span up to 15 cm 6 in or more in diameter These colonies comprise neighbouring individuals each with elongated linear structures laciniae that repeatedly branch dichotomously into roughly equally sized parts The laciniae generally have an upward somewhat ascending orientation Their width is up to about 2 mm 1 16 in and they are about 300 mm thick They appear either flat or somewhat convex and are covered in soft fine hairs pubescence 6 The fibrous outer cortex imparts some structural strength to the laciniae which contributes to their ability to maintain an upright orientation 21 Numerous pale lateral cilia lie along the margins of the laciniae 15 They are dark grey to black and up to 15 mm 3 5 in long 16 Sometimes these long cilia form hapters aerial attachment organs with highly adhesive hyphae Upon contact with nearby surfaces often another lobe of its own thallus these hapters induce branching and create a spreading sheath leading to entanglement 22 On the undersurface of the laciniae the thallus is decorticate i e it lacks a cortex and appears paler than its upper surface The lower surface features irregular veining and is adorned with rhizines attachment structures along the margins which are the same colour as the thallus These rhizines measure between 1 and 6 mm 1 16 and 1 4 in in length and may be either simple or occasionally branched towards the tips The upper cortex of the laciniae has irregular thickening and its lower surface has flexuous contours occasionally extending downward to the lower surface of the thallus The photobiont layer housing cells measuring 10 15 mm in diameter is frequently interrupted by the upper cortex resulting in a discontinuous pattern The medullary layer is typically very thin and may even be evanescent in some regions 6 nbsp Cluster of apothecia with dark brown discsApothecia the reproductive structures are found on the thallus These structures are usually laminal spread over the thallus surface and either stipitate with a stipe or somewhat sessile directly on the thallus Their diameters range from 2 to 5 millimetres 1 16 to 3 16 in Their margins are lacinulate tattered with ciliate lacinules along the edges The disc of the apothecia is brown or dark brown initially covered in a white pruina that may fade The receptacle s hymenium 150 200 mm tall turns blue when stained with iodine Its cortex is irregularly thickened and resistant to iodine staining The cylindrical or clavate asci measure about 120 by 30 mm and usually contain between four and eight spores Spores are dark brown ellipsoid with rounded tips and somewhat constricted at the centre They measure 17 23 by 28 43 mm with thin uniformly thickened walls 6 Initially spores are oval and filled with granular and mucous substances Eventually a central partition septum forms dividing the contents and leading to a two cell state 23 No lichen products have been identified from Anaptychia ciliaris and it does not react with any of the standard chemical spot tests used to help identify lichens 6 The morphology of A ciliaris changes when exposed to adverse concentrations of ambient levels of air pollutants It stops producing cilia and the lobes become shorter and develop a warty upper surface 24 Photobiont edit The green algal species Trebouxia arboricola was the first photobiont of Anaptychia ciliaris to be identified 25 A concurrent study corroborated this association and suggested the nonspecific nature of A ciliaris in incorporating algae from adjacent lichens The A ciliaris specimen studied was sourced from tree bark near Xanthoria parietina and Pleurosticta acetabulum The internal transcribed spacer ribosomal DNA of the photobiont closely matched the sequences from the photobionts of these neighbouring lichens suggesting they share the same algae 26 Anaptychia ciliaris undergoes sexual reproduction through the production of meiotic spores In lichens this reproductive mode disperses individual symbionts separately leading to new symbiotic formations Such a process facilitates genetic diversity and potential symbiotic shifts among different species 27 In 2014 a different member of Trebouxia was shown to partner with Anaptychia ciliata Trebouxia decolorans is a common and widespread symbiotic haploid green alga known for forming symbiotic associations with various lichen forming fungi Microsatellite primers designed specifically to probe the genetic structure and diversity of this photobiont 28 were used to elucidate the intra thallus genetic diversity of T decolorans This revealed the presence of multiple genetically distinct photobiont strains within the thalli of the fungi Particularly in A ciliata the predominant source of photobiont diversity seems to be intrathalline somatic mutations possibly due to the longer lifespan of the fungus compared to the mycobiont allowing ample time for mutations to accumulate 27 Similar species edit The moss dwelling African species Anaptychia ethiopica closely resembles A ciliata so much so that its authors consider it a sorediate version of that species It is only known to occur in the mountains of Ethiopia at altitudes over 3 500 m 11 500 ft 29 Habitat and distribution edit nbsp Dry individual on the bark of an old deciduous treeAnaptychia ciliaris primarily found in Northern Europe extends eastward to European Russia the Caucasus 6 and northeastern Russia Murmansk 30 It is also present in Central and Southern Europe and the Canary Islands In Africa it is established across Morocco 31 and has been reported from Sudan 32 The lichen has sporadic records in Asia 33 In China specimens have been collected from Xinjiang Gansu Shaanxi and Hebei at altitudes above 1 800 m 5 900 ft 34 Anaptychia ciliaris was among the top three most abundant lichens in Turkey s Lake Abant Nature Park 2018 biodiversity survey 35 In contrast northern Germany 36 and the UK have seen a decline in sightings It is rare in Ireland and nearly extinct in North East England 15 By 2010 Scotland recorded A ciliaris in only four locations with its scarcity attributed to air pollution and the declining elm tree population impacted by Dutch elm disease 37 A century ago it was more common in the UK typically found thriving on trees in parklands and along cultivated roadsides 38 Widely distributed in Finland it is abundant in populated areas present in parks alleys and field edges and also occurs on seashore cliffs 16 Anaptychia ciliaris has adapted to growth on various substrates Growing on bark the lichen has been recorded frequently on Quercus rotundifolia Q pyrenaica and Ulmus Less commonly it is found on Pinus sylvestris P nigra Juniperus oxycedrus 39 Acer pseudoplatanus sycamore and Fagus sylvatica beech 40 In Denmark its usual hosts are Fraxinus and Tilia 24 Less frequently it is found on calcareous and acidic rocks and gravestones 15 A key characteristic of A ciliaris is its preference for diffuse light 41 In Poland Anaptychia ciliaris is among six endangered species listed on the National red list 42 In Moscow s East European Plain area it is an uncommon species and listed in the 2018 Red Data Book of the Moscow Region It mostly found in the area s birch grass marsh forests with its limited presence attributed to the air pollution from Moscow 43 Austria s Regional Red List also classifies A ciliaris as endangered 40 Once common sight in Upper Austria its decline is due to less availability of preferred substrate like mature moss covered fertilised and dust impregnated barks Contemporary practices often result in the removal of trees before their bark matures to a consistency suitable for A ciliaris 44 Historical North American literature occasionally mentions the presence of A ciliaris but such references are misinterpretations These instances refer to A setifera and A ciliaris is not native to the continent 45 Biomonitoring edit nbsp Illustration of gross morphological featuresAnaptychia ciliaris is used in biomonitoring due to its sensitivity to air pollution This lichen serves as an indicator of environmental health reflecting changes in air quality and pollutant levels In Denmark and North Germany a method was developed to gauge SO2 emissions using the health and fertility of indicator lichens like A ciliaris 24 Similarly England and Wales adopted a scale rating zones from 0 most polluted to 10 least polluted with A ciliaris typically found in zones above 7 corresponding to SO2 levels around 40 micrograms per cubic metre 46 Historically common in 19th century Netherlands A ciliaris experienced a significant decline throughout the 20th century However healthy specimens were unexpectedly found in 2010 on young ash trees in Brabant a resurgence attributed to reduced air pollution and climate warming 47 Monitoring the breakdown of chlorophyll into phaeophytin in A ciliaris has proven effective for detecting air pollution The species ability to grow on different substrates enhances its utility in biomonitoring In France A ciliaris was used to measure lead and cadmium emissions from a municipal solid waste incinerator 48 It has also been employed in Greece to assess the levels of heavy metals in polluted areas 49 and near a lignite power plant 50 In Sweden A ciliaris has a history of being used for monitoring atmospheric pollution 51 Following the Chernobyl disaster it played a significant role in the biomonitoring of airborne radioactive fallout with detected caesium 137 activity in Anaptychia ciliaris reaching as high as 14560 becquerels per kilogram 52 Uses editIn the 17th Century Cyprus Powder was used as a toilette powder a fine powder often fragranced that was used for personal grooming and cosmetic purposes to whiten scent and cleanse the hair It was a blend of oakmoss Anaptychia ciliaris and species of Usnea and was fragranced with ambergris or musk combined with the essences of roses jasmine or orange blossoms 53 In the Erkowit region of eastern Sudan the lichen known locally as bakour was mixed with other plants and burned to repel insects 32 Research edit nbsp Vertical section of developing ascogonium in Anaptychia ciliaris illustrated by German botanist Wilhelm Baur in 1904 a paraphyses b ascogonial hyphae c ascogonial cells 54 Historically the lichen Anaptypia ciliaris has played a significant role in various scientific explorations of lichen structure and physiology Early on the French botanist Joseph Pitton de Tournefort reportedly first observed the lichen s distinctive large dark coloured spores 55 In 1849 56 Holle detailed the development of hyphae from lichen spores using A ciliaris as the subject of his study 57 In 1850 and 1851 the lichen was used by the German botanist Hermann Itzigsohn to demonstrate the existence of spermagones conidia 23 In 1853 58 Julius Ferdinand Speerschneider another German botanist reported the division of the lichen s photobiont cells then referred to as gonidia in moist thallus sections 59 He found that in humid air hyphae decomposed within two months while algae thrived growing and dividing rapidly Subsequently small light green structures emerged in the decomposing thallus centre evolving into lichen primordia 60 Further insights into lichen structure came when Reginald Heber Howe Jr presented the lichen s cortex as an exemplar of the fibrous cortex a tissue type characterised by long slender infrequently branched hyphae growing parallel to the surface 61 The German bryologist Johann Hedwig in the eighteenth century expanded on these findings In his 1784 work Fundamentum Historiae Naturalis Muscorum Frondosorum he described and depicted Anaptypia ciliaris apothecia dark septate spores and pycnidia He identified tiny bodies associated with the organism measuring approximately 50 mm long and 24 mm thick as semina 62 a term Acharius later replaced with spores in 1803 63 In the following century research on Anaptypia ciliaris advanced further Pierre Augustin Dangeard in 1894 studied the origin and development of asci in lichens using Anaptypia ciliaris as a model 64 Rene Maire explored cellular biology by observing nuclear division in an ascospore prior to septum formation 38 The lichen s practical applications were also investigated In 1825 Joseph Placide Alexandre Leorier documented Roy of Tonnerre s pioneering technique to produce alcohol from lichens notably Anaptypia ciliaris This innovation was remarkable as lichens unlike fruits or grains generally lack the abundant sugars usually employed as feedstock in traditional alcohol production 65 More recent research on Anaptychia ciliaris has uncovered various potential biological activities Its extracts tested for antibacterial and insecticidal effects against certain pathogenic bacteria and the Culiseta longiareolata mosquito larvae showed moderate larvicidal properties 66 In tests against fish bacterial pathogens A ciliaris demonstrated antibacterial effects particularly towards Aeromonas hydrophila Streptococcus agalactiae Enterococcus faecalis and Lactococcus garvieae 67 The active metabolites in A ciliaris including various antioxidants vary in presence and concentration depending on its tree substrate 68 Growth in culture editThe mycobiont of Anaptychia ciliaris can be cultivated in axenic pure culture More than 100 years ago the Finnish phycologist Harry Waren described the fungal partner of A ciliaris then known as Physcia ciliaris grown from spores noting its compact mycelia and large globular cells mistakenly believed to contain chlorophyll 69 70 To initiate spore growth researchers place apothecia from the lichen in proximity to the underside of an inverted petri dish if the asci and ascospores are mature the spores will be ejected onto the petri dish and begin germinating 71 Further research into A ciliaris showed that its spores have a unique dispersal behaviour where they often adhere to the growth medium as single isolated units rather than being discharged in clusters or small packets which then attach to the growth medium as groups This pattern of individual spore attachment is also seen in other lichen species and is characteristic of certain lichen families Anaptychia ciliaris is known for its consistent spore release in laboratory conditions a trait not commonly observed in many other lichens Researchers often encounter challenges such as lack of spore discharge or germination when working with other lichen species in vitro The reliable sporulation of A ciliaris under laboratory conditions signifies its suitability for scientific studies particularly those focused on lichen reproduction and development in aposymbiotic culture settings where the fungus component of the lichen is grown separately from its algal partner to better understand its individual characteristics and behaviour On average these spores took six to seven days to begin germination 72 Anaptychia ciliaris shows variability in spore production from its similarly sized apothecia reflecting differences in both the quantity of spores and their stages of development This variation emphasises the impact of its heterothallic life cycle which facilitates cross fertilization and genetic recombination leading to genetic diversity In the early stages of growth the presence of carbon sources enhances the filamentous development of the mycobiont These findings align with the lichen s characteristic slow growth rate and its ability to support apothecia of different ages on a single thallus further contributing to genetic variation The morphology metabolism and pigmentation of Anaptychia ciliaris are particularly influenced by sugars and sugar alcohols and show significant variation when grown in different culture media 72 Species interactions editAnaptychia ciliaris interacts with various lichenicolous organisms which are species that live on and often parasitise lichens Among the fungi that parasitise A ciliaris is Tremella anaptychiae a species described in 2017 This fungus produces spherical or tuberculate fruit bodies ranging in colour from cream to pinkish brownish or blackish and is found in Italy Macedonia Spain including the Canary Islands Sweden 33 and Greece Catillaria mediterranea a lichen with a reduced thallus 73 and Monodictys anaptychiae a rare hyphomycete also grow on A ciliaris Monodictys anaptychiae may exclusively target A ciliaris infection leads to thallus surface damage and discolouration 74 75 In the UK the Anaptychia ciliaris subspecies mamillata often shows tiny black dots on its lobes a result of Stigmidium hageniae parasitism 15 Additionally A ciliaris is subject to infection by other lichenicolous fungi such as Pronectria tincta 76 References edit a b Synonymy Current Name Anaptychia ciliaris L Flot Jber schles Ges vaterl Kultur 28 119 1850 Species Fungorum Archived from the original on 5 November 2023 Retrieved 8 October 2023 Anaptychia ciliaris L Korb ex A Massal Catalogue of Life Species 2000 Leiden the Netherlands Retrieved 8 October 2023 Smith 1921 p 3 Linnaeus C 1753 Species Plantarum in Latin Vol 2 Stockholm Lars Salvius p 1144 Archived from the original on 8 October 2023 Retrieved 8 October 2023 Flotow J V 1850 Lichenes florae silesiae Zweiter Artikel Lichen flora of Silesia Second article Jahresbericht der Schlesischen Gesellschaft fur Vaterlandische Kultur in German 28 119 a b c d e f g h i j k l Kurokawa Syo 1962 A Monograph of the GenusAnaptychia Weinheim J Cramer pp 10 14 a b Record Details Anaptychia Korb Grundriss Krypt Kunde 197 1848 Index Fungorum Archived from the original on 2 October 2023 Retrieved 8 October 2023 Korber Gustav Wilhelm 1848 Grundriss der Kryptogamen Kunde Zur Orientirung beim Studium der kryptogamischen Pflanzen sowie zum Gebrauch bei seinen Vorlesungen Outline of Cryptogam Science For orientation during the study of cryptogamic plants as well as for use in his lectures in German Breslau Verlag von Eduard Trewendt p 87 Archived from the original on 2 October 2023 Retrieved 8 October 2023 Smith James Edward 1804 English Botany Or Coloured Figures of British Plants with Their Essential Characters Synonyms and Places of Growth Vol 19 London R Taylor p 1352 Archived from the original on 25 November 2023 Retrieved 25 November 2023 Taxon Dictionary Aderyn LERC Wales Biodiversity Information amp Reporting Database Biodiversity Information Service Archived from the original on 25 November 2023 Retrieved 25 November 2023 Search term Anaptychia ciliaris Index Fungorum Archived from the original on 8 October 2023 Retrieved 8 October 2023 a b c Boistel Alphonse 1903 Nouvelle flore des lichens pour la determination facile des especes sans microscope et sans reactifs New lichen flora for easy species determination without a microscope and reagents in French Vol 2 Paris Librairie Generale de l enseignement p 49 Zahlbruckner A 1931 Catalogus Lichenum Universalis Vol 7 p 714 Hawksworth D L James P W Coppins B J 1980 Checklist of British lichen forming lichenicolous and allied fungi The Lichenologist 12 1 1 115 106 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