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Normandina pulchella

Normandina pulchella, commonly known as the elf-ear lichen or blue heart, is a species of squamulose lichen in the family Verrucariaceae. This cosmopolitan species is widely distributed across both hemispheres, where it thrives in moist microhabitats. It favours moss-covered deciduous trees and rocks, often colonising over mosses and bryophytes. It occasionally grows on bare bark and on other lichens. Distinctive features of N. pulchella include its bluish-green squamules (scales) with sharply raised margins, non-reactivity to standard chemical spot tests, and growth in humid habitats. Initially, Nannochloris normandinae, a green alga, was thought to be its photobiont. However, recent studies have revised this understanding, now suggesting Diplosphaera as the algal partner.

Normandina pulchella
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Eurotiomycetes
Order: Verrucariales
Family: Verrucariaceae
Genus: Normandina
Species:
N. pulchella
Binomial name
Normandina pulchella
(Borrer) Nyl. (1861)
Synonyms[2]
  • Endocarpon pulchellum Borrer (1831)
  • Verrucaria pulchella Borrer (1831)
  • Coccocarpia pulchella (Borrer) C.Bab. (1855)
  • Lenormandia jungermanniae Nyl. (1855)[1]
  • Normandina jungermanniae (Nyl.) Nyl. (1855)
  • Lenormandia pulchella (Borrer) A.Massal. (1856)

First named and scientifically described by the English botanist William Borrer in 1831, the clarification of Normandina pulchella's place within the Verrucariaceae, facilitated by molecular phylogenetics analysis in 2010, resolved long-standing taxonomic uncertainties. Prior classifications had varied widely, placing N. pulchella within groups such as the Basidiomycota (i.e., as a basidiolichen) and Fungi incertae sedis, largely due to differing interpretations of the perithecia (fruiting bodies) found within the lichen. These discrepancies stemmed from confusion over whether the perithecia belonged to the lichen itself or were instead associated with a parasitic lichenicolous fungus.

Systematics edit

Taxonomic history edit

 
Lobes with bluish colouration

The lichen was originally formally described in 1831 by the English botanist William Borrer, who classified it within the genus Verrucaria. He coined the vernacular name "little filmy-leaved Verrucaria" due to its distinctive morphology.[3] The specific epithet pulchella is the Latin diminutive of pulchra, 'beautiful' or 'fair'.[4] He observed the lichen to be characterised by thin, membranous, greenish-grey, leaf-like scales, with these features transitioning from smooth, rounded forms to crowded, waved, and lobed configurations, whilst adorned with powdery granules. The underside of these scales is distinguished by a pale brown colour and woolly fibres. Borrer described the lichen's tubercles as nearly globular and black. These tubercles reveal only their apex through the thallus surface, exposing a gelatinous, brownish nucleus with a central pore. He noted the lichen's frequent occurrence on mossy trees in Sussex, and that it thrived on the leafy liverwort species Jungermannia dilatata, forming wide but often interrupted patches. Ellen Hutchins was credited by Borrer for initially discovering the species on a mountain near Bantry (Ireland), growing on Lichen plumbeus on heath stems. He remarked on the lichen's uniqueness: "This curious little production is so unlike to every other Lichen, that its very genus must have remained doubtful but for Miss Hutchins's fortunate discovery of the tubercles. Acharius, to whom Sussex specimens were communicated, thought it a Thelephora, thus excluding it even from the natural order to which we hold it to belong." Despite its prevalence in Sussex, Borrer mentioned that it appeared to have been overlooked elsewhere.[5] In another publication that year, Borrer proposed to transfer it to the genus Endocarpon. However, this was nomenclaturally invalid because the name had already been for a different species, violating the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature guidelines.[3] William Nylander transferred the taxon to the genus Normandina in 1861.[6]

Classification edit

Recent advancements have clarified the classification of Normandina pulchella, addressing ambiguities and refining its placement within the systematic taxonomy. Initially, perithecia found within the thallus led to confusion, as these were later attributed to the parasitic fungus Sphaerulina chlorococca rather than to Normandina pulchella itself. This misunderstanding contributed to significant taxonomic challenges regarding the lichen's classification. Historically, N. pulchella was often classified as a basidiolichen, largely due to its morphological similarities with Coriscium viride, associated with the basidiomycete Omphalina hudsoniana. However, the discovery that Normandina lacks dolipore septa — key features of basidiomycetes — cast doubt on its classification as a basidiolichen. Despite this, the exact systematic position of Normandina remained unresolved.[7]

 
Microscopic cross section of a Normandina pulchella lobe illustrating its layered (heteromerous) structure

A cytological study revealed that Normandina pulchella has a complex structure with separate fungal and algal layers, a characteristic of heteromerous thalli. This structure plays a key role in its life processes, distinguishing it from basidiolichens. Specifically, the medulla, or inner layer, contains hyaline (transparent) fungal filaments entwined around small clusters of algal cells. These cells have thick walls and a singular, lobate chloroplast containing a distinct metameric pyrenoid – a structure assisting in starch formation, along with small starch grains and fat-containing plastoglobuli.[7]

The fungal partner, or mycobiont, was found to have hyphae featuring simple perforated septa, a type of internal cell division within the hyphae, accompanied by Woronin bodiesorganelles unique to ascomycetes, a large fungal group. Additionally, the close yet non-invasive relationship between the fungal and algal cells suggested a mutualistic association typical of ascolichens. The exclusive presence of Woronin bodies and the characteristics of the algal partner align with traits typically found in ascomycetes and their associated algae in ascolichens. This evidence collectively shifted Normandina pulchella away from being classified as a basidiolichen, as some previous studies suggested, firmly placing it within the ascolichens.[7]

In 2010, Lucia Muggia and colleagues employed molecular phylogenetics analysis to conclusively classify Normandina pulchella within the family Verrucariaceae, resolving longstanding classification debates.[8]

Common names edit

In addition to Borrer's original suggestion ("little filmy-leaved Verrucaria"), other vernacular names that have been used to refer to this lichen are "blue heart",[9] and "elf ear lichen".[10]

Description edit

 
Close-up of sorediate lobes

Normandina pulchella has a squamulose (scaly) thallus, composed of small, scale-like formations termed squamules. The squamules display colours ranging from glaucous—a bluish-green or grey—to pale grey or greenish-grey, intensifying to a richer green when moistened. Each squamule can span up to 5 mm across and may include one or more broadly rounded lobes, each up to 1.7 mm in diameter, reminiscent of shell or ear shapes. The upper surface of these lobes features concentric ridges, while the edges are sharply defined and raised, typically spanning 50–100 micrometres (µm) in width. The squamules may be dispersed or densely packed across the lichen's surface.[11] The thallus is closely appressed to the substrate.[10]

For vegetative reproduction, N. pulchella develops soralia—structures on the lobe surfaces and edges—that discharge granular particles known as soredia. These soralia are green or match the colour of the lobes and contain granular soredia measuring 40–80 µm in diameter. The underside of the lichen presents a whitish, slightly felted (tomentose) appearance and adheres to its substrate through numerous fungal strands, or hyphae.[11] Rhizines do not occur in this species.[10]

 
Zeorin is the only lichen product that occurs in Normandina pulchella.

Its spore-producing structures, or ascomata, resemble those in related species but are distinguished by their uniformly pigmented, cohesive nature under microscopic analysis. The ascospores are typically 29–37 by 6–7 µm, mostly with seven internal partitions, known as septa. Chemical analysis, particularly thin-layer chromatography, identify zeorin as a secondary metabolite (lichen product), yet N. pulchella remains unresponsive to standard chemical spot tests.[11]

Similar species edit

The squamules of Lichenomphalina hudsoniana share the neat, sharply defined edges characteristic of N. pulchella. However, they can be distinguished by their lack of soralia, the presence of both upper and lower cortices, and adaptation to arctic-alpine environments, typically growing on peaty soil or decaying wood. In contrast, N. pulchella tends to develop more pronounced soralia in shaded, humid settings, diverging from the preferred habitats of Lichenomphalina hudsoniana. Additionally, the fruiting bodies of N. pulchella are found to be more prevalent and larger in tropical regions compared to temperate ones, and they often do not contain soredia. This suggests that environmental factors or underlying taxonomic differences may influence the observed variations between these species in different locales.[11][10]

Photobiont edit

In 1981, Elisabeth Tschermak-Woess identified Nannochloris normandinae as the photobiont partner, the algae associated with Normandina pulchella.[12] Subsequent studies, however, have been less definitive about the role of Nannochloris.[13] By 2011, research by Thüs and colleagues revealed that Diplosphaera, not Nannochloris, was present in ten examined Normandina specimens.[14] More recently, Pröschold & Darienko (2020) reclassified Nannochloris normandinae as synonymous with Diplosphaera chodatii of the order Prasiolales,[15] further complicating the identification of the true photobiont in N. pulchella and suggesting that previous attributions to Nannochloris may be incorrect.[14]

Habitat and distribution edit

 
Normandina pulchella growing amongst moss on tree bark

Normandina pulchella has a cosmopolitan distribution, growing across diverse climates and regions.[11] The Swedish lichenologist Gunnar Degelius, in his 1934 phytogeographical study, highlights the species' oceanic distribution in Europe. It predominantly occupies coastal areas in Northern Europe, including Scandinavia and the British Isles, and extends to Austria, Bavaria, France, Czechoslovakia, and select Mediterranean locales.[16] In contrast, William Louis Culberson and Mason Hale's 1966 analysis of its North American presence noted its prevalence in the mountainous western regions and the Appalachian foothills, without indicating an oceanic distribution pattern.[17] Its range in North America extends north to Alaska,[18] although in 2022 Alan Orange showed that some collections from there represent a different species found in the Americas, provisionally named N. 'americana'.[19]

Ecologically, Normandina pulchella favours moss-covered deciduous trees and rocks within woodlands and parks, often colonising over mosses, bryophytes, and occasionally bare bark.[11] It also often grows on other lichens, particularly those that contain cyanobacteria,[20] such as Fuscopannaria, Pannaria, Parmeliella, Pectenia, and Peltigera. Its presence is increasing in southern and western Britain and throughout Ireland, reflecting a broadening distribution.[11]

It is listed as a vulnerable in the Finnish Regional Red List because of its small known population.[21]

Species interactions edit

Among the lichenicolous (lichen-dwelling) fungi specifically associated with Normandina pulchella are several species that have unique interactions. Capronia normandinae is characterised by its black, superficial, hair-like structures known as setose perithecia. Cladophialophora normandinae is distinguished by its black fruiting bodies, termed sporodochia, which play a role in its reproductive cycle. Additionally, Tremella normandinae is noted for producing pale, swollen growths, referred to as galls, indicative of its parasitic relationship with the lichen. Another parasite, Globosphaeria jamesii, also interacts with Normandina pulchella, further contributing to the diversity of its ecological associations. Moreover, Lawreymyces pulchellae has an endolichenic relationship, residing within the lichen's structure.[11][22]

References edit

  1. ^ Nylander, W. (1855). "Additamentum in floram cryptogamicam Chilensem". Annales des Sciences Naturelles. Botanique. 4 (in Latin). 3: 145–187 [151].
  2. ^ "Synonymy. Current Name: Normandina pulchella (Borrer) Nyl., Annls Sci. Nat., Bot., sér. 4 15: 382 (1861)". Species Fungorum. Retrieved 27 March 2024.
  3. ^ a b "Record Details: Endocarpon pulchellum Borrer, in Hooker & Sowerby, Suppl. Engl. Bot. 1: tab. 2602 (1831)". Index Fungorum. Retrieved 27 March 2024.
  4. ^ Bomfleur, Benjamin; Grimm, Guido W.; McLoughlin, Stephen (2015). "Osmunda pulchella sp. nov. from the Jurassic of Sweden—reconciling molecular and fossil evidence in the phylogeny of modern royal ferns (Osmundaceae)". BMC Evolutionary Biology. 15: e15. doi:10.1186/s12862-015-0400-7. PMC 4487210. PMID 26123220.
  5. ^ Borrer, William (1831). Supplement to the English Botany of the late Sir J. E. Smith and Mr. Sowerby. Vol. 1. London: J. D. C. and C. E. Sowerby. tab. 2602, fig. 1.
  6. ^ Nylander, W. (1861). "Additamentum ad lichenographiam Andium Boliviensium". Annales des Sciences Naturelles. Botanique. 4 (in Latin). 15: 365–382 [382].
  7. ^ a b c Mares, Donatello; Fasulo, Maria P.; Bruni, Alessandro (1993). "Contribution to the study of Normandina pulchella: a cytological approach". Orsis. 8: 33–40.
  8. ^ Muggia, Lucia; Gueidan, Cécile; Grube, Martin (2010). "Phylogenetic placement of some morphologically unusual members of Verrucariales". Mycologia. 102 (4): 835–846. doi:10.3852/09-153. PMID 20648751.
  9. ^ Tripp, Erin A.; Lendemer, James C. (2020). Field Guide to the Lichens of Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Knoxville: The University of Tennessee Press. pp. 308–309. ISBN 978-1-62190-514-1.
  10. ^ a b c d McMullin, R. Troy (2023). Lichens. The Macrolichens of Ontario and the Great Lakes Region of the United States. Firefly Books. p. 311. ISBN 978-0-228-10369-1.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h Orange, A.; Cannon, P.; Prieto, M.; Coppins, B.; Sanderson, N.; Simkin, J. (2023). Verrucariales: Verrucariaceae, including the genera Agonimia, Atla, Bagliettoa, Catapyrenium, Dermatocarpon, Endocarpon, Henrica, Heteroplacidium, Hydropunctaria, Involucropyrenium, Merismatium, Nesothele, Normandina, Parabagliettoa, Placidopsis, Placidium, Placopyrenium, Polyblastia, Psoroglaena, Sporodictyon, Staurothele, Thelidium, Trimmatothele, Verrucaria, Verrucula, Verruculopsis and Wahlenbergiella (PDF). Revisions of British and Irish Lichens. Vol. 31. British Lichen Society. p. 43.
  12. ^ Tschermak-Woess, E. (1981). "Zur Kenntnis der Phycobionten von Lobaria linita und Normandina pulchella" [On the knowledge of the phycobionts of Lobaria linita and Normandina pulchella]. Nova Hedwigia (in German). 35: 63–73.
  13. ^ Lohtander, Katileena; Oksanen, Ilona; Rikkinen, Jouko (2003). "Genetic diversity of green algal and cyanobacterial photobionts in Nephroma (Peltigerales)". The Lichenologist. 35 (4): 325–339. doi:10.1016/S0024-2829(03)00051-3.
  14. ^ a b Thüs, Holger; Muggia, Lucia; Pérez-Ortega, Sergio; Favero-Longo, Sergio E.; Joneson, Suzanne; O’Brien, Heath; Nelsen, Matthew P.; Duque-Thüs, Rhinaixa; Grube, Martin; Friedl, Thomas; Brodie, Juliet; Andrew, Carrie J.; Lücking, Robert; Lutzoni, François; Gueidan, Cécile (2011). "Revisiting photobiont diversity in the lichen family Verrucariaceae (Ascomycota)". European Journal of Phycology. 46 (4): 399–415. Bibcode:2011EJPhy..46..399T. doi:10.1080/09670262.2011.629788.
  15. ^ Pröschold, Thomas; Darienko, Tatyana (2020). "The green puzzle Stichococcus (Trebouxiophyceae, Chlorophyta): new generic and species concept among this widely distributed genus". Phytotaxa. 441 (1): 113–142. doi:10.11646/phytotaxa.441.2.2.
  16. ^ Degelius, Gunnar (1935). Das oceanische Element der Strauch- und Laubflechtenflora von Skandinavien [The oceanic element of the shrub and leaf lichen flora of Scandinavia]. Acta Phytogeographica Suecica (in German). Vol. 7.
  17. ^ Culberson, William Louis; Mason E., Hale (1966). "The range of Normandina pulchella in North America". The Bryologist. 69 (3): 365–367. doi:10.2307/3240836. JSTOR 3240836.
  18. ^ Spribille, Toby; Fryday, Alan M.; Hampton-Miller, Celia J.; Ahti, Teuvo; Dillman, Karen; Thor, Göran; Tonsberg, Tor; Schirokauer, Dave, eds. (2023). Compendium of the Lichens and Associated Fungi of Alaska. Bibliothecia Lichenologica. J. Cramer. p. 278. doi:10.1127/bibl_lich/2023/112. ISBN 978-3-443-58093-3.
  19. ^ Orange, Alan (2022). "The crustose species of Normandina Verrucariaceae)". The Lichenologist. 54 (6): 371–378. doi:10.1017/s0024282922000317.
  20. ^ Sharnoff, Stephen (2014). A Field Guide to California Lichens. New Haven/London: Yale University Press. p. 357. ISBN 978-0-300-19500-2.
  21. ^ Hyvärinen, Esko; Juslén, Aino; Kemppainen, Eija; Uddström, Annika; Liukko, Ulla-Maija, eds. (2019). Suomen lajien uhanalaisuus – Punainen kirja 2019. The 2019 Red List of Finnish Species (Report). Ministry of the Environment. Finnish Environment Institute. p. 292. ISBN 978-952-11-4974-0.
  22. ^ Diederich, Paul; Lawrey, James D.; Ertz, Damien (2018). "The 2018 classification and checklist of lichenicolous fungi, with 2000 non-lichenized, obligately lichenicolous taxa". The Bryologist. 121 (3): 385, 392. doi:10.1639/0007-2745-121.3.340.

normandina, pulchella, commonly, known, lichen, blue, heart, species, squamulose, lichen, family, verrucariaceae, this, cosmopolitan, species, widely, distributed, across, both, hemispheres, where, thrives, moist, microhabitats, favours, moss, covered, deciduo. Normandina pulchella commonly known as the elf ear lichen or blue heart is a species of squamulose lichen in the family Verrucariaceae This cosmopolitan species is widely distributed across both hemispheres where it thrives in moist microhabitats It favours moss covered deciduous trees and rocks often colonising over mosses and bryophytes It occasionally grows on bare bark and on other lichens Distinctive features of N pulchella include its bluish green squamules scales with sharply raised margins non reactivity to standard chemical spot tests and growth in humid habitats Initially Nannochloris normandinae a green alga was thought to be its photobiont However recent studies have revised this understanding now suggesting Diplosphaera as the algal partner Normandina pulchellaScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom FungiDivision AscomycotaClass EurotiomycetesOrder VerrucarialesFamily VerrucariaceaeGenus NormandinaSpecies N pulchellaBinomial nameNormandina pulchella Borrer Nyl 1861 Synonyms 2 Endocarpon pulchellum Borrer 1831 Verrucaria pulchella Borrer 1831 Coccocarpia pulchella Borrer C Bab 1855 Lenormandia jungermanniae Nyl 1855 1 Normandina jungermanniae Nyl Nyl 1855 Lenormandia pulchella Borrer A Massal 1856 First named and scientifically described by the English botanist William Borrer in 1831 the clarification of Normandina pulchella s place within the Verrucariaceae facilitated by molecular phylogenetics analysis in 2010 resolved long standing taxonomic uncertainties Prior classifications had varied widely placing N pulchella within groups such as the Basidiomycota i e as a basidiolichen and Fungi incertae sedis largely due to differing interpretations of the perithecia fruiting bodies found within the lichen These discrepancies stemmed from confusion over whether the perithecia belonged to the lichen itself or were instead associated with a parasitic lichenicolous fungus Contents 1 Systematics 1 1 Taxonomic history 1 2 Classification 1 3 Common names 2 Description 2 1 Similar species 3 Photobiont 4 Habitat and distribution 5 Species interactions 6 ReferencesSystematics editTaxonomic history edit nbsp Lobes with bluish colourationThe lichen was originally formally described in 1831 by the English botanist William Borrer who classified it within the genus Verrucaria He coined the vernacular name little filmy leaved Verrucaria due to its distinctive morphology 3 The specific epithet pulchella is the Latin diminutive of pulchra beautiful or fair 4 He observed the lichen to be characterised by thin membranous greenish grey leaf like scales with these features transitioning from smooth rounded forms to crowded waved and lobed configurations whilst adorned with powdery granules The underside of these scales is distinguished by a pale brown colour and woolly fibres Borrer described the lichen s tubercles as nearly globular and black These tubercles reveal only their apex through the thallus surface exposing a gelatinous brownish nucleus with a central pore He noted the lichen s frequent occurrence on mossy trees in Sussex and that it thrived on the leafy liverwort species Jungermannia dilatata forming wide but often interrupted patches Ellen Hutchins was credited by Borrer for initially discovering the species on a mountain near Bantry Ireland growing on Lichen plumbeus on heath stems He remarked on the lichen s uniqueness This curious little production is so unlike to every other Lichen that its very genus must have remained doubtful but for Miss Hutchins s fortunate discovery of the tubercles Acharius to whom Sussex specimens were communicated thought it a Thelephora thus excluding it even from the natural order to which we hold it to belong Despite its prevalence in Sussex Borrer mentioned that it appeared to have been overlooked elsewhere 5 In another publication that year Borrer proposed to transfer it to the genus Endocarpon However this was nomenclaturally invalid because the name had already been for a different species violating the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature guidelines 3 William Nylander transferred the taxon to the genus Normandina in 1861 6 Classification edit Recent advancements have clarified the classification of Normandina pulchella addressing ambiguities and refining its placement within the systematic taxonomy Initially perithecia found within the thallus led to confusion as these were later attributed to the parasitic fungus Sphaerulina chlorococca rather than to Normandina pulchella itself This misunderstanding contributed to significant taxonomic challenges regarding the lichen s classification Historically N pulchella was often classified as a basidiolichen largely due to its morphological similarities with Coriscium viride associated with the basidiomycete Omphalina hudsoniana However the discovery that Normandina lacks dolipore septa key features of basidiomycetes cast doubt on its classification as a basidiolichen Despite this the exact systematic position of Normandina remained unresolved 7 nbsp Microscopic cross section of a Normandina pulchella lobe illustrating its layered heteromerous structureA cytological study revealed that Normandina pulchella has a complex structure with separate fungal and algal layers a characteristic of heteromerous thalli This structure plays a key role in its life processes distinguishing it from basidiolichens Specifically the medulla or inner layer contains hyaline transparent fungal filaments entwined around small clusters of algal cells These cells have thick walls and a singular lobate chloroplast containing a distinct metameric pyrenoid a structure assisting in starch formation along with small starch grains and fat containing plastoglobuli 7 The fungal partner or mycobiont was found to have hyphae featuring simple perforated septa a type of internal cell division within the hyphae accompanied by Woronin bodies organelles unique to ascomycetes a large fungal group Additionally the close yet non invasive relationship between the fungal and algal cells suggested a mutualistic association typical of ascolichens The exclusive presence of Woronin bodies and the characteristics of the algal partner align with traits typically found in ascomycetes and their associated algae in ascolichens This evidence collectively shifted Normandina pulchella away from being classified as a basidiolichen as some previous studies suggested firmly placing it within the ascolichens 7 In 2010 Lucia Muggia and colleagues employed molecular phylogenetics analysis to conclusively classify Normandina pulchella within the family Verrucariaceae resolving longstanding classification debates 8 Common names edit In addition to Borrer s original suggestion little filmy leaved Verrucaria other vernacular names that have been used to refer to this lichen are blue heart 9 and elf ear lichen 10 Description edit nbsp Close up of sorediate lobesNormandina pulchella has a squamulose scaly thallus composed of small scale like formations termed squamules The squamules display colours ranging from glaucous a bluish green or grey to pale grey or greenish grey intensifying to a richer green when moistened Each squamule can span up to 5 mm across and may include one or more broadly rounded lobes each up to 1 7 mm in diameter reminiscent of shell or ear shapes The upper surface of these lobes features concentric ridges while the edges are sharply defined and raised typically spanning 50 100 micrometres µm in width The squamules may be dispersed or densely packed across the lichen s surface 11 The thallus is closely appressed to the substrate 10 For vegetative reproduction N pulchella develops soralia structures on the lobe surfaces and edges that discharge granular particles known as soredia These soralia are green or match the colour of the lobes and contain granular soredia measuring 40 80 µm in diameter The underside of the lichen presents a whitish slightly felted tomentose appearance and adheres to its substrate through numerous fungal strands or hyphae 11 Rhizines do not occur in this species 10 nbsp Zeorin is the only lichen product that occurs in Normandina pulchella Its spore producing structures or ascomata resemble those in related species but are distinguished by their uniformly pigmented cohesive nature under microscopic analysis The ascospores are typically 29 37 by 6 7 µm mostly with seven internal partitions known as septa Chemical analysis particularly thin layer chromatography identify zeorin as a secondary metabolite lichen product yet N pulchella remains unresponsive to standard chemical spot tests 11 Similar species edit The squamules of Lichenomphalina hudsoniana share the neat sharply defined edges characteristic of N pulchella However they can be distinguished by their lack of soralia the presence of both upper and lower cortices and adaptation to arctic alpine environments typically growing on peaty soil or decaying wood In contrast N pulchella tends to develop more pronounced soralia in shaded humid settings diverging from the preferred habitats of Lichenomphalina hudsoniana Additionally the fruiting bodies of N pulchella are found to be more prevalent and larger in tropical regions compared to temperate ones and they often do not contain soredia This suggests that environmental factors or underlying taxonomic differences may influence the observed variations between these species in different locales 11 10 Photobiont editIn 1981 Elisabeth Tschermak Woess identified Nannochloris normandinae as the photobiont partner the algae associated with Normandina pulchella 12 Subsequent studies however have been less definitive about the role of Nannochloris 13 By 2011 research by Thus and colleagues revealed that Diplosphaera not Nannochloris was present in ten examined Normandina specimens 14 More recently Proschold amp Darienko 2020 reclassified Nannochloris normandinae as synonymous with Diplosphaera chodatii of the order Prasiolales 15 further complicating the identification of the true photobiont in N pulchella and suggesting that previous attributions to Nannochloris may be incorrect 14 Habitat and distribution edit nbsp Normandina pulchella growing amongst moss on tree barkNormandina pulchella has a cosmopolitan distribution growing across diverse climates and regions 11 The Swedish lichenologist Gunnar Degelius in his 1934 phytogeographical study highlights the species oceanic distribution in Europe It predominantly occupies coastal areas in Northern Europe including Scandinavia and the British Isles and extends to Austria Bavaria France Czechoslovakia and select Mediterranean locales 16 In contrast William Louis Culberson and Mason Hale s 1966 analysis of its North American presence noted its prevalence in the mountainous western regions and the Appalachian foothills without indicating an oceanic distribution pattern 17 Its range in North America extends north to Alaska 18 although in 2022 Alan Orange showed that some collections from there represent a different species found in the Americas provisionally named N americana 19 Ecologically Normandina pulchella favours moss covered deciduous trees and rocks within woodlands and parks often colonising over mosses bryophytes and occasionally bare bark 11 It also often grows on other lichens particularly those that contain cyanobacteria 20 such as Fuscopannaria Pannaria Parmeliella Pectenia and Peltigera Its presence is increasing in southern and western Britain and throughout Ireland reflecting a broadening distribution 11 It is listed as a vulnerable in the Finnish Regional Red List because of its small known population 21 Species interactions editAmong the lichenicolous lichen dwelling fungi specifically associated with Normandina pulchella are several species that have unique interactions Capronia normandinae is characterised by its black superficial hair like structures known as setose perithecia Cladophialophora normandinae is distinguished by its black fruiting bodies termed sporodochia which play a role in its reproductive cycle Additionally Tremella normandinae is noted for producing pale swollen growths referred to as galls indicative of its parasitic relationship with the lichen Another parasite Globosphaeria jamesii also interacts with Normandina pulchella further contributing to the diversity of its ecological associations Moreover Lawreymyces pulchellae has an endolichenic relationship residing within the lichen s structure 11 22 References edit Nylander W 1855 Additamentum in floram cryptogamicam Chilensem Annales des Sciences Naturelles Botanique 4 in Latin 3 145 187 151 Synonymy Current Name Normandina pulchella Borrer Nyl Annls Sci Nat Bot ser 4 15 382 1861 Species Fungorum Retrieved 27 March 2024 a b Record Details Endocarpon pulchellum Borrer in Hooker amp Sowerby Suppl Engl Bot 1 tab 2602 1831 Index Fungorum Retrieved 27 March 2024 Bomfleur Benjamin Grimm Guido W McLoughlin Stephen 2015 Osmunda pulchella sp nov from the Jurassic of Sweden reconciling molecular and fossil evidence in the phylogeny of modern royal ferns Osmundaceae BMC Evolutionary Biology 15 e15 doi 10 1186 s12862 015 0400 7 PMC 4487210 PMID 26123220 Borrer William 1831 Supplement to the English Botany of the late Sir J E Smith and Mr Sowerby Vol 1 London J D C and C E Sowerby tab 2602 fig 1 Nylander W 1861 Additamentum ad lichenographiam Andium Boliviensium Annales des Sciences Naturelles Botanique 4 in Latin 15 365 382 382 a b c Mares Donatello Fasulo Maria P Bruni Alessandro 1993 Contribution to the study of Normandina pulchella a cytological approach Orsis 8 33 40 Muggia Lucia Gueidan Cecile Grube Martin 2010 Phylogenetic placement of some morphologically unusual members of Verrucariales Mycologia 102 4 835 846 doi 10 3852 09 153 PMID 20648751 Tripp Erin A Lendemer James C 2020 Field Guide to the Lichens of Great Smoky Mountains National Park Knoxville The University of Tennessee Press pp 308 309 ISBN 978 1 62190 514 1 a b c d McMullin R Troy 2023 Lichens The Macrolichens of Ontario and the Great Lakes Region of the United States Firefly Books p 311 ISBN 978 0 228 10369 1 a b c d e f g h Orange A Cannon P Prieto M Coppins B Sanderson N Simkin J 2023 Verrucariales Verrucariaceae including the generaAgonimia Atla Bagliettoa Catapyrenium Dermatocarpon Endocarpon Henrica Heteroplacidium Hydropunctaria Involucropyrenium Merismatium Nesothele Normandina Parabagliettoa Placidopsis Placidium Placopyrenium Polyblastia Psoroglaena Sporodictyon Staurothele Thelidium Trimmatothele Verrucaria Verrucula VerruculopsisandWahlenbergiella PDF Revisions of British and Irish Lichens Vol 31 British Lichen Society p 43 Tschermak Woess E 1981 Zur Kenntnis der Phycobionten von Lobaria linita und Normandina pulchella On the knowledge of the phycobionts of Lobaria linita and Normandina pulchella Nova Hedwigia in German 35 63 73 Lohtander Katileena Oksanen Ilona Rikkinen Jouko 2003 Genetic diversity of green algal and cyanobacterial photobionts in Nephroma Peltigerales The Lichenologist 35 4 325 339 doi 10 1016 S0024 2829 03 00051 3 a b Thus Holger Muggia Lucia Perez Ortega Sergio Favero Longo Sergio E Joneson Suzanne O Brien Heath Nelsen Matthew P Duque Thus Rhinaixa Grube Martin Friedl Thomas Brodie Juliet Andrew Carrie J Lucking Robert Lutzoni Francois Gueidan Cecile 2011 Revisiting photobiont diversity in the lichen family Verrucariaceae Ascomycota European Journal of Phycology 46 4 399 415 Bibcode 2011EJPhy 46 399T doi 10 1080 09670262 2011 629788 Proschold Thomas Darienko Tatyana 2020 The green puzzle Stichococcus Trebouxiophyceae Chlorophyta new generic and species concept among this widely distributed genus Phytotaxa 441 1 113 142 doi 10 11646 phytotaxa 441 2 2 Degelius Gunnar 1935 Das oceanische Element der Strauch und Laubflechtenflora von Skandinavien The oceanic element of the shrub and leaf lichen flora of Scandinavia Acta Phytogeographica Suecica in German Vol 7 Culberson William Louis Mason E Hale 1966 The range of Normandina pulchella in North America The Bryologist 69 3 365 367 doi 10 2307 3240836 JSTOR 3240836 Spribille Toby Fryday Alan M Hampton Miller Celia J Ahti Teuvo Dillman Karen Thor Goran Tonsberg Tor Schirokauer Dave eds 2023 Compendium of the Lichens and Associated Fungi of Alaska Bibliothecia Lichenologica J Cramer p 278 doi 10 1127 bibl lich 2023 112 ISBN 978 3 443 58093 3 Orange Alan 2022 The crustose species of Normandina Verrucariaceae The Lichenologist 54 6 371 378 doi 10 1017 s0024282922000317 Sharnoff Stephen 2014 A Field Guide to California Lichens New Haven London Yale University Press p 357 ISBN 978 0 300 19500 2 Hyvarinen Esko Juslen Aino Kemppainen Eija Uddstrom Annika Liukko Ulla Maija eds 2019 Suomen lajien uhanalaisuus Punainen kirja 2019 The 2019 Red List of Finnish Species Report Ministry of the Environment Finnish Environment Institute p 292 ISBN 978 952 11 4974 0 Diederich Paul Lawrey James D Ertz Damien 2018 The 2018 classification and checklist of lichenicolous fungi with 2000 non lichenized obligately lichenicolous taxa The Bryologist 121 3 385 392 doi 10 1639 0007 2745 121 3 340 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Normandina pulchella amp oldid 1215934901, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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