Department of the Environment and Water Resources home page

About us | Contact us | Publications | What's new

Header imagesHeader imagesHeader images

Australian Biological Resources Study

 
 
Checklist of the Lichens of Australia and its Island Territories
     
Introduction | A–D | E–O | P–R | S–Z | Oceanic Islands | References
     
     
Cladonia crispata (Ach.) Flotow var. cetrariiformis (Delise) Vain.
     
  Acta Soc. Fauna Fl. Fenn. 4: 392 (1887); Cenomyce gracilis var. cetrariiformis Delise in J.É.Duby, Bot. Gall. 2: 625 (1830) as cetrariaeformis. T: Vire, Calvados, France, 1824, Delise; syn: PC-Thuret.  
     
  Basal squamules persistent or evanescent, 2 mm long, 1 mm diam., irregularly subdigitate-lacinate, esorediate. Podetia growing from basal squamules, or less commonly dying at base, 1–6 cm tall, 0.5–2 mm diam., with subcorymbose apices, esorediate, escyphiferous to irregularly subscyphiferous, greenish white, becoming brown in older specimens; scyphi marginal, open to interior of podetia, narrow; cortex smooth, areolate, becoming subwarted in older specimens. Apothecia terminal on margins of scyphi, clustered, 0.5–2 mm diam., convex, brown. Pycnidia terminal on margins of scyphi, 0.2 × 0.1 mm, cylindrical, black. CHEMISTRY: K- or K+ yellow, KC-, P- or P+ yellow. Thamnolic acid (major) or squamatic acid (major) with barbatic acid (major) in the apothecia.
     
  Occurs in south-western W.A., S.A. and Tas.; also in New Zealand, Europe, North America, Papua New Guinea and Japan; grows on soil or dead or decayed wood.  
     
   
     
     
  Archer (1992b)  

Checklist Index
Introduction | A–D | E–O | P–R | S–Z | Oceanic Islands | References
 
 
Copyright

This work is copyright. Apart from any use as permitted under the Copyright Act 1968, no part may be reproduced by any process without prior written permission from Australian Biological Resources Study. Requests and inquiries concerning reproduction and rights should be addressed in the first instance to Dr P. McCarthy. These pages may not be displayed on, or downloaded to, any other server without the express permission of ABRS.


Top | About us | Advanced search | Contact us | Information services | Publications | Site index | What's new