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 | ||
Physma byrsaeum (Ach.) Tuck. | ||
Syn. N. Amer. Lich. 1: 115 (1882) Parmelia byrsaea Ach., Methodus 222 (1803). T: E Sierra Leona, Africa, Afzelius [A.]; n.v. |
||
Thallus foliose, ±rosulate, adnate, 3–10 cm wide, 300–500 µm thick. Lobes ±radiating, oblong to linear-oblong, occasionally obovate 1.5–10 mm wide; margins entire, thickened, ±recurved. Upper surface ridged, wrinkled or smooth in parts, leaden grey, pale grey, olive green, becoming brown to black with age, sometimes spotted, without isidia. Lower surface dull or pale brown, ±rhizinate; cortex sometimes absent; rhizines of interwoven hyphae forming an indumentum, ±fasciculate, rarely branched, black. Ascomata apothecial,usually present, ±abundant, usually laminal, sessile, 1.5–4 mm wide; disc concave to plane or slightly convex, pale orange to reddish brown; thalline exciple thick, ±wrinkled, sometimes plicate, ±lobed, concolorous with thallus. Ascospores simple, ellipsoidal to broadly ellipsoidal, 13–20 × 10–13 µm; episporium ±irregular, 2–5 µm thick. Pycnidia laminal. Conidia 3–4 µm long; apices not swollen. | ||
Occurs in north-eastern Qld from the Cooktown area to Finch Hatton and disjunctly in south-eastern Qld and north-eastern N.S.W. Also on Christmas Is. and Norfolk Is. Grows on bark. Also in W Africa, tropical America, N Asia, SE Asia, Oceania. | ||
Verdon (1992c) |
Checklist Index |
Introduction | A–D | E–O | P–R | S–Z | Oceanic Islands | References |
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.