Farinose Cartilage Lichen

Ramalina farinacea

Description 3

 Thallus: fruticose, shrubby or tufted, up to 7(-15) cm long; branching: irregularly or dichotomously branched from a narrow holdfast; branches: solid, irregular in thickness or plane, 1-3(-5) mm wide; surface: greenish gray to greenish yellow, smooth, shiny, sorediate; soredia: farinose, in laminal or marginal, rounded, discrete soralia; pseudocyphellae: almost lacking in distal branches, more common near the base of branches, ellipsoid to short linear; cortex: thin; chondroid strands: continuous, weakly to heavily cracked; Apothecia: rare but frequent in local populations in some limited areas, mostly laminal, up to 6 mm in diam.; disc: covered with thin pruina; margin: concolorous with the thallus, entire, usually lacking pseudocyphellae; asci: elongate-clavate, 8-spored; ascospores: hyaline, 1-septate, broadly fusiform, 12-15 x 5-7 µm; Pycnidia: not observed; Spot tests: cortex K-, C-, KC+ yellow, P-; medulla K+ yellow or yellow turning dark red, C-, KC-, P+ yellowish orange; Secondary metabolites: cortex with usnic acid; medulla with (race 1) protocetraric acid (major); (race 2) norstictic (major) acid and salazinic acid (±trace).; Substrate and ecology: on bark, rarely on rock; World distribution: cosmopolitan, especially common in temperate, coastal regions; Sonoran distribution: southern California, Baja California and Baja California Sur.; Notes: Among the two chemical races of Ramalina farinacea, race 1 (protocetraric acid) is more common in the greater Sonoran region. The distribution of the chemical races in North America have been extensively investigated by Bowler (1977). 

Sources and Credits

  1. (c) CALS, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC-ND), uploaded by CALS
  2. (c) wanderflechten, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC-ND), http://www.flickr.com/photos/29750062@N06/4169959482
  3. (c) Lichen Unlimited: Arizona State University, Tempe., some rights reserved (CC BY-NC-SA), http://eol.org/data_objects/10548674

More Info

iNat Map

Color yellow-green
Form fruticose
Morphological feature soredia
Substrate bark