Leptosira A. Borzì.
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.1080/00318884.2024.2325329 |
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https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15536497 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5F246365-FFE1-FFF4-7665-FB24478AF83D |
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Felipe |
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Leptosira A. Borzì. |
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Leptosira A. Borzì. View in CoL
The thallus of the photobiont genus Leptosira is composed of cushion-shaped clusters of filaments with short lateral branches ( Fig. 15 View Figs 1–18 ). A parietal chloroplast with or without a pyrenoid ( Bakker et al. 1997) is located inside spherical cells with a single nucleus. Leptosira reproduces asexually by zoospores and aplanospores. However, in the lichenized state, the appearance of the thallus changes dramatically – as a photobiont it forms ellipsoidal or spherical single cells ( Tschermak-Woess 1988).
This genus closely resembles the genus Pleurastrum ( Guiry & Guiry 2022) . In the past, several species of Pleurastrum were reassigned to Leptosira based on examination of morphology and later molecular data ( Friedl 1996). Li et al. (2021) places this genus close to Xylochloris and Dictyochloropsis . However, this placement remains uncertain ( Sanders & Masumoto 2021).
The genus currently includes seven taxonomically accepted species ( Guiry & Guiry 2022), two of which, L. obovata and L. thrombii , enter lichen symbiotic associations ( Tschermak-Woess 1988; Roldán et al. 2004). A record of L. obovata comes from a cavity in limestone in the Garraf Mountains ( Spain), where the species occurred both free-living and as a photobiont of the lichen Macentina stigonemoides ( Roldán et al. 2004) .
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