Pseudendoclonium Wille.

Veselá, Veronika, Malavasi, Veronica & Škaloud, Pavel, 2024, A synopsis of green-algal lichen symbionts with an emphasis on their free-living lifestyle, Phycologia 63 (3), pp. 317-338 : 329

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.1080/00318884.2024.2325329

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15536521

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5F246365-FFE6-FFF3-7525-FEE745F6FBFE

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Pseudendoclonium Wille.
status

 

Pseudendoclonium Wille. View in CoL

Pseudendoclonium View in CoL possesses the typical Dilabifilum View in CoL -like packet-forming to filamentous morphology with cells differentiating into prostrate and erect systems ( Fig. 26 View Figs 19–30 ), which makes accurate determination impossible without molecular methods. In addition, these genera often exhibit considerable phenotypic plasticity ( Darienko & Pröschold 2017). The genus with 10 accepted species ( Guiry & Guiry 2022) includes free-living (mostly marine, sometimes freshwater, terrestrial or aerophytic; Škaloud et al. 2018) and lichen-symbiotic members. Crustose Verrucariaceae View in CoL lichens, belonging to the genera Hydropunctaria View in CoL , Verrucaria and Wahlenbergiella View in CoL are often associated with P. commune , P. arthropyreniae , P. submarinum and P. incrustans ( Darienko & Pröschold 2017; Černajová et al. 2022).

Free-living P. commune was isolated from coastal rocks, Snake Island, Ukraine and from a concrete block in the tidal zone on Oakland beach, RI, USA ( Darienko & Pröschold 2017). A free-living strain closely related to P. arthropyreniae was cultivated from material collected from stone surfaces of the Borobudur Temple, Indonesia ( Purbani et al. 2020). Environmental sequences of P. submarinum , P. commune and P. arthropyreniae were recovered from the littoral rocks of the North Sea and the Baltic Sea ( Schmidtová 2022).

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