Lecanora strobilina
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Lecanora strobilina | |
Systematik | |
---|---|
Domän | Eukaryoter Eukaryota |
Rike | Svampar Fungi |
Division | Sporsäcksvampar Ascomycota |
Klass | Lecanoromycetes |
Ordning | Lecanorales |
Familj | Lecanoraceae |
Släkte | Lecanora |
Art | Lecanora strobilina |
Vetenskapligt namn | |
§ Lecanora strobilina | |
Auktor | (Spreng.) Kieff. |
Synonymer | |
Lecanora conizaea (Ach.) Nyl.[1] |
Lecanora strobilina är en lavart[2] som först beskrevs av Kurt Sprengel, och fick sitt nu gällande namn av Kieff. Lecanora strobilina ingår i släktet Lecanora och familjen Lecanoraceae.[3][4] Arten är reproducerande i Sverige.[5] Inga underarter finns listade i Catalogue of Life.[3]
Källor
- ^ Nyl. in Nylander (1872) Flora, Vol.: 55 p. 249
- ^ Kieff. (1895) Bull. Soc. Hist. Nat. Metz, Vol.: 19 p. 74
- ^ [a b] Bisby F.A., Roskov Y.R., Orrell T.M., Nicolson D., Paglinawan L.E., Bailly N., Kirk P.M., Bourgoin T., Baillargeon G., Ouvrard D. (red.) (9 augusti 2011). ”Species 2000 & ITIS Catalogue of Life: 2011 Annual Checklist.”. Species 2000: Reading, UK. http://www.catalogueoflife.org/annual-checklist/2011/search/all/key/lecanora+strobilina/match/1. Läst 24 september 2012.
- ^ LIAS: A Global Information System for Lichenized and Non-Lichenized Ascomycetes. Rambold G. (lead editor); for detailed information see http://liaslight.lias.net/About/Impressum.html and http://liasnames.lias.net/About/Impressum.html, 2011-03-09
- ^ Dyntaxa
- Wikimedia Commons har media som rör Lecanora strobilina.
- Wikispecies har information om Lecanora strobilina.
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Författare/Upphovsman: Ed Uebel, Licens: CC BY-SA 3.0
Lecanora strobilina (Sprengel) Kieffer, 1895
(photograph of a herbarium specimen taken through a dissecting microscope (x40) showing a pale yellowish green thallus with small, waxy light yellow apothecia)
[Chemical spot tests of thallus and apothecial section: PD-, K-, KC+ yellow, C- (usnic acid & zeorin)]
Growing on a dead limb on the ground at Soldiers Delight Natural Environment Area, in a woodland east of the gravel road leading to the pond in the area north of Wards Chapel Road; collected and identified by E.C. Uebel (No. U-465, 25 Jun 2003).Författare/Upphovsman: Ed Uebel, Licens: CC BY-SA 3.0
Lecanora strobilina (Sprengel) Kieffer, 1895
(photograph of a herbarium specimen)
Growing on bark of a small Acer rubrum at Liberty Reservoir, on the W side of Route 32, Carroll County, Maryland, USA; collected and identified by E.C. Uebel (No. U-267A, 14 Jul 2001).Författare/Upphovsman: Ed Uebel, Licens: CC BY-SA 3.0
Lecanora strobilina (Sprengel) Kieffer, 1895
(photograph of a herbarium specimen taken through a dissecting microscope (x20) showing a pale yellowish green thallus with small, waxy light yellow apothecia)
[Chemical spot tests of thallus and apothecial section: PD-, K-, KC+ yellow, C- (usnic acid & zeorin)]
Growing on a dead limb on the ground at Soldiers Delight Natural Environment Area, in a woodland east of the gravel road leading to the pond in the area north of Wards Chapel Road; collected and identified by E.C. Uebel (No. U-465, 25 Jun 2003).Författare/Upphovsman: Ed Uebel, Licens: CC BY-SA 3.0
Lecanora strobilina (Sprengel) Kieffer, 1895
(photograph of a spore taken through a compound microscope (x1000); spore measures 12 x 5 microns)
L. strobilina was growing on bark of dead branch of Pinus thunbergiana in the M-NCPPC Lake Artemesia Park, Berwyn Heights, Prince George's County, Maryland, USA; collected by E.C. Uebel, identified by H. Thorsten Lumbsch, Department of Botany, Field Museum of Natural History, 1400 S. Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, IL (Specimen No. U-484, 22 Oct 2004).Författare/Upphovsman: Ed Uebel, Licens: CC BY-SA 3.0
Lecanora strobilina (Sprengel) Kieffer, 1895
(photograph of a herbarium specimen taken through a dissecting microscope (x20) showing a pale yellowish green thallus with small, waxy light yellow apothecia)
[Chemical spot tests of thallus and apothecial section: PD-, K-, KC+ yellow, C- (usnic acid & zeorin)]
Growing on bark of dead branch of Pinus thunbergiana in the M-NCPPC Lake Artemesia Park, Berwyn Heights, Prince George's County, Maryland, USA; collected by E.C. Uebel, identified by H. Thorsten Lumbsch, Department of Botany, Field Museum of Natural History, 1400 S. Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, IL (Specimen No. U-484C, 22 Oct 2004).Författare/Upphovsman: Ed Uebel, Licens: CC BY-SA 3.0
Lecanora strobilina (Sprengel) Kieffer, 1895 - - Host trees
(photograph of Pinus thunbergiana trees with abundant colonies of Lecanora strobilina)
Lecanora strobilina grows abundantly on Japanese Black Pines planted in Lake Artemesia Park, Berwyn Heights, Prince George's County, Maryland, USA.Författare/Upphovsman: Ed Uebel, Licens: CC BY-SA 3.0
Lecanora strobilina (Sprengel) Kieffer, 1895
(photograph of a cross section of an apothecium, through a compound microscope (x1000), showing seven 1-celled, hyaline spores per ascus)
Growing on bark of dead branch of Pinus thunbergiana in the M-NCPPC Lake Artemesia Park, Berwyn Heights, Prince George's County, Maryland, USA; collected by E.C. Uebel, identified by H. Thorsten Lumbsch, Department of Botany, Field Museum of Natural History, 1400 S. Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, IL (Specimen No. U-484C, 22 Oct 2004).Författare/Upphovsman: Ed Uebel, Licens: CC BY-SA 3.0
Lecanora strobilina (Sprengel) Kieffer, 1895
(photograph of a herbarium specimen taken through a dissecting microscope (x40) showing a pale yellowish green thallus with small, waxy light yellow apothecia)
[Chemical spot tests of thallus and apothecial section: PD-, K-, KC+ yellow, C- (usnic acid & zeorin)]
Growing on bark of dead branch of Pinus thunbergiana in the M-NCPPC Lake Artemesia Park, Berwyn Heights, Prince George's County, Maryland, USA; collected by E.C. Uebel, identified by H. Thorsten Lumbsch, Department of Botany, Field Museum of Natural History, 1400 S. Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, IL (Specimen No. U-484C, 22 Oct 2004).Författare/Upphovsman: Ed Uebel, Licens: CC BY-SA 3.0
Lecanora strobilina (Sprengel) Kieffer, 1895
(photograph of a cross section of an apothecium, through a compound microscope (x1000), showing asci stained with iodine (Lugol's solution); note that the tips of the asci display the Lecanora-type of staining)
This specimen was growing on a fallen tree branch in the M-NCPPC Lake Artemesia Park, Berwyn Heights, Prince George's County, Maryland, USA; collected and identified by E.C. Uebel (No. U-505, Jan 2005).Författare/Upphovsman: Ed Uebel, Licens: CC BY-SA 3.0
Lecanora strobilina (Sprengel) Kieffer, 1895
(photograph of a herbarium specimen taken through a dissecting microscope (x40) showing a pale yellowish green thallus with small, waxy light yellow apothecia)
[Chemical spot tests of thallus and apothecial section: PD-, K-, KC+ yellow, C- (usnic acid & zeorin)]
Growing on bark of dead branch of Pinus thunbergiana in the M-NCPPC Lake Artemesia Park, Berwyn Heights, Prince George's County, Maryland, USA; collected by E.C. Uebel, identified by H. Thorsten Lumbsch, Department of Botany, Field Museum of Natural History, 1400 S. Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, IL (Specimen No. U-484C, 22 Oct 2004).