Hyperphyscia

Genus of lichen-forming fungi


title: "Hyperphyscia" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["caliciales", "lichen-genera", "caliciales-genera", "taxa-described-in-1894", "taxa-named-by-johannes-müller-argoviensis"] description: "Genus of lichen-forming fungi" topic_path: "general/caliciales" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperphyscia" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Genus of lichen-forming fungi ::

| image = Hyperphyscia adglutinata Custrein 10.jpg | image_caption =Hyperphyscia adglutinata | taxon = Hyperphyscia | authority = Müll.Arg. (1894) | type_species = Hyperphyscia synthalea | type_species_authority = (C.Knight) Müll.Arg. (1894) | subdivision_ranks = Species | subdivision =

Hyperphyscia is a genus of lichen-forming fungi in the family Physciaceae. These lichens form tightly attached, leaf-like crusts that spread outward in rosettes, with individual radiating in shallow, overlapping tiers that are seldom more than a millimetre or two wide and range in colour from pale brownish-grey to dark brown. They reproduce through brown, disc-shaped fruiting bodies that sit directly on the upper surface and contain thick-walled brown ascospores divided by a single cross-wall, typical of many members of their family.

Taxonomy

The genus was circumscribed by the Swiss lichenologist Johannes Müller Argoviensis in 1894. He assigned Hyperphyscia synthalea as the type species.

Description

Hyperphyscia forms a tightly attached, leaf-like crust that spreads outward in a rosette. Viewed from above, the individual lobes radiate in shallow, overlapping tiers and are seldom more than a millimetre or two wide. Their surface is dull and free of any frost-like bloom (), ranging in colour from pale brownish-grey to dark brown. The lower surface is much paler and bears only a scattering of very short, almost hidden rhizines that anchor the thallus to bark or stone. Internally, the upper is built of roughly cube-shaped cells with cavities three to seven micrometres across, while the lower cortex is restricted to the lobe tips; there it consists of tightly woven brown hyphae whose minute cells merge into the substrate. Some species develop granular soralia—tiny eruptions that release powdery propagules for vegetative dispersal. The photosynthetic partner ) is a green alga of the Trebouxia type.

Sexual reproduction takes place in disc-shaped apothecia (fruiting bodies) that sit directly on the upper surface. Each is brown, and lacks any whitish dusting, while its rim is made from the same fungal–algal tissue as the rest of the thallus (a ). A pale-brown covers the colourless hymenium beneath; this spore layer turns blue in iodine, a reaction lichenologists use for identification. The hymenium is threaded with slender paraphyses that branch near the top and end in club-shaped tips capped by a thin, dark-brown pigment. The asci are narrow, eight-spored and conform to the Lecanora type; their spores mature to a single-septate, thick-walled brown form typical of many members of the family Physciaceae. Asexual spores are produced in immersed pycnidia whose otherwise colourless walls are ringed by a brown zone at the pore; they release thread-like conidia formed on short, barrel-shaped cells. Chemical tests have yet to detect lichen acids in the genus, although some species contain traces of the orange pigment skyrin, visible only under the microscope or by chromatography.

Species

, Species Fungorum (in the Catalogue of Life) accept eight species of Hyperphyscia, although several more than this have been described in the genus.

References

References

  1. (2022). "Caliciales: Physciaceae, including the genera ''Anaptychia'', ''Heterodermia'', ''Hyperphyscia'', ''Mischoblastia'', ''Phaeophyscia'', ''Physcia'', ''Physciella'', ''Physconia'', ''Rinodina'' and ''Tornabea''".
  2. "''Hyperphyscia''".
  3. (2012). "A new North American species of ''Hyperphyscia'' (Physciaceae)". The Bryologist.
  4. (2015). "The genus ''Hyperphyscia'' (Physciaceae, Ascomycota) in Argentina". Sydowia.
  5. Kashiwadani, H.. (1985). "Genus ''Hyperphyscia'' (lichen) in Japan". Bulletin of the National Science Museum Tokyo.
  6. (2018). "New and noteworthy lichen-forming and lichenicolous fungi 7". Acta Botanica Hungarica.
  7. Moberg, R.. (1987). "The genera ''Hyperphyscia'' and ''Physconia'' in East Africa". Nordic Journal of Botany.
  8. Müller, J.. (1894). "Conspectus systematicus lichenum Novae Zelandiae". Bulletin de l'Herbier Boissier.
  9. Scutari, N.C.. (1991). "''Hyperphyscia variabilis'', a new foliose species of Physciaceae With 3-septate spores". The Lichenologist.
  10. Scutari, N.C.. (1997). "Three new species of ''Hyperphyscia'' (Physciaceae, lichenized Ascomycotina), with a revision of ''Hyperphyscia adglutinata''". Mycotaxon.
  11. van der Pluijm, Arno. (2020). "''Hyperphyscia lucida'' (Physciaceae, lichenized Ascomycota), a new species from willow forests in the Biesbosch, the Netherlands". Lindbergia.
  12. (2022). "Outline of Fungi and fungus-like taxa – 2021". Mycosphere.

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

calicialeslichen-generacaliciales-generataxa-described-in-1894taxa-named-by-johannes-müller-argoviensis