Leptogium

Genus of lichens


title: "Leptogium" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["leptogium", "peltigerales-genera", "lichen-genera", "taxa-described-in-1810", "taxa-named-by-erik-acharius"] description: "Genus of lichens" topic_path: "general/leptogium" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leptogium" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Genus of lichens ::

| image = Leptogium phyllocarpum 69094.jpg | image_caption = Leptogium phyllocarpum | taxon = Leptogium | authority = (Ach.) Gray (1821) | type_species = Leptogium lacerum | type_species_authority = (Sw.) Gray (1821) | subdivision_ranks = Species | subdivision =

Leptogium is a genus of lichen-forming fungi in the family Collemataceae. It has about 110 species. Species formerly classified under Leptogium have since been divided among the genera Leptogium, Pseudoleptogium, and Scytinium. Leptogium lichens are predominantly found on tree bark or soil, often among mosses, and sometimes on rocks in moist environments.

Taxonomy

In 2013, a proposal supported by molecular phylogenetics data was made to conserve the genus Leptogium with a conserved type, aiming to maintain the current broader classification including both small- and larger foliose species within Leptogium, while segregating the smaller squamulose species into Scytinium. This conservation was recommended by a vote of 14-0-1 to prevent the necessity of reclassifying about 100 species into new genera such as Malotium. The proposal was widely supported by the Nomenclature Committee for Fungi as it simplifies the taxonomy and maintains historical continuity for the genus Leptogium.

A broad molecular re-assessment of the jelly lichens (Collemataceae) showed that the long-used genera Collema and Leptogium were not each monophyletic. Using four DNA markers, the authors recovered ten well-supported lineages and, to align names with both molecules and morphology, they treated those lineages as genera. In that framework Leptogium is re-circumscribed to the clade formed by “B+C” in their trees, the group that includes Leptogium azureum—the conserved type species designated by Jørgensen and colleagues—so that the name Leptogium covers a coherent lineage. They also showed that a "true cortex" (a proper eucortex) has evolved several times, so cortex alone cannot define genera; instead, the revised classification combines molecular evidence with traits such as habitat, thallus size and anatomy, and spore type.

In this modern sense, Leptogium comprises the large, foliose, eucorticate jelly lichens, typically with more than a few millimetres wide that can interconnect and swell conspicuously when wet, and it is mainly epiphytic (growing on bark) in wet tropical and humid temperate regions. The authors formalised this usage by listing Leptogium azureum as type, and by treating several historic names as synonyms, including Collema sect. Mallotium (≡ Mallotium), Leptogiopsis, and Colleptogium. They contrasted Leptogium with Scytinium, which contains smaller species (often with a rather than a true cortex), more frequently on soil, mosses, or rock, and centred in temperate regions.

Description

Leptogium is characterized by its foliose, gelatinous thallus, which varies in colour from blue-grey to olive-brown or blackish. The upper and lower of these lichens consists of a single layer of roughly equal-sized cells. The medulla, on the other hand, is made up of loosely intertwined hyphae intermingled with chains of cells. The upper surface of the thallus can range from smooth to wrinkled or ridged, often exhibiting a glossy appearance, while the lower surface may be smooth, web-like, or hairy, sometimes featuring small clusters of white rhizines.

Leptogium species often possess isidia and have Nostoc as their photobiont. The ascomata are , which can be sessile or shortly stalked and are predominantly . The may persist or become excluded, occasionally displaying a form. The is raised, cup-shaped, and mainly composed of arranged hyphae, with a colour that varies from colourless to reddish-brown. The of the lichen is either concave or flat.

The is colourless to reddish-brown and does not react with solutions of either potassium hydroxide or ammonia. The hymenium is colourless and turns blue when exposed to iodine. The is shallow and either colourless or pale yellowish. The consists of numerous, with slightly swollen apices. The asci are club-shaped () and contain four to eight spores, with the wall and turning blue in response to potassium hydroxide and iodine. are ellipsoidal, ovoid, or fusiform, sometimes featuring an apiculate end, and are septate and colourless. Lichen substances have not been detected by thin-layer chromatography in Leptogium species.

Species

, Species Fungorum (in the Catalogue of Life) accepts 86 species of Leptogium. ::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b4/Leptogium_chloromelum_-Flickr-pellaea(1).jpg" caption="''Leptogium chloromelum''"] ::

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/96/Leptogium_cochleatum_(Dicks.)_P.M.Jørg.&_P._James_202137.jpg" caption="''Leptogium cochleatum''"] ::

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/92/Leptogium_javanicum_-Flickr-_pellaea.jpg" caption="''Leptogium javanicum''"] ::

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/82/Leptogium_phyllocarpum_5745198.jpg" caption="''Leptogium phyllocarpum''"] ::

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/4f/Leptogium_saturninum_SM1_(2).JPG" caption="''Leptogium saturninum''"] ::

References

References

  1. (2020). "Peltigerales: Collemataceae, including the genera ''Blennothallia'', ''Callome'', ''Collema'', ''Enchylium'', ''Epiphloea'', ''Lathagrium'', ''Leptogium'', ''Pseudoleptogium'', ''Rostania'' and ''Scytinium''". Revisions of British and Irish Lichens.
  2. "''Leptogium''".
  3. (2010). "Occurrence of four additional non-hairy species of ''Leptogium'' from Maharashtra, India". The Lichenologist.
  4. (1983). "Studies on some ''Leptogium'' species of western Europe". The Lichenologist.
  5. (2010). "A new hairy ''Leptogium'' from Nepal". The Lichenologist.
  6. (2013). "Further contributions to the lichen genus ''Leptogium'' in southern South America". The Lichenologist.
  7. (2013). "(2235) Proposal to conserve the name ''Leptogium'' (lichenized Ascomycota) with a conserved type". Taxon.
  8. (2012). "The ''Leptogium juressianum'' complex in southeastern Brazil". Mycotaxon.
  9. (2013). "A revision of ''Leptogium'' species with spherical-celled hairs (Section ''Mallotium'' p.p.)". The Bryologist.
  10. (2015). "''Leptogium denticulatum'' (Collemataceae, lichenized Ascomycota) and some morphologically related species". The Bryologist.
  11. (2018). "A revision of ''Leptogium'' (Collemataceae, lichenized Ascomycota) from Antarctica with a key to species". The Lichenologist.
  12. (2007). "New species in the lichen genus ''Leptogium'' (Collemataceae) from tropical South America". Bibliotheca Lichenologica.
  13. (2012). "A new hairy species of ''Leptogium'' (Collemataceae) from China". Mycotaxon.
  14. (2015). "Two new species and a new record of ''Leptogium'' from China". Mycotaxon.
  15. (2007). "Lichenologische Nebenstunden. Contributions to lichen taxonomy and ecology in honour of Klaus Kalb".
  16. (2023). "Report of the Nomenclature Committee for Fungi: 22". Taxon.
  17. (2013). "A revised generic classification of the jelly lichens, Collemataceae". Fungal Diversity.
  18. (2016). "A revision of the ''Leptogium saturninum'' group in North America". The Lichenologist.
  19. (1990). "New Australasian species and records in the genus ''Leptogium'' S. Gray (lichenized Ascomycotina: Collemataceae)". Mycotaxon.
  20. (2022). "Outline of Fungi and fungus-like taxa – 2021". Mycosphere.
  21. (1893). "The lichens of Victoria. Part 1". Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria.

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