Overview

Brief Summary

Description

 Thallus: foliose, adnate to loosely adnate, appressed, orbicular, (2-) 3-8 (-12) cm diam., often rather randomly arranged; lobes: usually 1-4 mm long, 0.5-1.5 mm broad, flat, linear to sublinear, divergent to contiguous or crowded and overlapping, sometimes quite dissected, irregularly (± pinnately) branched, tips rounded, often forked; upper surface: whitish mineral gray, light gray or bluish gray, or in some thalli becoming darker and distinctly greenish or brownish, sometimes wrinkled or shallowly pitted in older parts, continuous to faintly rimulose; lobe tips shiny, becoming rough with incipient isidia; isidia: laminal, abundant, cylindrical, simple to branched, to c. 2 mm tall, usually with warty tips, grayish- or yellowish-brown, to brown-black and shiny at tips, often breaking, rarely becoming granulose and coalescing to form a paler gray or greenish sorediate-isidiate mass; medulla: white; algal layer with Trebouxia; lower surface: white to cream-color or pale brownish, somewhat wrinkled; rhizines: sparse to dense, brownish or darkening, simple, c. 0.5-1 mm long, sometimes short and wart-like; Apothecia: occasional, 2-7 mm diam., flat, saucer-shaped, adnate; disc: pale gray or brownish or reddish brown, dull, epruinose; thalloid margin persistent, entire or breaking up into isidia; ascospores: ellipsoid, (5-) 6 (-9) x (3.5-) 4 (-6) micrometer; Pycnidia: rare, small, black, at or near margins of lobes, up to 0.1 mm diam.; conidia: 3-4 x 1 micrometer; Spot tests: upper cortex and medulla K+ deep yellow, C-, KC-, P+ deep yellow, orange, or reddish, UV-; Secondary metabolites: upper cortex with atranorin and chloroatranorin; medulla with thamnolic acid (major) and decarboxythamnolic acid (trace).; Substrate and ecology: on bark of conifers and on dead stumps in open pine-oak woodlands and mixed conifer forests, sometimes in ravines or near streams, occasionally on broad-leaved trees and shrubs, sometimes on old wood, rarely on rocks; World distribution: circumpolar, boreal, montane; in North America, Europe, Asia, Australasia; Sonoran distribution: Arizona, Chihuahua, Sonora and Sinaloa, at 1300-3000 m.; Notes: Somewhat similar species include Parmelinopsis minarum and P. horrescens, both of which have dark lower surfaces and sparse cilia, Heterodermia granulifera, which has a dull, fibrous upper surface, pustular isidia, and a K+ red medulla, and Myelochroa obsessa, which has a pale yellowish medulla and sparse cilia. All of these species have different secondary metabolite profiles from either Imshaugia species. 
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© Lichen Unlimited: Arizona State University, Tempe.

Source: Lichen Flora of the Greater Sonoran Desert Region

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Distribution

National Distribution

Canada

Origin: Unknown/Undetermined

Regularity: Regularly occurring

Currently: Unknown/Undetermined

Confidence: Confident

United States

Origin: Unknown/Undetermined

Regularity: Regularly occurring

Currently: Unknown/Undetermined

Confidence: Confident

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Conservation

Conservation Status

National NatureServe Conservation Status

Canada

Rounded National Status Rank: NNR - Unranked

United States

Rounded National Status Rank: NNR - Unranked

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NatureServe Conservation Status

Rounded Global Status Rank: G5 - Secure

Reasons: "Imshaugia aleurites is common on bark of conifers and hardwoods, old wood, tree stumps, and more rarely on rocks from the upper Great Lakes, eastern Canada, and New England southward in the mountains and foothills to Georgia and Alabama" (Flenniken 1999).

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Names and Taxonomy

Taxonomy

Comments: Stable. Moved from Parmelopsis.

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