Chaenotheca brachypoda
{{Short description|Species of lichen}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2025}}
{{Use Oxford spelling|date=June 2025}}
{{Speciesbox
| image = Chaenotheca brachypoda 180357085.jpg
| taxon = Chaenotheca brachypoda
| authority = (Ach.) Tibell (1987)
| synonyms = *Lichen sulphureus {{small|Retz. (1769)}}
- Coniocybe brachypoda {{small|Ach. (1816)}}
- Calicium furfuraceum var. sulphurellum {{small|Link (1833)}}
- Coniocybe furfuracea subsp. brachypoda {{small|(Ach.) Arnold (1885)}}
- Coniocybe sulphurea {{small|(Retz.) Nyl. (1886)}}
- Chaenotheca sulphurea {{small|(Retz.) Middelb. & Mattsson (1987)}}
}}
Chaenotheca brachypoda is a species of lichen in the family Coniocybaceae. This tiny pin lichen is almost invisible except for its minute fruiting structures that rise like microscopic pins from tree bark, each topped with a yellow-green, frost-like coating containing distinctive acids. Originally described in 1816 from specimens growing on pine logs in Sweden, it lives mostly hidden within the bark of its host tree, with only hair-fine stalks extending upward to release powdery spores from spherical heads barely 0.2 mm across.
Taxonomy
The lichen was first described in 1816 by Erik Acharius as Coniocybe brachypoda. Acharius distinguished the species by its areolate-leproso greyish crust, spherical yellowish-farinose apothecia (fruiting bodies) on short thick stalks, and yellowish powdery spores. He noted that the species grows on wood, specifically on truncated pine logs in Sweden, and mentioned existing specimens in the herbarium at the eye level. Acharius compared it to Calicium chlorellum, noting that while it sometimes grows on the same wood and crust, C. brachypoda has a larger {{lichengloss|capitulum}} than Coniocybe furfuracea. Leif Tibell transferred the taxon to the genus Chaenotheca in 1987.
Description
Chaenotheca brachypoda is a tiny pin lichen whose main body (the thallus) lives almost entirely inside the bark it colonises, so little more than a faint stain is usually visible on the surface. Its internal algal partner (Stichococcus) forms a thin green layer that keeps the lichen self-sufficient by providing photosynthate. Above the bark rise the minute fruiting structures that give the species its pin-like appearance. Each consists of a hair-fine stalk only 0.04–0.08 mm thick that lifts the spore-bearing head 0.4–1.4 mm into the air. Both stalk and head are cloaked in a dense yellow-green {{lichengloss|pruina}}—a frost-like coating of crystalline pigments containing vulpinic and pulvinic acids—which sometimes leaves the lower half of the stalk exposed as glossy black. The head itself is near-spherical, just 0.1–0.2 mm across. Its outer rim ({{lichengloss|exciple}}) is poorly developed and may appear only as a slight collar sitting below the dark-brown {{lichengloss|mazaedium}}, the powdery mass of mature spores.
Microscopically, the sacs that produce spores (asci) grow in chains and vary in outline from cylindrical to irregular. Each ascus releases numerous spherical to cuboid ascospores 3–4 μm in diameter. The spore walls are unevenly thickened and show a network of fine cracks, features that help separate C. brachypoda from closely related species.
References
{{Reflist|refs=
{{Catalogue of Life |id=T9SX |title=Chaenotheca brachypoda (Ach.) Tibell |access-date=17 June 2025}}
{{cite web |title=Synonymy: Chaenotheca brachypoda (Ach.) Tibell |url=http://www.speciesfungorum.org/Names/SynSpecies.asp?RecordID=131053 |publisher=Species Fungorum |access-date=12 February 2012}}
}}
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Category:Lichens described in 1816