Department of the Environment and Water Resources home page

About us | Contact us | Publications | What's new

Header imagesHeader imagesHeader images

Australian Biological Resources Study

 
 
Checklist of the Lichens of Australia and its Island Territories
     
Introduction | A–D | E–O | P–R | S–Z | Oceanic Islands | References
     
     
Metus conglomeratus (F.Wilson) D.J.Galloway & P.James
     
  Notes Roy. Bot. Gard. Edinburgh 44: 566 (1987)
Pilophoron conglomeratum F.Wilson, Victorian Naturalist 6: 68 (1889); republished in J. Linn. Soc., Bot. 28: 372 (1891). T: Black Spur, Vic., F.R.M.Wilson 70; holo: BM.
 
     
  Primary thallus emerald green, occasionally brownish or yellowish green, granular, forming a contiguous or rather dispersed, widespreading crust over a thin brown to black prothallus. Podetia to 25 mm tall, 1–4 mm wide, subterete, longitudinally striate and fissured, covered with green corticate granules or decorticate and pale to brownish in patches, mostly simple, becoming irregularly branched towards apices. Apothecia 1–5 mm wide, subglobose, becoming irregularly convoluted, pale reddish to dark brown, commonly forming cerebriform, conglomerate clusters to 5 (–10) mm wide. Ascospores usually 8–13 × 2.5–3.5 µm. Pycnidia mostly at apices of sterile pin-like podetia to c. 2 mm tall, dispersed, or crowded in sterile thalli, black-brown. CHEMISTRY: protolichesterinic and lichesterinic acid, ±atranorin. N.Z. populations contain caperatic acid (Galloway & James, op. cit. 568).
     
  Common and widespread in Tas. from sea level to alpine altitudes in cool temperate rainforest, on moist shaded tree trunks or rotting wood, usually over bryophytes. Uncommon in Vic., but sterile thalli possibly overlooked. Rare in Qld. Also in N.Z.  
     
   
     
     
  Kantvilas (1992b)  

Checklist Index
Introduction | A–D | E–O | P–R | S–Z | Oceanic Islands | References
 
 
Copyright

This work is copyright. Apart from any use as permitted under the Copyright Act 1968, no part may be reproduced by any process without prior written permission from Australian Biological Resources Study. Requests and inquiries concerning reproduction and rights should be addressed in the first instance to Dr P. McCarthy. These pages may not be displayed on, or downloaded to, any other server without the express permission of ABRS.


Top | About us | Advanced search | Contact us | Information services | Publications | Site index | What's new