Abstract

Rock-inhabiting fungi (RIF) are melanized, meristematic fungi which dwell on and within rocks and have adapted to withstand harsh conditions in extreme habitats worldwide. Their morphological and genetic diversity remained unknown for a long time, but in the past few years culture-dependent and molecular phylogenetic approaches have contributed to uncovering the species richness of these otherwise very inconspicuous fungi. Only a few taxa of RIF develop both sexual reproductive structure (fertile stromata and/or pycnidia) and show multiple life styles, interacting with algae and lichen thalli in different ways. The genus Lichenothelia is one of these: It is characterized by fertile stromata and pycnidia and by species which can grow on and within exposed rocks, optionally associating with algae, with some species also being lichenicolous. The genus Lichenothelia includes up to now 25 species and form a monotypic family (Lichenotheliaceae) and order (Lichenotheliales) in Dothideomycetes. Here we focused on a group of Lichenothelia taxa distributed in the hot arid region of the Sonoran and Mojave Deserts in the Joshua Tree National Park in California. We performed molecular and morphological analyses and culture isolation and considered the ecology of the environmental samples to disentangle five species. We present the revision of two species already described, Lichenothelia calcarea and L. convexa, and introduce three new taxa to science, L. arida, L. umbrophila and L. umbrophila var. pullata.

Highlights

  • Black, meristematic, rock-inhabiting fungi (RIFs) dwell on and within exposed rock surfaces and can cope with harsh conditions, out-competing other organisms in extreme habitats (Gorbushina 2003, Sterflinger 2006)

  • Rock-inhabiting fungi can associate with microalgae, without forming the stratified structure recognized in lichen thalli

  • In this paper we focused on a group of Lichenothelia species distributed in the Sonoran and Mojave deserts in the Joshua Tree National Park in California, a hot arid region characterized by wide, flat valleys and rugged isolated mountain ranges

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Summary

Introduction

Meristematic, rock-inhabiting fungi (RIFs) dwell on and within exposed rock surfaces and can cope with harsh conditions, out-competing other organisms in extreme habitats (Gorbushina 2003, Sterflinger 2006). These fungi have been reported frequently from hot or cold arid regions around the world (Friedmann 1982, Henssen 1987, Ruibal et al 2005, Onofri et al 2007, Selbmann et al 2013a). The algal cells are loosely engulfed by the melanized hyphae or grow within the rock, distributed in a layer right below the black fungal mycelium These associations with algal colonies likely represent a further carbon source for the fungi and resemble primitive forms of lichenization (Kohlmeyer et al 2004)

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