Vermilacinia rosei is a fruticose lichen known from two islands off the Pacific Coast of central Baja California, San Roque Island and Cedros Island. The epithet, rosei, is in honor of Joseph Nelson Rose who collected the lichen on San Roque Island, 15 March 1911, during the Albatross Expedition.[1] His lichen specimens had been kept separate from the mounted and filed lichen collections in the herbarium at the Smithsonian Institution, Department of Botany, US)[2] loose in brown standard herbarium paper, and were made available to Richard Spjut sometime after 1986 while he was undertaking a revision of the genus Niebla.[3] The epithet was proposed by Albert William Herre who considered the lichen to be a new species but did not describe the species or publish the name.[3] .

Vermilacinia rosei
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Lecanoromycetes
Order: Lecanorales
Family: Ramalinaceae
Genus: Vermilacinia
Species:
V. rosei
Binomial name
Vermilacinia rosei
Spjut (1996)

Distinguishing Features

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Vermilacinia rosei is classified in the subgenus Vermilacinia in which it is distinguished from related species by its thallus divided into relatively few fan-shaped branches (less than 10)—widely expanded above a short narrow stalk-like base—and by its secondary metabolites of triterpenes, referred to as T1 and T2 by their Rf values on thin-layer chromatography plates; their formulas are C30H50O2 (T1) and C30H50OO (T2). Lichen substances also include the triterpene zeorin and the diterpene (-)-16 α-hydroxykaurane that characterize subgenus Vermilacinia.[3] The broadly expanded branches from base to apex is similar to V. robusta, which differs by lacking the T1, T2 triterpenes, and by having a definite tubular shape to the branches. Vermilacinia varicosa, also from Isla San Roque, appears morphological indistinguishable from V. rosei, differing only in chemistry, lacking the two triterpenes, which appear to have phytogeography significance in the species classification of Vermilacinia.[3] A specimen from Cedros Island referred to this species, collected by Richard Spjut and Richard Marin in April 1990, differs by having a thicker reticulate ridged cortex, 75–110 μm thick, compared to the cortex in the type collection with crater-like depression, 45–65(-75) μm thick.[3]

Taxonomic History

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Vermilacinia rosei was described by Richard Spjut in 1996 from study of herbarium specimens at the United States National Herbarium, Smithsonian Institution.[3] Peter Bowler and Janet Marsh in 2004 included V. rosei under their Niebla laevigata (= Vermilacinia laevigata), among five other species of Vermilacinia without explanation.[4] The morphology and chemistry differ conspicuously between the two species. Among the species recognized by Bowler and Marsh, V. rosei appears more similar to V. robusta than to V. laevigata.[3]

References

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  1. ^ Towsend,. C. H. 1916. Voyage of the U.S.S. Albatross in Lower California Seas. Cruise of 1911. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 35:399–476
  2. ^ US is the acronym for the United States National Herbarium as standardized by the Index Herbariorum, http://sciweb.nybg.org/science2/IndexHerbariorum.asp
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Spjut, R. W. 1996. Niebla and Vermilacinia (Ramalinaceae) from California and Baja California. Sida Miscellany 14
  4. ^ Bowler, P. and J. Marsh. 2004. Niebla. ‘Lichen Flora of the Greater Sonoran Desert 2: 368–380
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