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Lichenicolous fungus

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The lichenicolous fungus Abrothallus parmeliarum growing on Parmelia saxatilis in Serra de São Mamede, Portugal

A lichenicolous fungus (from Latin cola 'inhabitant'; akin to Latin colere 'to inhabit') is a parasitic fungus that only lives on lichen as the host.[1] A lichenicolous fungus is not the same as the fungus that is the component of the lichen, which is known as a lichenized fungus.[2] They are most commonly specific to a given fungus as the host, but they also include a wide range of pathogens, saprotrophs, and commensals.[1]

Sometimes a lichenicolous fungus can steal the symbiont of another lichen (kleptosymbiosis) into their own thallus structure, becoming lichens too (trans-lichenisation). In this case, the fungus is known as a lichenicolous lichen. Lichenicolous lichens are generally very selective for their hosts.[3] By stealing another lichen's photobiont, a lichenicolous lichen saves energy for itself. Diploschistes muscorum is a typical example.[4]

As of 2018, there are 2,319 accepted species of lichenicolous fungi, distributed across 10 classes of Fungi (including Ascomycota and Basidiomycota), 55 orders, 115 families, and 397 genera. This group comprises 2,000 obligately lichenicolous species, 257 lichenicolous lichens, and 62 facultatively lichenicolous taxa. The majority, 96% (2,219 taxa), belong to the ascomycetes, and the remaining 4% (100 taxa) to the basidiomycetes. About half of the genera (198) are entirely lichenicolous. Additionally, six families (Abrothallaceae, Polycoccaceae, Adelococcaceae, Sarcopyreniaceae, Obryzaceae, and Cyphobasidiaceae, and two orders (Abrothallales and Cyphobasidiales) are completely dedicated to lichenicolous life. DNA sequence information is available for species in 128 genera.[5] In 2021, the genus Crittendenia was proposed to contain a new lichenicolous lineage in the Pucciniomycotina – the first known example in this subdivision of fungi.[6]

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See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Lichenicolous fungi : Worldwide Checklist". www.lichenicolous.net. Retrieved 2022-10-04.
  2. ^ Brodo, Irwin; Sharnoff, Sylvia; Sharnoff, Stephen (2001). Lichens of North America. New Haven, Conn. [u.a.]: Yale Univ. Press. ISBN 978-0300082494.
  3. ^ Pichler, Gregor; Muggia, Lucia; Carniel, Fabio Candotto; Grube, Martin; Kranner, Ilse (May 2023). "How to build a lichen: from metabolite release to symbiotic interplay". New Phytologist. 238 (4): 1362–1378. doi:10.1111/nph.18780. PMC 10952756.
  4. ^ Moya, Patricia; Molins, Arantzazu; Chiva, Salvador; Bastida, Joaquín; Barreno, Eva (20 August 2020). "Symbiotic microalgal diversity within lichenicolous lichens and crustose hosts on Iberian Peninsula gypsum biocrusts". Scientific Reports. 10 (1). doi:10.1038/s41598-020-71046-2. PMC 7441164.
  5. ^ Diederich, Paul; Lawrey, James D.; Ertz, Damien (2018). "The 2018 classification and checklist of lichenicolous fungi, with 2000 non-lichenized, obligately lichenicolous taxa". The Bryologist. 121 (3): 340–425. doi:10.1639/0007-2745-121.3.340.
  6. ^ Millanes, Ana M.; Diederich, Paul; Westberg, Martin; Wedin, Mats (2021). "Crittendenia gen. nov., a new lichenicolous lineage in the Agaricostilbomycetes (Pucciniomycotina), and a review of the biology, phylogeny and classification of lichenicolous heterobasidiomycetes". The Lichenologist. 53 (1): 103–116. doi:10.1017/S002428292000033X. hdl:10115/28130.
This page was last edited on 7 April 2024, at 12:51
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