Gibbosporina revisited: new records from Fiji, Indonesia, New Caledonia, Papua New Guinea, and Queensland, with one species from the Solomon Islands transferred to Pannaria.
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/25020Date
2020-07Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
More than 40 Australasian collections of the genus Gibbosporina have been studied and
found to confirm the concepts of the six species previously known from Australia and Papua
New Guinea. Perispore morphology is the character most useful for identification.
Gibbosporina nitida appears to be the most common species in the area. Gibbosporina elixii
and G. leptospora were previously thought to be very rare, known from only two localities
each, but they are reported here from several new localities. Gibbosporina thamnifera was
previously known from only the Eungella National Park in Queensland and from one locality
in Papua New Guinea, but is now known from further localities. New Caledonia is now known
to have three species, G. leptospora newly reported. Fiji also has three species, G. leptospora,
G. nitida and G. sphaerospora newly reported here, and G. sphaerospora is also reported as
new to Papua New Guinea. Gibbosporina phyllidiata, previously known from only the sterile
holotype specimen from the Solomon Islands, is now shown to contain pannarin, and is
therefore much better accommodated in Pannaria under its new name P. melanesica
Description
Published version available at https://nhm2.uio.no/botanisk/lav/RLL/AL/AL87.pdf.
Publisher
Australasian Lichen SocietyCitation
Elvebakk A, Sipman H. Gibbosporina revisited: new records from Fiji, Indonesia, New Caledonia, Papua New Guinea, and Queensland, with one species from the Solomon Islands transferred to Pannaria.. Australasian Lichenology. 2020;87:52-57Metadata
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