Francisrosea is a fungal genus in the family Gyalectaceae. It was established in 2021 to accommodate the distinctive species Francisrosea bicolor, a crustose lichen, bark-dwelling lichen from Great Britain. The genus is characterised by an inconspicuous, mostly immersed thallus and small, two-toned, powdery reproductive patches (soralia) without detectable .
Taxonomy
Francisrosea was circumscribed by Damien Ertz and Neil Sanderson in 2021. The type and only species is
F. bicolor; the
holotype was collected in the
New Forest (
Hampshire, England) from a wound track on ancient
Fagus sylvatica (voucher Sanderson 2200, BR). The genus was erected following multilocus DNA analyses, which recovered
Francisrosea as a distinct lineage sister to a
clade including
Gyalidea praetermissa,
Neopetractis and
Ramonia. Although placed in the family
Gyalectaceae in the protologue, the authors noted that family-level limits remain unsettled because the broader tree backbone is poorly resolved.
The generic name honours the British field botanist and woodland lichen specialist Francis Rose (1921–2006). The botanical name bicolor refers to the two-coloured soralia.
Description
The
thallus is immersed in the outer bark and usually visible only where the soralia break through the surface. Soralia are discrete, slightly domed and erumpent, typically 0.2–0.8 mm across, pale green internally with an orange-ochre surface and rim, which gives a bicoloured appearance; they are usually scattered but may rarely occur in small clusters of up to four, forming patches to about 1.5 mm across.
Soredia are without projecting hyphae and measure (25–)30–50(–70) μm; the is , with algal cells 6–13 μm across occurring in short chains of 2–6 (less often up to 8) cells. Hyphae are I−, KI−; no crystals are seen in
polarised light. Standard spot tests are negative (K−, C−, KC−, PD−, UV−) and thin-layer chromatography detected no
acetone-soluble secondary metabolites.
Sexual structures are unknown for
Francisrosea;
apothecia and
pycnidia have not been observed.
Distribution and habitat
Francisrosea bicolor has a stronghold in the New Forest, Hampshire, where it has been recorded from 26 woods since 1992. It is most frequently found in long, shaded wound tracks on mature or senescent
Fagus sylvatica and less often on
Quercus robur; associated growths include algae films and
such as
Metzgeria furcata and
Zygodon rupestris. A confirmed outlying British record is from a wound track on ancient
Quercus at Rydal Park,
Lake District. Outside the New Forest the true distribution is unclear due to past confusion with superficially similar taxa, but it is probably present in
Exmoor and
North Wales.
Similar species
Francisrosea bicolor has often been confused with
Thelopsis corticola, which also forms ochre-tinged soralia on bark. In
T. corticola the soralia are typically finer and more compact, more frequently confluent into larger (2–3 mm) patches, and the soredia are smaller (about 10–17 μm);
T. corticola can also bear perithecia, whereas
F. bicolor is only known sterile.
Other orange-sorediate crusts differ chemically or structurally:
Porina multipuncta has numerous minute, uniformly bright orange soralia;
Zwackhia sorediifera has C+ (pink-red) soralia; and
Caloplaca lucifuga has soralia reacting K+ (purple).