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Fossilised Anzia (Lecanorales, lichen-forming Ascomycota) from European Tertiary amber

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 October 2002

Jouko RIKKINEN
Affiliation:
Department of Applied Biology, P.O. Box 27, University of Helsinki, FIN-00014 Helsinki, Finland. E-mail: jouko.rikkinen@helsinki.fi
George O. POINAR
Affiliation:
Department of Entomology, Oregon State University, 2046 Cordley Hall, Corvallis, Oregon 97331-2907, USA.
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Abstract

Anzia electra sp. nov. is described and illustrated from Baltic amber dating back approx. 40 Myr. The diagnostic features of the fossilised species include the small, narrow lobed foliose thallus, two-layered medulla, lack of chondroidal axis, moniliform spongiostratum, and rhizines born singly at the margins of spongiostratum cushions. The fossil species demonstrates that all distinguishing features in the thallus morphology of Anzia sect. Anzia have remained stable for tens of millions of years. Hence the divergence of anzioid lichens must have occurred in the distant past, most probably before the Tertiary. The fossil also provides the first hard evidence that the disjunct-Laurasian distributions of some modern lichens represent relicts of a formerly wider range. The close similarity of the fossil to extant species in East Asia and eastern North America suggests that the present range of Anzia sect. Anzia is highly relict.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© The British Mycological Society 2002

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