Baculifera is a genus of lichens in the family Caliciaceae.[1] It was circumscribed in 2000 by Bernhard Marbach and Klaus Kalb. Species in this genus are characterized by having bacilliform conidia typically measuring 8–11 μm long, and a non-inspersed hymenium. The genus is roughly similar in morphology to Buellia.[2]

Baculifera
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Lecanoromycetes
Order: Caliciales
Family: Caliciaceae
Genus: Baculifera
Marbach & Kalb (2000)
Type species
Baculifera orosa
Marbach (2000)

Description

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The thallus is crustose: it forms a thin, appressed crust that can be smooth and continuous or break into patches, and in some species it lies mostly within the bark (endophloeodal). It lacks a distinct outer cortex (ecorticate), and a faint marginal prothallus may be present. The photobiont is a unicellular green alga with roughly spherical cells about 8–18 μm across.[3]

Sexual reproductive structures are apothecia that are lecideine (with only a proper margin, not a thalline one) and sessile. The disc is black and flat, wavy, or slightly convex, without a whitish frosting (epruinose). The proper exciple is persistent, the same colour as the disc, and cup-shaped in section, appearing opaque dark brown. The hymenium is clear and not filled with oil droplets (hyaline, not inspersed) and carries a dark, pigmented epithecial layer. Paraphyses are simple or only sparsely branched and tend to stick together in a KOH test; their tips bear a distinct, internally pigmented cap. The asci are club-shaped and usually contain 3–8 spores. Their apical cap (tholus) is well developed and amyloid (staining blue with iodine), sometimes with a slightly more intensely amyloid band beside a broad or narrow conical central plug (a masse axiale) whose rounded apex usually extends through the tholus.[3]

The ascospores are brown to grey-brown, ellipsoid, sometimes slightly curved, and divided by 1–3 cross-walls. They lack a clear outer halo, and occur in two main forms: a Buellia-type with fairly even walls and little thickening, and a Callispora-type with slight to strong wall thickenings near the ends and the middle. Asexual reproduction occurs in immersed pycnidia that produce short, rod-shaped conidia (bacilliform). In chemical tests, many species contain atranorin and/or norstictic acid, while others have no detectable secondary metabolites.[3]

Species

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References

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  1. "Baculifera". Catalogue of Life. Species 2000: Leiden, the Netherlands. Retrieved 15 September 2025.
  2. Marbach, Bernhard (2000). Corticole und lignicole Arten der Flechtengattung Buellia sensu lato in den Subtropen und Tropen [A study of corticolous and lignicolous species of the lichen genus Buellia s.l. in subtropical and tropical regions]. Bibliotheca Lichenologica (in German). Vol. 74. J. Cramer. p. 113. ISBN 978-3-443-58053-7.
  3. 1 2 3 Kantvilas, G. (2025). de Salas, M.F. (ed.). "Baculifera, version 2025:1". Flora of Tasmania Online. Hobart: Tasmanian Herbarium, Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery. Retrieved 15 September 2025.
  4. Elix, John A. (2020). "Ten new species and two new records of buellioid lichens (Physciaceae, Ascomycota) from Australia and Norfolk Island" (PDF). Australasian Lichenology. 87: 3–19. Open access icon
  5. 1 2 3 4 Elix, J.A.; Kantvilas, G. (2014). "New species and new records of the lichen genus Baculifera (Physciaceae, Ascomycota) in Australia". Australasian Lichenology. 75: 28–37.