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Abrothallus canariensis

Pérez-Ort., van den Boom & Suija
2015
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Summary

Abrothallus canariensis is a species of lichenicolous fungus in the family Abrothallaceae. Found in the Canary Islands, it was formally described as a new species in 2015 by Sergio Pérez-Ortega, Pieter van den Boom, and Ave Suija. The type specimen was collected from Chinobre (Santa Cruz de Tenerife), where it was found on a Pseudocyphellaria aurata lichen that itself was growing on a species of Erica. The species epithet refers to the area of its type locality. The fungus is similar to Abrothallus secedens, but unlike that species, has four-spored asci, and larger ascospores that measure 16–25 by 6–9.5 μm....read more on Wikipedia.

Climate

What environment does Abrothallus canariensis prefer?

Natural Climate
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Natural Habitat

Where does Abrothallus canariensis grow?

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Observations

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Proteins

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Traditional Uses

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Credits & Sources

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