0
Your shopping cart:
Nothing in your cart yet!Add a device?
ItemCountTotal
$
Log in to load your saved addresses.
< Back to Overview
Loading shipping options...
< Back to Address
Log in to load your saved payment methods.
Pay by Credit Card
or direct bank debit
Purchase Order
Pay by wire or bank transfer
After you confirm your order, we'll email you an invoice and all bank details to complete your purchase.
< Back to Shipping
Processing... Creating order Confirming inventory Processing payment Acquiring shipping Final confirmation (Cleaning up)
Order confirmed!
Summary
Devices$ 0
Plants$ 0
ShippingNot yet calculated
TaxesNot yet calculated
Total$ 0
Address
Shipping
Payment
Start Checkout

Hymenelia parva

Fryday & J.W. McCarthy
2018
Loading image...
Loading image...
Loading image...

Summary

Hymenelia parva is a species of saxicolous (rock-dwelling), crustose lichen in the family Hymeneliaceae. Found in Canada, it was formally described as a new species in 2018 by lichenologists Alan Fryday and John McCarthy. The type specimen was collected from Saint Mary's Bay in the Avalon Peninsula (Newfoundland and Labrador), where it was found growing on soft reddish-brown shale that was on the seashore. This area is part of the South Avalon–Burin oceanic barrens. The lichen is only known to occur in the type locality. The species epithet parva (Latin for "small" or "little") refers to its relatively small apothecia and ascospores....read more on Wikipedia.

Climate

What environment does Hymenelia parva prefer?

Natural Climate
Compiling climate data...
Sign Into apply these settings to any Meso Device or your Home Assistant.
Or download them as recipe:CompositeLights Only
Current Weather in Most Ideal Locations
PlaceRain (24h)Sun
Humidity
Hum.
Wind
Loading...0.8in918umol64%4mph
Loading...1.2in12umol84%9mph
Loading...0in18umol81%11mph

Native Habitat

Where does Hymenelia parva normally grow?

Loading habitat data...

Observations

Latest Research

Loading Hymenelia parva research...
No research found.
Error loading research, please try again in 30 seconds.

Proteins

No 3D model found. Try a different protein.

Traditional Uses

There's also wisdom in how different civilizations used fungi throughout the millenia.

And some people put tremendous effort into collecting and preserving it.

We're currently working on aggregating this information and making it available here.

Request Early Access

Credits & Sources

Collecting all attributions...