Parmotrema specimen 3

Feldberg, Kathrin, Kaasalainen, Ulla, Mamontov, Yuriy S., Gradstein, S. Robbert, Schäfer-Verwimp, Alfons, Divakar, Pradeep K. & Schmidt, Alexander R., 2025, Extending the fossil record of Miocene neotropical epiphyte communities, Fossil Record 28 (1), pp. 79-102 : 79-102

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.3897/fr.28.137758

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A10C1262-F859-4004-A83C-C8F032C1156A

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14947561

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FB66CEF0-0387-5E48-8271-55D844A39F21

treatment provided by

by Pensoft

scientific name

Parmotrema specimen 3
status

 

Parmotrema specimen 3 View in CoL View at ENA

Specimen.

American Museum of Natural History, New York, AMNH DR-14-294 .

Age and stratigraphic level.

15‒20 Ma, Langhian – Burdigalian (early to middle Miocene), La Toca Formation, Dominican Republic.

Description.

Lichen fragment approximately 1.7 × 1.3 mm in diameter. Thallus foliose, lobate. Lobes flat, linear, approximately 0.5 mm wide and 40 µm thick, lobe apices truncate to rounded. Upper surface slightly uneven with effigurate maculae, with prominent dark margins (Fig. 8 A View Figure 8 ). Marginal cilia long (up to 0.9 mm), branching, tapering (Fig. 8 A View Figure 8 ). Medulla pale (Fig. 8 C View Figure 8 ). Lower cortex dark (Fig. 8 B, C View Figure 8 ). Rhizines dark, mainly simple (Fig. 8 B View Figure 8 ). Apothecia, isidia, soredia, or pycnidia not present.

Discussion.

The general habit and long, branching and tapering marginal cilia identify the specimen as Parmotrema . The effigurate maculae on the upper surface and tapered marginal cilia of Parmotrema specimen 3 resemble the former genus Canomaculina ( Elix 1993) which has been synonymized with Parmotrema ( Blanco et al. 2005) . The Canomaculina group is characterized by tapered cilia, effigurate-maculate upper surface of the lobes, and simple and furcate to branched rhizines ( Elix 1993). The Canomaculina group contains more than ten extant species and has a center of distribution in South America ( Elix 1993; Blanco et al. 2005).

AMNH

American Museum of Natural History