The species has only been collected from Oklahoma in the United States, and is the only member of the genus reported from the country.[1] The genus was first described from Europe in 1996.[2]
Habitat
When it was first described, the species had only been collected three times, all from sheltered faces of non-calcareoussandstone cliffs, in areas with high light exposure.[1]
Reichlingia americana contains notable quantities of 2'-O-methylperlatolic acid, which has been observed in several other genera of Arthoniomycetes, but R. americana distinguishes itself from other Arthoniomycetes due to its unique white, cracked, thallus with immersed apothecia and unique spore morphology (spores are submuriform with a terminal cell bigger than the others).[1] Those spores, and that chemistry, combined with the habitat preference and geographic distribution, distinguish it from other members of the Reichlingia genus.[1]
References
^ abcdeMorse, Caleb A.; Ladd, Douglas (2021). "A new species of Reichlingia (Arthoniaceae) from the grasslands of central North America". The Bryologist. 124 (1): 33–38. doi:10.1639/0007-2745-124.1.033. S2CID232326828.
^Diederich, P.; Scheidegger, C. (1996). "Reichlingia leopoldii gen. et sp. nov., a new lichenicolous hyphomycete from Central Europe". Bulletin de la Société des Naturalistes Luxembourgeois. 97: 3–8.
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