Ohio Biological Survey, Bull. 10, Vol. 11, No. 6 - The Ascomycetes of Ohio IV and V by Bruce Fink;Leafy J. Corrington
page 18 of 56 (32%)
page 18 of 56 (32%)
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KEY TO THE SPECIES OF BIATORINA
Growing on another lichen 1. B. _heerii_ Growing on wood or on rocks. On old wood 2. B. _prasina_ On rocks. Exciple strong and seldom becoming covered 4. B. _chalybeia_ Exciple weak and usually becoming covered 3. B. _lentibularis_ 1. Biatorina heerii (Hepp) Fink Cont. Nat. Herb. 14: 83. 1910. _Biatora heerii_ Hepp, Spore Flecht. Eur. pl. 16. f. 135. 1853. Thallus of very minute, rounded and frequently heaped granules, sometimes visible under a hand lens, but often seen only in sections of the substratum, rarely disappearing; apothecia minute, 0.1 to 0.3 mm. in diameter, adnate to sessile, flesh-colored and blackening, flat to slightly convex, the concolorous or darker exciple commonly persistent; hypothecium and hymenium pale to light brown; paraphyses distinct to coherent-indistinct; asci clavate; spores ellipsoid, 7 to 12 mic. long and 3 to 3.5 mic. wide. Collected in Butler County. On the thallus of _Peltigera canina_. Not previously reported from Ohio. So minute as to be difficult to detect. Consequently nothing further is known of its distribution in the State. 2. Biatorina prasina (Fr.) Fink Cont. Nat. Herb. 14: 84. 1910. |
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