Nodobryoria | |
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The budding apothecium of Nodobryoria oregana | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Fungi |
Division: | Ascomycota |
Class: | Ascomycetes |
Order: | Lecanorales |
Family: | Parmeliaceae |
Genus: | Nodobryoria Common & Brodo |
Type species | |
Nodobryoria subdivergens (Å.E. Dahl) Brodo & D. Hawksw. |
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Species | |
N. abbreviata |
Nodobryoria is a genus of medium to large, reddish-brown lichens that are hair-like to shrubby in shape and grow on conifer trees.[1] The genus contains three species, distributed in North America and Greenland,[2] which were previously included in the genus Bryoria.[3] Nodobryoria is similar in appearance to Bryoria, but is differentiated because it does not contain the polysaccharide lichenin (which is present in high quantities in Bryoria),[4] and it has a unique cortex composed of interlocking cells that look like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle when viewed under a light microscope.[5]
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