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Squamulose lichen

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Placidium arboreum is a squamulose lichen with squamules that become green when wet.

A squamulose lichen is a lichen that is composed of small, often overlapping "scales" called squamules.[1] If they are raised from the substrate and appear leafy, the lichen may appear to be a foliose lichen, but the underside does not have a "skin" (cortex), as foliose lichens do. [2] Squamulose lichens are composed of flattish units that are usually tightly clustered. They are like an intermediate between crustose and foliose lichens.

Examples of squamulose lichens include Vahliella leucophaea, Cladonia subcervicornis and Lichenomphalia hudsoniana.[3]

References

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  1. ^ Dobson, F.S. (2011). Lichens, an illustrated guide to the British and Irish species. Slough, England: Richmond Publishing Co. Ltd. ISBN 9780855463151.
  2. ^ "Morphology of Lichens". www.ucmp.berkeley.edu. Retrieved 20 December 2022.
  3. ^ "FAQs". Images of British Lichens. Retrieved 3 April 2020.