Collema leptaleum
Crumpled bat's wing lichen, black jelly lichen
OooOooOoo Happy Halloween! I have picked a super spooky lichen to share with y'all on this most auspicious holiday! This crustose-subfoliose cyanolichen grows in thick, wrinkled clumps on the bark and twigs of trees in humid habitats. It has an unstratified thallus, meaning it lacks distinct internal layers and is instead a jumbled collection of fungal hyphae and cyanobacteria mixed together, allowing the thallus to more freely absorb water and swell or shrink as needed.
When dry, it is thin, brown to black, and wrinkled, and when moist, is thick, nodulous, gelatinous, and dark brown to olive green in color. It comes in 2 distinct varieties: C. leptaleum var. biliosum, which is sterile (non-apothecial producing) and has globular isidia, and C. lepataleum var. leptaleum which produces lots of reddish-brown apothecia. Inside the apothecia, the spores are described as "vermiform," or "worm-like," which is also kinda spooky! C. leptaleum has a wide, scattered distribution, and has been found in isolated populations in North and South America, Australia, Asia, Africa, and in only 1 location in Europe! Some pictures of it really do look like little black bats clinging to the side of tree, and I cannot imagine the loop that would throw me for. Either way, what a win. I freakin love bats, and I freakin love lichens.
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