Search references for HEPPIA. Phrases containing HEPPIA
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Genus of lichens
Heppia is a genus of olive, brownish, grey, or blackish squamulose, crustose, or peltate like lichens. Heppia was once the type genus of the family Heppiaceae
Heppia
Species of lichen-forming fungus
Heppia lutosa is a species of jelly lichen in the family Porocyphaceae. The species forms small scaly lobes up to 10 mm across that are attached to the
Heppia_lutosa
Species of lichen
Heppia arenacea is a species of terricolous (ground-dwelling) lichen in the family Lichinaceae. Discovered in Yemen, it is characterized by its sand-coloured
Heppia_arenacea
Species of lichen-forming fungus
and the Arabian Peninsula. Gloeoheppia erosa was originally described as Heppia erosa by Julius Steiner (1902), based on a single collection from earthy
Gloeoheppia_erosa
Species of lichen-forming fungus
Gloeoheppia in 1935, and a later revision upheld Gloeoheppia as distinct from Heppia, and fixed the application of Acharius's name by designating Schleicher's
Gloeoheppia_turgida
Species of lichen-forming fungus
affinities. In 1921 Edvard Vainio transferred it to Heppia, a genus of soil lichens. Several names, such as Heppia guepinii (Delise) Nyl., were once applied to
Peltula_euploca
Species of lichen
Heppia conchiloba (common soil ruby) is a gray to light brown squamulous to foliose terricolous (grows on soil) lichen that occurs in southwestern deserts
Heppia_conchiloba
Species of lichen
in the family Lichenopeltella. It grows on the thallus and apothecia of Heppia despreauxii. Lichenopeltella heppiae was first described by Dutch lichenologist
Lichenopeltella_heppiae
Single-species lichen genus
Pseudoheppia. Pseudoheppia can be distinguished from the closely related genus Heppia by its lack of pseudoparenchymatous tissue in the thallus, which is a key
Pseudoheppia
Haematomma similis Hafellia disciformis Hafellia dissa Hafellia reagens Heppia despreauxii Hertelidea pseudobotryosa Heterodea beaugleholei Heterodea muelleri
List of lichens of Western Australia
List_of_lichens_of_Western_Australia
Family of lichens
(1890) Cladopsis Nyl. (1885) Ephebe Fr. (1825) Gyrocollema Vain. (1929) Heppia Nägeli ex A.Massal. (1854) Lapismalleus M.Schultz & M.Prieto (2024) Lecidopyrenopsis
Porocyphaceae
Genus of lichen-forming fungi
Vainio proposed that Peltula should be considered a section of the genus Heppia rather than an independent genus. For decades, the genus Peltula saw limited
Peltula
Austrian botanist and lichenologist (1860–1938)
Dermatocarpon zahlbruckneri Hasse (1913); Epichloë zahlbruckneriana Henn. (1900); Heppia zahlbruckneri Hasse (1911); Lecanactis zahlbruckneri Herre (1907); Lecanora
Alexander_Zahlbruckner
Genus of lichens
genus by Vilmos Gyelnik in 1935, when he separated Heppia turgida (Ach.) Nyl. from the genus Heppia due to its distinctive 'gloeocapsiform' photobiont
Gloeoheppia
Species of lichen-forming fungus
small, peltate thallus resembles lichens in the genus Heppia. She noted that it can look like Heppia adglutinata and could be confused with it, but the internal
Pseudopeltula_heppioides
Symbiosis of fungi with algae or cyanobacteria
Heiomasia Helicobolomyces Helminthocarpon Helocarpon Hemithecium Henrica Heppia Heppsora Herpothallon Hertella Herteliana Hertelidea Heterocarpon Heterocyphelium
Outline_of_lichens
Nattrass. Genus: Heppia (Lichens) Heppia azurea Vain Heppia guepini Nyl. Heppia guepini var. nigrolimbata Nyl Heppia mossamedana Wain Heppia nigrolimbata
List of fungi of South Africa – H
List_of_fungi_of_South_Africa_–_H
Family of lichen-forming fungi
initially proposed for inclusion in the Lecideaceae based on its resemblance to Heppia and Psora, but is now also in the Ramalinaceae. Mycobilimbia is another
Lecideaceae
Family of lichen-forming fungi
family proposed by Alexander Zahlbruckner in 1906 to contain the genus Heppia. It was considered to differ from the Peltulaceae in the polysporous asci
Lichinaceae
Single-species lichen genus
Botanik und Zoologie. 116: 207–246. JSTOR 43922298. Schultz, M. (2005). "Heppia arenacea and Lempholemma polycarpum, two new species from southern Yemen
Peltolemma
Species of lichen
often in association with Endocarpiscum (a rare genus, now synonymous with Heppia), and characterised it by its yellow-green thallus and lobate margins with
Lepraria_lobificans
Helminthocarpon leprevostii – PE, AL, SE, RJ, SP Heppia despreauxii – CE, MS Heppia fuscata B – RJ Heppia murorum B – RJ Herpothallon adnatum – AM, RO, BA
List_of_lichens_of_Brazil
Species of lichen
note its occurrence alongside water-tolerant lichens such asPeltula and Heppia on perpetually damp rock faces. Didymella parvispora is a lichenicolous
Zahlbrucknerella_africana
German physician and botanist (1797–1867)
mycological family Heppiaceae commemorates his name, as does the lichen genus Heppia (Nägeli ex A.Massal, 1854), the botanical genus Heppiella (Regel, 1853;
Johann_Adam_Philipp_Hepp
Single-species fungal genus
3114/sim.2024.109.09. PMC 11663425. PMID 39717657. Schultz, M. (2005). "Heppia arenacea and Lempholemma polycarpum, two new species from southern Yemen
Pycnolemma
Genus of fungi
Lobaria (L. lobariae on lungwort lichens), Hypogymnia, Peltigera, Thelidium, Heppia, and more, spanning multiple lichen families. By the late 1990s, at least
Lichenopeltella
Genus of lichen-forming fungi
Bibcode:2011Phytx..18....1L. doi:10.11646/phytotaxa.18.1.1. Schultz, M. (2005). "Heppia arenacea and Lempholemma polycarpum, two new species from southern Yemen
Lempholemma
HEPPIA
HEPPIA
HEPPIA
HEPPIA
Girl/Female
Australian, Bengali, Indian, Telugu
Powerful Brain; Shadow
Boy/Male
Sikh
One who resides in the elixir of lords name
Boy/Male
American, British, English, German, Greek, Latin
Follower of Christ; From the Camp of the Roman Army
Boy/Male
Latin
Worthy of praise; of value. Saint Anthony is the patron sain of poor people. Famous Bearer:...
Girl/Female
Arabic, Muslim
Rare
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
Having Lighten / Bright Body
Male
English
Anglicized form of Irish Gaelic Tighearnán, TIERNAN means "little lord."
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from any of three places: the first, Cockfield in Durham, is named from an Old English personal name Cocca + feld ‘open country’; the second, Cockfield in Suffolk, is named from an Old English personal name Cohha, with the same second element; and the third, Cuckfield in Sussex, is believed to be from an Old English personal name Cuca + feld.
Boy/Male
Hebrew
From the red earth.
Girl/Female
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian
Boat
HEPPIA
HEPPIA
HEPPIA
HEPPIA
HEPPIA