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This is a list of species in the fruticose lichen genus Usnea, commonly known as "beard lichens". As of March 2025, Species Fungorum (in the Catalogue of Life) accepts 128 species of Usnea, although many more have been described throughout the genus's extensive taxonomic history. The fungal nomenclatural authority Index Fungorum lists nearly 2,000 taxa that have ever been associated with the ...
Usnea is a genus of fruticose lichens in the large family Parmeliaceae.The genus, which currently contains roughly 130 species, was established by Michel Adanson in 1763. . Species in the genus grow like leafless mini-shrubs or tassels anchored on bark or
Usnea hirta is a species of beard lichen in the family Parmeliaceae. It was one of 80 lichen species first formally described by Carl Linnaeus in his 1753 work Species Plantarum . Friedrich Heinrich Wiggers transferred it to the genus Usnea in 1780. [ 2 ]
Growing on a conifer in the hills north of Mount St. Helens, showing the leaf-like side-branches and pendent "stems", some of them several metres long. Dolichousnea longissima (syn. Usnea longissima), [2] [3] commonly known by the names old man's beard or Methuselah's beard lichen, is a fruticose lichen in the family Parmeliaceae.
The Parmeliaceae is a large and diverse family of Lecanoromycetes.With over 2700 species [2] in 71 genera, it is the largest family of lichen-forming fungi.The most speciose genera in the family are the well-known groups: Xanthoparmelia (822 species), Usnea (355 species), Parmotrema (255 species), and Hypotrachyna (262 species).
Usnea strigosa has worldwide distribution. It is a common tree lichen in Eastern and Southeastern North America. It is a common tree lichen in Eastern and Southeastern North America. [ 1 ] [ 2 ]
Usnea mutabilis is a grayish-yellowish pale green, unequally branching, shrubby 3–7 cm long lichen commonly anchored on holdfasts on trees, mostly in eastern North America, sometimes in chaparral shrubs or pines in California. [1]: 212 It is darker green than other members of the genus Usnea.
Usnea intermedia, the western bushy beard, is a grayish-yellowish pale green, irregularly much-branching, stiff shrubby fruticose lichen commonly anchored on holdfasts on trees, often on oaks. [ 1 ] : 201 Abundant apothecia are convex discs with a ring or thallus-like margin having tendril-like fringe radiating from it.