Anagrams & Information About | English word LECANORA


LECANORA

2

Number of letters

8

Is palindrome

No

15
AN
ANO
CA
CAN
EC
ECA
LE
LEC
NO
NOR
OR
ORA
RA

5

5

664
AA
AAC
AAE
AAL
AAN
AAO
AAR

Examples of Using LECANORA in a Sentence

  • Two nationally scarce species of vascular plant, small adder's-tongue and northern knotgrass are found here, as is the nationally scarce lichen Lecanora straminea.
  • The dyes are extracted from such species as Roccella tinctoria (South American), Roccella fuciformis (Angola and Madagascar), Roccella pygmaea (Algeria), Roccella phycopsis, Lecanora tartarea (Norway, Sweden), Variolaria dealbata, Ochrolechia parella, Parmotrema tinctorum, and Parmelia.
  • Usnic acid was identified in many genera of lichens including Usnea, Cladonia, Hypotrachyna, Lecanora, Ramalina, Evernia, Parmelia and Alectoria.
  • Later he discovered, in addition to lecanoric acid, another new compound, parellic acid from Lecanora parella.
  • Morphological interactions between the phycobionts of different lichens and the mycobionts Cladonia cristatella and Lecanora chrysoleuca.
  • maura are black; Xanthoria parietina and Caloplaca marina are bright yellow and orange; Lecanora atra is grey; and Ramalina siliquosa is green.
  • Lecanora mugambii was first discovered and described by Paul Kirika, Imke Schmitt, Johnathon Fankhauser, and H.
  • It was formally described as a new species in 1867 by Finnish lichenologist William Nylander, originally as a member of the genus Lecanora.
  • Lecanora muralis (Protoparmeliopsis muralis) is a waxy looking, pale yellowish green crustose lichen that usually grows in rosettes radiating from a center (placodioid) filled with disc-like yellowish-tan fruiting bodies (apothecia).
  • Lecanora laxa is a species of saxicolous (rock-dwelling), crustose lichen in the family Lecanoraceae.
  • These eponyms include: Usnea kurokawae ; Parmelia kurokawae ; Lobaria kurokawae ; Physconia kurokawae ; Cetraria kurokawae ; Heterodermia kurokawae ; Scleropyrenium kurokawae ; Cladonia kurokawae ; Ramalina kurokawae ; Parmotrema kurokawianum ; Fellhaneropsis kurokawae ; Graphis kurokawae ; and Lecanora kurokawae.
  • Australian lichenologist John Elix transferred Lecidea aberrata to the genus Lecanora in 2007 because of the reduced or excluded algal cells in the apothecial margins, as well as the structure of its asci, both of which are features typical of Lecanora.
  • Lecanora polytropa, the granite-speck rim lichen, is a species of saxicolous (rock-dwelling), crustose lichen in the family Lecanoraceae.
  • Lecanora shangrilaensis can be distinguished from other multispored species of Lecanora by the presence of usnic acid rather than atranorin and the pruina-free discs with coarse granular epihymenium.
  • The lichen is similar in general morphology to Lecanora somervellii, but can be distinguished from that species by its small, squamulose (scaly) to marginally lobate umbilicate thallus and the persistent margin of its apothecia.
  • It is similar in morphology to Lecanora symmicta, from which it is distinguished by the continuous, areolate thallus, immersed apothecia with pale pink to pink-brown discs, and by the presence of atranorin and psoromic acid rather than usnic acid, zeorin and xanthones in the thallus.
  • These include: Caloplaca raesaenenii ; Lecanora raesaenenii ; Pertusaria raesaenenii ; Usnea raesaenenii ; and Verrucaria raesaenenii.
  • The species was first identified on the bark of a Phellodendron amurense tree in Tsukuba, where it grow alongside the other lichens Graphis handelii, Lecanora pulverulenta and Pertusaria pertusa.
  • In 2017, Divakar and colleagues proposed to subsume the Carbonicolaceae into the Lecanoraceae, because in their analysis, genus Carbonicola was found to be nested in Lecanora in the broad sense.
  • The major secondary compounds found in Lecanora achroa are atranorin, 2'-O-methylperlatolic acid, and usnic acid.



Search for LECANORA in:






Page preparation took: 283.34 ms.