Acanthothecis archeri is a species of corticolous (bark-dwelling) script lichen in the family Graphidaceae. It has a yellowish to reddish-brown crust with elongated, pale cream fruiting bodies. The species is found in tropical rainforests and moist deciduous woodlands in India, including the Andaman and Nicobar Islands and Karnataka.
Acanthothecis archeri was described as a new species in 2010 by Bharati Sharma, Urmila Makhija and Pradnya Khadilkar, based on Indian material studied during a revision of Acanthothecis from the country. The type specimen was collected in the Andaman Islands (North Andaman, Diglipur range, Sitapur) on 28 January 1986 by P.K. Sethy and P.G. Patwardhan, and is housed in the Ajrekar Mycological Herbarium (AMH).
In overall appearance, the species was compared most closely with Acanthothecis subclavulifera, but it differs in having ascospores (divided by both transverse and longitudinal walls), rather than only transversely septate spores. Sharma and colleagues also separated it from similar-looking species by a combination of features, including its non-grooved and the absence of detectable lichen substances in chemical tests (in contrast to lookalikes reported to contain compounds such as protocetraric, stictic/constictic, or norstictic acids).
The lichen forms a thick, crust-like thallus on bark that is yellowish to reddish brown, irregularly cracked, rough to the touch, and slightly glossy, with a black bordering hypothallus. Its fruiting bodies are numerous and pale cream, appearing as mealy () elongated about 0.3âÂÂ10 mm long. They may be straight, curved, or irregular in outline, and sit raised above the thallus with rounded ends and a thick . The exposed is slit-like, looking yellowish to cream and dusted when dry, and turning browner when wet.
In section, the is reddish brown and present mainly at the base, narrowing inward and becoming swollen towards the top. It is partly covered by the and has a distinct orange-yellow about 10âÂÂ12 üm thick. The hymenium is clear (not ) and 150âÂÂ162 üm tall. The paraphyses are and slender with warty tips, and the are short and weakly warted at their tips. The asci contain 4âÂÂ6 spores. The ascospores are hyaline (colourless) and muriform, measuring 75âÂÂ120 à22âÂÂ37 üm. No lichen secondary metabolites were detected by thin-layer chromatography.
Acanthothecis archeri is similar to Acanthothecis salazinica in having emergent ascomata with creamy, pruinose discs, an entire (non-striate) exciple, and large ascospores about 75âÂÂ120 üm long. It differs, however, in lacking detectable thallus compounds and in having muriform ascospores that react weakly blue with iodine (I+ pale blue).
Acanthothecis archeri grows on exposed tree trunks, with collections coming from tropical rainforest as well as from moist deciduous woodland. It is a corticolous species (living on bark), consistent with the type material and the other known specimens cited in the original description.
The species is known from India, recorded from the Andaman and Nicobar Islands (including North Andaman and the Nicobar group) and from Karnataka on the mainland. In addition to the type locality at Sitapur (North Andaman), published specimens include material from Mayabunder (North Andaman), Kamorta Island (Nicobars), and several sites in Karnataka (including the KumtaâÂÂSirsi road area and Hebri).