Calopadia imshaugii is a species of crustose lichen in the family Ectolechiaceae. It was described from Florida. It has brown apothecia (fruiting bodies) with a coarse, white (powdery) coating, and its (multi-chambered) ascospores are often produced two per ascus (sometimes one or three), which is unusual in Calopadia.
Calopadia imshaugii was described as a new species in 2011 by Ralph Common and Robert Lücking, based on material collected in Fakahatchee Strand Preserve State Park (Collier County, Florida). The holotype (the single specimen designated as the name-bearing type; Common 7322F) was gathered in April 1997 along the Scenic Drive (CR 837) just past bend near gate 14 in second-growth habitat. It is deposited in the herbarium of the Michigan State University Museum (MSC).
The species is named in honor of the American lichenologist Henry Imshaug. The species stands out within Calopadia because its asci can contain more than one ellipsoid ascospore, whereas most species in the genus have single-spored asci. Among the few multi-spored species, the spores are usually narrow and oblong rather than ellipsoid.
The thallus grows on bark (corticolous), typically 0.5âÂÂ3 cm across and about 0.5âÂÂ3 cm across and about 30âÂÂ50 üm (micrometres) thick. It is continuous in the center but breaks into dispersed, irregular patches toward the edges. The surface is uneven and ranges from white to pale gray. The (the photosynthetic partner) is a green alga with cells.
The apothecia are rounded and (sitting directly on the thallus), 0.4âÂÂ0.8 mm in diameter. The disk is brown and coarsely white-pruinose (powdery), and the margin is conspicuous and pale gray to cream-colored. Microscopically, the excipulum is colorless (about 50âÂÂ100 üm wide) and the hypothecium is brown (about 20âÂÂ40 üm high); the apothecial base is dull brown. The hymenium is colorless and about 100âÂÂ130 üm high, with paraphyses that are unbranched to slightly branched.
The asci are about 90âÂÂ100 à20âÂÂ30 üm and contain (1âÂÂ)2(âÂÂ3) ellipsoid, ascospores per ascus. The spores measure about 50âÂÂ80 à15âÂÂ23 üm. The species also forms campylidia (about 0.5âÂÂ1 mm broad and 1âÂÂ1.5 mm long) with a hood-shaped lobe that is dark gray with a paler apex and pruinose. The conidia are filiform with a clavate tip, 7âÂÂ15-septate (divided by internal walls), and about 70âÂÂ90 à1.5âÂÂ2 üm. All spot tests were negative.
Calopadia imshaugii is known from several collections in Florida, where it grows on the bark of small twigs of unidentified trees. In addition to the type locality in Collier County, collections were cited from the Homestead area in Miami-Dade County (near SW 388th Street, east of Old Dixie Highway).