Fissurina platythecioides is a species of bark-dwelling, crustose lichen-forming fungus in the family Graphidaceae. It is a light green lichen with straight to curved, slit-like fruiting bodies that expose a pale orange-brown , known only from lowland tropical rainforest in Madre de Dios, Peru. The species was described in 2012 and is named for its resemblance to species of Platythecium.
Fissurina platythecioides was described as a new species by Eimy Rivas Plata and Robert Lücking in 2012 from material collected at Los Amigos Research and Training Center (CICRA) in Madre de Dios, Peru. It was introduced in the context of a survey of Graphidaceae at this Amazonian lowland rainforest site. The specific epithet platythecioides alludes to its similarity with some species of Platythecium.
The thallus is crustose and grows on bark. It is light green, continuous, and up to across, with a thickness of 70âÂÂ120 üm and a dense . The is a member of the green algal genus Trentepohlia. The medulla is white, and the lacks crystals except near the fruiting bodies ().
The lirellae are straight to curved, mostly unbranched, and immersed but gaping, with a complete . They measure 0.5âÂÂ2 mm long and 0.2âÂÂ0.3 mm wide, with an exposed light orange-brown . Ascospores are (divided into multiple chambers by transverse and longitudinal septa), colorless, and 30âÂÂ50 à15âÂÂ20 üm (8 per ascus), and no lichen substances were detected by thin-layer chromatography.
The species is known from the type locality in Amazonian Peru (Madre de Dios), where it was collected at elevation in tropical lowland rainforest. It was found on the bark of a tree in secondary forest.