Graphis taneina is a species of script lichen in the family Graphidaceae. It forms a thin, pale greenish-grey crust on tree bark and produces both powdery patches (soredia) and elongated, slit-like fruiting bodies. The species is known from the Angkor temple complex in Cambodia, where it grows on various trees in well-lit sites.
Graphis taneina was described as a new species in 2011 by Minoru Nakanishi, Hiroyuki Kashiwadani, and Kwang Hee Moon from material collected on tree bark near the Ta Nei stone temple in the Angkor area of Siem Reap Province, Cambodia. The holotype is housed in the herbarium of the National Museum of Nature and Science (TNS).
The authors distinguished the species from similar members of Graphis by a combination of morphology and chemistry: the thallus produces (powdery vegetative propagules), the (elongate, slit-like apothecia) are (breaking through the surface) and usually lack obvious striations, the is near the top, and the colourless ascospores have 6âÂÂ8 transverse septa and measure 30âÂÂ32 à7âÂÂ8 micrometres (üm). It contains 2-methoxypsoromic acid, which helps separate it from lookalikes such as G. bulacana and G. glaucescens (both lacking soredia and lacking detected lichen substances), and from G. supracola (with laterally carbonised exciples and protocetraric acid).
The thallus of Graphis taneina is corticolous (growing on bark), pale greenish-grey to whitish-grey, thin, and lacks a distinct outer . It is partly , forming (mealy) soralia that are hemispherical to irregular in shape and about 40âÂÂ100 üm across.
The fruiting bodies are to sparingly branched lirellae up to 4 mm long and 0.18âÂÂ0.3 mm wide. They are erumpent from the thallus and are largely bordered by a almost to the top. The are entire to occasionally grooved (), and they are covered with white (a frosted, powdery bloom). Internally, the exciple (the tissue supporting the fruiting bodies) is carbonised near the top (about 25âÂÂ40 üm thick there), the hymenium is clear (not ) and iodine-negative, and the asci contain eight spores. The colourless ascospores are 6âÂÂ8-septate and stain purple with iodine (I+), measuring 30âÂÂ32 à7âÂÂ8 üm. The lichen contains 2-methoxypsoromic acid, a rare secondary metabolite in the genus Graphis.
In the publication that described it, Graphis taneina is documented from the Angkor area of Siem Reap Province in Cambodia, with collections made around Ta Nei Temple at about 30 m elevation. It grows on tree bark and is fairly common in the survey area, occurring on several kinds of trees including Ficus, Planchonia, and Tetrameles (among others); it favours well-lit (sun-exposed) bark. Graphis taneina is one of five Graphis species that have been documented from Ta Nei Temple and surrounding areas; the others are G. cambodiensis, G. chlorotica, G. glaucescens, and G. supracola.