Lobariella flavomedullosa is a species of foliose lichen in the family Peltigeraceae. The species was first scientifically described in 2013 by researchers working in Colombia, where it grows on tree branches in high-elevation cloud forests. It is characterized by its small size, narrow ribbon-like , and distinctive pale yellow inner layer that gives the species its name. Genetic studies show it is closely related to other South American and Hawaiian species, being closely related to a Hawaiian endemic clade; molecular work places Hawaiian colonisation about 1âÂÂ8 millions of years ago.
Lobariella flavomedullosa was described in 2013 by Bibiana Moncada, Luisa Betancourt-Macuase, and Robert Lücking. The epithet highlights the lichen's pale-yellow medulla. Although superficially similar to L. angustata, it differs in having a yellow rather than white medulla and much narrower ribbon-like (1.5âÂÂ3 mm versus 3âÂÂ5 mm wide).
A maximum-likelihood tree based on three genetic markers shows that L. flavomedullosa is sister to L. subcrenulata; together they are sister to a Hawaiian endemic clade (including L. flynniana, L. robusta, and L. sandwicensis). A molecular clock analysis places the colonisation of Hawaii at roughly 1âÂÂ8 Ma, with within-Hawaii divergences around 0âÂÂ2 Ma.
This is a small species whose tightly adherent thallus rarely exceeds across. Lobes are wide and up to long, branching irregularly into flat ribbons that give the thallus a delicate aspect. When dry the upper surface appears gray; when moistened it shifts to a pale yellow-brown. Small white e are present but seldom open into distinct e. The medullaâÂÂa soft inner layer exposed in sectionâÂÂis pale yellow, matching the species name.
The lower surface is cream to pale yellow-brown with scant tomentum and dirty yellow-brown s that anchor the lichen. Fruiting bodies (apothecia), when produced, are tiny cups up to 2 mm in diameter with gray to cream margins; they generate long, narrow ascospores.
Lobariella flavomedullosa has so far been recorded only from Colombia, where it grows on branches and twigs in upper-montane and sub-Andean cloud forests. It favors semi-shaded to semi-exposed microhabitats. Lobariella is a fairly species-rich genus in Colombia, with at least 20 species from the genus reported from there. L. flavomedullosa is one of three Lobariella species reported from the Cerro MachÃÂn volcano cloud forest in Tolima.