Malmidea allobakeri is a species of corticolous (bark-dwelling), crustose lichen in the family Malmideaceae. It is found in Venezuela.
The lichen was formally described as a new species in 2021 by the lichenologists Klaus Kalb and Marcela Cáceres. The type specimen was collected by the second author from the Centro de Pesquisa do Cacao (Itabuna) in Atlantic Forest. The species epithet alludes to its similarity of Malmidea bakeri.
Malmidea allobakeri is a crustose lichen with a continuous thallus that is 40âÂÂ70 üm thick. The surface of the thallus is , with measuring 0.075âÂÂ0.1 mm in height and 0.07âÂÂ0.1 mm in width. The thallus has a dull appearance, showing shades of greenish-grey to brownish, and is devoid of soralia and isidia (reproductive propagules). The medulla, both of the verrucae and the thallus, is white to faintly yellow and reacts to a solution of potassium hydroxide (i.e., the K spot test) with an orange to reddish colour. The lichen hosts a (green algal) photobiont, whose cells measure 6âÂÂ8 üm in diameter.
The apothecia of Malmidea allobakeri are sessile and rounded, measuring 0.3âÂÂ0.8 mm in diameter and 0.2âÂÂ0.3 mm in height. The apothecial are plane to slightly convex and range in colour from dark chocolate brown to blackish. The , of the granifera type, is initially but becomes as the lichen ages and may partly or entirely vanish. It is cream-coloured to greyish or black in colour. The excipulum is hyaline at the periphery and internally contains pockets of the medullary layer filled with greyish to ochraceous-yellow hydrophobic granules. These granules are opaque and only partially dissolve in potassium hydroxide solution, resulting in a K+ orange-yellowish to greenish lemon-yellow reaction. The is approximately 25 üm high and light brown, while the centrally located is 80âÂÂ100 üm high, narrowing towards the margin, and dark brown with no reaction to K tests. The of this species is indistinct, and the hymenium is hyaline, measuring 90âÂÂ110 üm in height. The asci are sized 70âÂÂ80 üm by 15âÂÂ20 üm, containing 6 (occasionally up to 8) non-septate, , ellipsoid ascospores per ascus, measuring 10âÂÂ14 by 7âÂÂ8 üm, with a of 1âÂÂ1.5 üm.
Chemically, Malmidea allobakeri is characterised by the presence of several unidentified xantholepinones, distinct from those found in Malmidea bakeri, and it lacks atranorin.
Malmidea allobakeri has been recorded from several states of Brazil: Bahia, Sergipe, Pernambuco, and Alagoas. It has been found at elevations ranging up to .