Phyllopsora himalayensis is a species of bark-dwelling lichen in the family Ramalinaceae. It was described as a new species in 2011 by Gaurav Kumar Mishra, Dalip Kumar Upreti, and Sanjeeva Nayaka. It occurs in temperate parts of the Himalayas in northern India (recorded from Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand), where it grows on the bark of rough-barked trees in moist, humid forest at about 1,500âÂÂ3,140 m elevation. The species epithet refers to the Himalayas, the type locality.
The thallus is squamulose (made of small, scale-like ) with a thin white . The squamules are closely attached, rounded to elongate, sometimes overlapping, and about 0.1âÂÂ0.5 mm wide, with a smooth pale green to yellow upper surface. It produces mostly globular isidia (minute outgrowths used in vegetative spread), and the and medulla contain crystals that dissolve in potassium hydroxide solution (K). Apothecia are common, up to 2.0 mm across, with a brown to dark brown . The ascospores are hyaline, simple, narrowly ellipsoid to fusiform, 5âÂÂ10 à1âÂÂ2.5 üm. Pycnidia are also common (orange to brown and immersed), producing straight, rod-shaped conidia 6âÂÂ12 à1âÂÂ1.5 üm. In terms of chemical spot tests, the thallus is K+ (yellow) and CâÂÂ/KCâÂÂ/PDâÂÂ, with atranorin detected by thin-layer chromatography.