Trypethelium astroideum is a species of corticolous (bark-dwelling), crustose lichen in the family Trypetheliaceae. It was described as new to science by Adam Flakus and André Aptroot from material collected in lowland Bolivia.
The species was described from a type specimen collected in 2009 in Noel Kempff Mercado National Park, Santa Cruz Department, Bolivia, where it grew on trees in Moxos Savanna. Its name refers to the star-like appearance of its , created by the arrangement of the fruiting bodies. Trypethelium astroideum is most similar to T. subeluteriae but differs by having pseudostromata containing parietin (reacting K+ carmine red), an additional rust-red anthraquinone on the outside, partly fused ostioles, and larger, more septate ascospores.
The thallus is , with a cortex 40âÂÂ80 üm thick. It is smooth to somewhat swollen (), continuous, somewhat shiny, olive-green, up to 7 cm across, and about 0.5 mm thick. It induces swellings of the host bark but is not surrounded by a black .
The are raised, irregular to star-like in outline, 1.0âÂÂ1.5 à1âÂÂ3 mm and about 0.8 mm high, with sloping sides. Their surfaces are similar to or slightly paler than the thallus, bordered paler, and contain black ostiolar areas overlaid with rust-red pigment. Internally they contain orange granular pigment and parietin, embedded in bark tissue. The ascomata are pear-shaped (), 0.3âÂÂ0.6 mm in diameter, aggregated within the pseudostromata. Their walls are fully , not layered, and up to 100 üm wide. Ostioles are mostly fused, eccentric to apical, convex, and black, each surrounded by a rust-red pigmented spot that often forms a star-shaped pattern. The is clear. The asci contain eight spores each. The ascospores are colorless, spindle-shaped (), with rounded ends, divided by 12âÂÂ22 septa, and measure 65âÂÂ100 à11âÂÂ14 üm. They have rounded and no gelatinous sheath. Pycnidia have not been observed.
The thallus surface is UVâ and KâÂÂ, and the medulla is KâÂÂ. The pseudostromata surface is UVâÂÂ, while the rust-red pigment near the ostioles reacts K+ purple (not dissolving). Inside the pseudostromata, the granular orange pigment reacts K+ carmine red (dissolving). Thin-layer chromatography detected parietin (minor) and an additional unidentified anthraquinone (trace).
Trypethelium astroideum grows on smooth bark of trees in lowland rainforest and in Moxos savannah. At the time of its original publication, it was known to occur only in Bolivia, where it has been collected in Santa Cruz and Pando Departments.