Lecanora subpallens Zahlbr.

  • Filed As

    Lecanoraceae
    Lecanora subpallens Zahlbr.

  • Collector(s)

    J. C. Lendemer 65462, 21 Apr 2020

  • Location

    United States of America. Tennessee. Sevier Co. Great Smoky Mountains National Park, lower floodplain of Little Brier Branch of the Little River 0.25 mi NE of Little River confluence, 0.3 mi S of confluence w/ Mossy Rock Branch at Greenbrier.

  • Habitat

    Riparian forest with mixed hardwoods (Acer saccharum, Carpinus, Liriodendron dominant; Betula lenta, Cornus, Ilex opaca, Liquidambar, Ostrya, Ulmus) and conifers (Pinus strobus, Tsuga) and ericaceous understory (Leucothoe, Rhododendron maximum) and Pyrularia. on fallen Acer saccharum branch.

  • Identifiers

    NY Barcode: 04244781

    Occurrence ID: 4a2746c6-00b6-44c5-b01b-1f33b6033770

  • Feedback

    Send comments on this specimen record

  • Kingdom

    Fungi

  • Division

    Ascomycota

  • Class

    Lecanoromycetes

  • Order

    Lecanorales

  • Family

    Lecanoraceae

  • All Determinations

    Lecanora subpallens Zahlbr. det J. C. Lendemer, 2020

  • Region

    North America

  • Country

    United States of America

  • State/Province

    Tennessee

  • County/Municipio

    Sevier Co.

  • Locality

    Great Smoky Mountains National Park, lower floodplain of Little Brier Branch of the Little River 0.25 mi NE of Little River confluence, 0.3 mi S of confluence w/ Mossy Rock Branch at Greenbrier

  • Elevation

    Alt. 536 m. (1759 ft.)

  • Coordinates

    35.6806, -83.6434

  • Distribution

    Map all specimens of this taxon

Herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden (NY)
Lichens of Tennessee
Lecanora subpallens Zahlbr.
Det. J.C. Lendemer, 2020
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. TENNESSEE.
SEVIER COUNTY: Great Smoky Mountains National Park,
lower floodplain of Little Brier Branch of the Little River 0.25 mi
NE of Little River confluence, 0.3 mi S of confluence w/ Mossy
Rock Branch at Greenbrier. — Lat. 35°40’50”N Long. 83°38’36”W
— 1757 ft. — Riparian forest with mixed hardwoods {Acer
saccharum, Carpinus, Liriodendron dominant! Betula lenta,
Cornus, Ilex opaca, Liquidambar, Ostrya, Ulmus) and conifers
{Pin us strobus, Tsuga) and ericaceous understory {Leucotboe,
Rhododendron maximum) and Pyrularia. — On fallen Acer
saccharum branch.
NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN
04244781
James C. Lendemer #65462	21 April 2020
Fieldwork funded by NSF-DEB #1542639 & #1542629 - Southern Appalachian Lichen Biodiversity Gradients
04244781