This is a list of species in the predominantly
crustose lichen genus Lecidea. They are
commonly known as "disk lichens" or "tile lichens".[1] A 2020 estimate placed about 100 species in the genus.[2] As of January 2024[update],
Species Fungorum accepts 128 species in Lecidea.[3]
^Van den Boom, P.; Ertz, D. (2012). "Lichens and lichenicolous fungi from El Hierro (Canary Islands), a survey, including five new species". Cryptogamie, Mycologie. 33 (1): 59–97.
doi:
10.7872/crym.v33.iss1.2012.059.
^
abFryday, Alan M.; Hertel, Hannes (2014). "A contribution to the family Lecideaceae s. lat. (Lecanoromycetidae inc. sed., lichenized Ascomycota) in the southern subpolar region; including eight new species and some revised generic circumscriptions". The Lichenologist. 46 (3): 389–412.
doi:
10.1017/S0024282913000704.
^Werner, R.G. (1979). "La flore lichénique de la cordillére Bético-Rifaine". Collectanea Botanica (in French). 11: 409–471.
^Bouly de Lesdain, M. (1955). "Notes lichénologiques. XL". Bulletin de la Société Botanique de France (in French). 102: 229–231.
doi:
10.1080/00378941.1955.10833282.
^Holien, Håkon; Palice, Zdeněk; Björk, Curtis R.; Goward, T.; Spribille, Trevor (2016). "Lecidea coriacea sp. nov., a lichen species from oldgrowth boreal and montane forests in Europe and North America". Herzogia. 29 (2/1): 412–420.
doi:
10.13158/heia.29.2.2016.412.
^Hertel, H. (1984). "Über saxicole, lecideoide Flechten der Subantarktis". Beihefte zur Nova Hedwigia (in German). 79: 399–499.
^Knudsen, K.; Kocourkova, J. (2014). "A new species of Lecidea (Lecideaceae, Lichenized Ascomycetes) from the mountains of California". Opuscula Philolichenum. 13: 80–83.
^Spribille, Toby; Printzen, Christian (2007). "Lecidea rubrocastanea, a new lichen species from conifer bark and wood in interior western North America (Lecanorales, lichenized ascomycetes)". The Lichenologist. 39 (4): 339–347.
doi:
10.1017/S0024282907006974.
^Knudsen, K.; Lendemer, J.C.; Schultz, M.; Kocourkova, J.; Sheard, J.W.; Pigniolo, A.; Wheeler, T. (2017). "Lichen biodiversity and ecology in the San Bernardino and San Jacinto Mountains in southern California (U.S.A.)". Opuscula Philolichenum. 16: 15–138.
^Hertel, H. (1995). "Schlüssel für die Arten der Flechtenfamilie Lecideaceae in Europea". Bibliotheca Lichenologica (in German). 58: 137–180.
^Crombie, J.M. (1876). "Lichenes Capenses: An Enumeration of the Lichens collected at the Cape of Good Hope by the Her. A.E. Eaton during the Venus-Transit Expedition in 1874". Journal of the Linnean Society. Botany. 15: 165–180.
^Haugan, R.; Timdal, E. (2018). "Lecidea toensbergii, the first described sorediate species in Lecidea sensu stricto". Graphis Scripta. 30 (6): 51–58.
^McCune, Bruce; Curtis, Marc J.; Di Meglio, Joseph (2017). "New taxa and a case of ephemeral spore production in Lecideaceae from western North America". The Bryologist. 120 (2): 115–124.
doi:
10.1639/0007-2745-120.2.115.
^Rodriguez-Flakus, Pamela (2020). "Non-saxicolous lecideoid lichens in southern South America". Phytotaxa. 476 (1): 1–73.
doi:
10.11646/phytotaxa.476.1.1.