
Tricharia is a genus of lichens in the family Gomphillaceae. It has an estimated 30 species.
Buck's Whiskers
PHYLUM
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Tricharia is a genus of lichens in the family Gomphillaceae. It has an estimated 30 species.
==Taxonomy== Recent molecular studies have shown that the long, carbon-black bristles (sterile ) that once united many species under Tricharia evolved several times independently within the family. A two-gene phylogeny published in 2024 confirmed that the type lineage of Tricharia (species with pale, thin-walled apothecial rims) forms a well-supported clade distinct from three other "black-setae" groups that had been bundled together on the basis of bristle morphology. In particular, the Costa Rican species Tricharia paradoxa—long treated as an odd member of the genus—was transferred to the monospecific genus Paratricharia and shown to be sister to Caleniopsis in the early-diverging Aulaxina clade, far removed from Tricharia in the strict sense. The same analysis placed the remaining black-setae taxa in the separate genera Microxyphiomyces and Santricharia, confirming that bristles alone are a poor guide to deep relationships, whereas apothecial structure carries stronger phylogenetic signal.
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