Arthonia ligniariella was
described by
Brian Coppins in 1989 from material collected in
Knole Park,
Sevenoaks (Kent), on decaying wood of a
beech (
Fagus) trunk. The species closely resembles
Arthonia ligniaria in overall appearance and internal anatomy, but differs in having narrower
asci and smaller
ascospores. Coppins also reported that the
holotype of
A. ligniaria includes a small patch attributable to
A. ligniariella, which helped clarify that two similar
taxa were involved. After its description in 1989,
Arthonia ligniariella was for a long time afterwards reported only rarely in Europe. In the field it was initially regarded as an obligate lignicole, but the first North American material was collected in
British Columbia on the bark of western red cedar (
Thuja plicata), a
substrate that often supports species otherwise associated with dead wood. The species can be separated from superficially similar members of the genus such as
A. ligniaria by a non-amyloid
hymenium and smaller ascospores. Because it has small, black, apothecia and single-
septum (1-septate) spores of this size,
A. ligniariella may be confused with species such as
A. apatetica,
A. exilis,
A. lapidicola and
A. leucodontis. Those species can be separated microscopically because they have
amyloid reactions in the hymenium (at least after
K treatment) and a minute amyloid ring at the ascus apex, which are absent in
A. ligniariella. Coppins noted that the biological status of
A. ligniariella (and the related
A. ligniaria) is uncertain, as they occur with a mixed algal film and may be
parasitic, weakly lichenised, or
saprophytic on organic material in the film or substrate. ==Description==