It was
formally described as a new species by lichenologist James Lendemer in 2012. The
type specimen was collected by Lendemer in
Dismal Swamp State Park,
North Carolina, where it was found growing on the bark of
Chamaecyparis. The
specific epithet honors lichenologist
Richard C. Harris, among the first modern scientists to study the genus
Lepraria. Using
molecular phylogenetics, Lendemer was able to show that there were two distinct species being called
Lepraria caesiella, a species originally described by Harris. Both of the
cryptic species are chemically identical (i.e., they produce the same set of
secondary compounds sometimes used to distinguish lichens), but they differ ecologically, and rarely
occur in the same geographic area. Two distinct
morphotypes occur that correlate to the two
clades recovered in phylogenetic analysis.
Lepraria harrisiana refers to the population with placodioid thalli (i.e.,
crustose in the center and lobed at the periphery), while
L. caesiella has aggregate thalli. ==Description==