The lichen was
formally described as a new species in 2011 by Pradeep Divakar,
Ana Crespo, and Maria del Carmen Molina. The
species epithet honors North American lichenologist Philip F. May, who collected the
type specimens from
Mount Everett (
Berkshire County,
Massachusetts) at an altitude of . Here it was found growing on the trunk of a
paper birch tree (
Betula papyrifera).
Parmelia mayi is a formerly
cryptic species that is a member of the
species complex grouped around
Parmelia saxatilis. Because of its close visible resemblance, it had previously been misidentified as that species until
molecular phylogenetic analysis showed it to be genetically distinct. A 2016 study estimates that
P. mayi diverged from others species in the
P. saxatilis group during the
Pleistocene, 0.4 million years ago. The study also showed that despite their morphological similarity, these two lichens are only distantly related to each other. ==Description==