Porina scabrida is found in eastern North America, ranging from
Ontario, Canada south through the southeastern United States, with a distribution spanning from the
Southern Coastal Plain through the
Piedmont to the
Appalachian Mountains. The species has been documented across several states including Florida,
Louisiana,
South Carolina, and
North Carolina. In Florida, it occurs from
Leon County in the panhandle south to
Putnam County in the peninsula. In North Carolina, it has been found in three distinct
ecoregions: the
Outer Banks (
Tidewater), the
Piedmont (
Wake County), and the
Blue Ridge (
Great Smoky Mountains). In Canada, it is known from
Thunder Bay District, Ontario, where it has been found in
Sleeping Giant Provincial Park on the
Sibley Peninsula. The lichen typically grows in humid environments such as hardwood-cypress swamps and
mesic hardwood forests, including mixed-wood forests dominated by
balsam fir (
Abies balsamea),
northern white cedar (
Thuja occidentalis),
alder (
Alnus),
birch (
Betula), and
spruce (
Picea). It has been found growing on various tree species, including
tupelo (
Nyssa),
cypress (
Taxodium),
oak (
Quercus),
water hickory (
Carya aquatica),
red maple (
Acer rubrum),
white oak (
Quercus alba),
tulip tree (
Liriodendron tulipifera), and northern white cedar (
Thuja occidentalis), usually at relatively low elevations but reaching up to in Ontario. Most collections have been made in protected areas such as
national forests,
state parks, and
wildlife management areas, though it can also occur in disturbed areas near infrastructure such as highway corridors. ==References==