The species is rare, originally known from only three gatherings made in 1992, 1995 and 2007. All collections came from the fine, upper branches of western hemlock (
Tsuga heterophylla) in ancient inland boreal rain forests of British Columbia. At the type site the lichen occupied twigs roughly two metres above the ground in a
gorge where water-logged soils and constant mist maintain very high humidity throughout the year. Associated lichen flora includes
Alectoria sarmentosa,
Lobaria pulmonaria and other moisture-loving species indicative of long-undisturbed conditions. Fieldwork north-west of
McBride and north of
Kispiox recovered two additional colonies on dead hemlock twigs in "antique" cedar–hemlock stands estimated to exceed five centuries in age. No thallus has ever been observed outside this humid inland-rain-forest belt, and every find comprised only one or a few individual crusts, underscoring both the lichen's scarcity and its apparent reliance on continuous, old-growth
canopy cover. The authors therefore regarded
Schaereria brunnea as one of the rarest tree-dwelling lichens in western North America and a potential
indicator of the continent's vanishing interior rain-forest ecosystem. The species was later identified in southeastern
Alaska, also growing on
Tsuga heterophylla. Its known range was extended more when it was reported from
Denali Borough, where it was found growing on a different substrate (
spruce twigs) and a different forest type (
wetlands). ==References==