Usnea moreliana was
described by
Józef Motyka in 1938, based on material collected in 1910 from
Cerro San Miguel near
Morelia, Mexico. The
holotype was reported to be in the
herbarium of the
Berlin Botanical Garden and Botanical Museum (B) but appears to be missing. Camille Truong and
Philippe Clerc later lectotypified the name using material housed at
Maria Curie-Skłodowska University, Lublin, Poland (selecting specimen LUB127 as the
lectotype. In 2011, Truong and Clerc described
Usnea rubricornuta in a study of red-pigmented
Usnea from the tropical Andes and the Galápagos. In a later revision, they found that Motyka's original material of
U. moreliana matched
U. rubricornuta in
morphology and chemistry (including a reddish and a K−
medulla with
triterpenoids), and they therefore resurrected the earlier name
U. moreliana as the
correct name for the species and placed
U. rubricornuta in
synonymy. In the original treatment (as
U. rubricornuta), the species was compared with
Usnea cornuta, which can look similar but lacks true red cortical pigmentation.
U. moreliana (as
circumscribed in that work) was defined by a combination of inflated branches that narrow where side branches join, a shiny, thin cortex with red pigment mainly inside the cortex, minute
soralia that usually stay small, and a distinctive chemistry dominated by unidentified triterpenoids detected by
thin-layer chromatography. In a revision of shrubby, esorediate (soredia-lacking) Brazilian
Usnea, Gerlach and coauthors reported an uncommon taxon they treated as
Usnea cf. moreliana (bearing
apothecia). They suggested it most likely represents the fertile counterpart of
U. moreliana sensu stricto, but noted that they were unable to obtain
DNA sequences and that more material and
molecular study are needed before firm taxonomic decisions can be made. ==Description==