Common orange lichen, maritime sunburst lichen, shore lichen Â
Starting off with this charismatic pal, X. parietina. Easily recognizable due to its orange, foliose lobes and habit of growing anywhere and everywhere, this species is incredibly tolerant of pollution and human activity, and will probably takeover the world soon. In spite of that obnoxiously neon hue, its photosymbiont is actually green algae. Also, it was first described by Carl Linnaeus, you know, just the father of taxonomy, so thatâs pretty cool.Â
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This week, I will be revisiting some of the older posts I made long before I had any followers. And this is perhaps the most important post Iâve ever made. X. parietina is one of the most common lichens pretty much everywhere. Like if you see a yellow or orange or yellowish-green lichen, 9/10 itâs gonna be this one.
A true icon of the lichen world. Like you could probably go outside and find some within 5 minutes. Go on, do it. I dare you. Unless itâs like, really cold where you are or your busy or whatever. But anyway, if you want to start your lichen ID journey, start with X. parietina and you will be rewarded everywhere you go.