Talk:Melanohalea/GA1

Latest comment: 8 months ago by AryKun in topic GA Review

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Reviewer: AryKun (talk · contribs) 19:15, 2 March 2024 (UTC)Reply


  • "mostly Northern Hemisphere species" to "mostly Northern Hemispheric species"?
  • It's correct as it is. There's no need to change "Hemisphere" to "Hemispheric" in this context, since "Northern Hemisphere" acts as an adjective describing the origin of the species, not the species themselves. The term "Northern Hemisphere" is a proper noun used to describe a specific part of the Earth and does not have a common adjectival form. Esculenta (talk) 16:41, 7 March 2024 (UTC)Reply
  • "Notably, Melanohalea peruviana" I think the "notably" should be dropped, since there aren't any sources saying this is notable.
  • The "Habitat and distribution" section explains how these two species are outliers and are significant because they represent the genus's limited distribution in tropical areas. Also, source 14 says "The large and diverse family Parmeliaceae is common in the tropical latitudes of South America, with a large number of genera and species known to occur there. Melanelixia and Melanohalea, the two recently erected brown parmelioid genera in this family (Blanco et al. 2004), are primarily north temperate however, and neither genus has been reported from northern South America. It was therefore particularly noteworthy when a small, fertile, undescribed species of Melanohalea was encountered among a small collection of Peruvian lichens sent to me for identification from the University of Uppsala". and later "As mentioned above, this is the first species of the primarily north temperate genus Melanohalea to be reported for tropical South America, although another highland tropical species was recently described from south central Mexico (Esslinger & Pérez Pérez 2010). Four species of Melanohalea and one species of Melanelixia are known from temperate South America, especially the far south (Esslinger 1977)." Esculenta (talk) 16:41, 7 March 2024 (UTC)Reply
  • "The distribution...environmental pollutants." Hard to read since it's 4 clauses one after another, would be better as 2 sentences.
  • "Several Melanohalea...stable population" Another very long sentence that could be split up.
  • "with only M. halei assessed globally by the IUCN as least concern" to "M. halei, the only species that has been assessed for the global IUCN Red List, is listed as least concern"?
  • "early molecular phylogenetics studies" Give some kind of date alongside this, lay readers won't know when "early" was in relation to phylogenetics.
  • "including the type" The genus containing its type is kind of "water is wet" level obviousness. There's probably a better way to mention what the type is.
  • Link subgenus.
  • "broad lobes that are round to rather elongate and more or less flat" This seems it's from a key and doesn't read very well.
  • "cortex, but having" Why the "but"? Are usnic acid/atranorin the chemicals that usually give Parmelia lichen a brown color?
  • "Methods used...speciation in Melanohalea" Run-on sentence.
  • "23.03 to 5.333 BP" Needs millions, otherwise it's referring to 2001. Also for the Pliocene range mentioned, where 2.53 BP would be 2022.
  • "suggest that diversification" to "suggest that the diversification"?
  • Link foliose in description.
  • "unlike the related genus Melanelixia" to "unlike in the related genus Melanelixia"
  • "Cell walls contain the α-glucan compound isolichenan." This doesn't seem immediately related to the morphology of the lichen, which is what the rest of the paragraph's about.
  • "are apothecial, laminal, sessile to more or less pedicellate" Needs an "and".
  • "5–8.5 by 1 μm long" Kind of hard to figure out what this is supposed to mean.
  • "The cortex of Melanohalea lichens have a brown pigment" Subject-verb agreement issue.
  • Link K, C, and P for the individual spot tests mentioned.
  • "Xanthoparmelia-type" Is type meant to be italicized here?
  • "that reacts violet to both" to "that turns violet upon reacting with both"?
  • ", in contrast," Should be cut since your aren't actually contrasting it with anything from the previous sentence.
  • "as endangered in the Red List of Switzerland" to "as endangered on the Red List of Switzerland"?
  • References all seem to be to reliable sources and are formatted properly.
  • Scheidegger ref should have a translated title alongside the French one.
  • Images are licensed correctly and use appropriately.
  • Spot-checks: Verified all claims made, no issues except where noted below.
    • Cannon, P.; Divakar, P.; Yahr, R.; Aptroot, A.; Clerc, P.; Coppins, B.; Fryday, A.; Sanderson, N.; Simkin, J. (2023). Lecanorales: Parmeliaceae, including the genera Alectoria, Allantoparmelia, Arctoparmelia, Brodoa, Bryoria, Cetraria, Cetrariella, Cetrelia, Cornicularia, Evernia, Flavocetraria, Flavoparmelia, Hypogymnia, Hypotrachyna, Imshaugia, Melanelia, Melanelixia, Melanohalea, Menegazzia, Montanelia, Nesolechia, Parmelia, Parmelina, Parmeliopsis, Parmotrema, Platismatia, Pleurosticta, Protoparmelia, Pseudephebe, Pseudevernia, Punctelia, Raesaenenia, Tuckermannopsis, Usnea, Vulpicida and Xanthoparmelia (PDF). Revisions of British and Irish Lichens. Vol. 33.
    • Leavitt, Steven D.; Esslinger, Theodore L.; Divakar, Pradeep K.; Crespo, Ana; Lumbsch, H. Thorsten (2016). "Hidden diversity before our eyes: Delimiting and describing cryptic lichen-forming fungal species in camouflage lichens (Parmeliaceae, Ascomycota)". Fungal Biology. 120 (11)
    • Esslinger, Theodore L. (2012). "A new species of Melanohalea from the Andes Mountains in central Peru" (PDF). Opuscula Philolichenum. 11
    • Truong, Camille; Naciri, Yamama; Clerc, Philippe (2009). "Multivariate analysis of anatomical characters confirms the differentiation of two morphologically close species, Melanohalea olivacea (L.) O. Blanco et al. and M. septentrionalis (Lynge) O. Blanco et al" (PDF). The Lichenologist. 41
    • Divakar, Pradeep K.; Upreti, Dalip K. (2005). "A new species in Melanohalea (Parmeliaceae, Ascomycotina) and new lichen records from India". The Lichenologist. 37 (6
      • I think it'd be interesting to mention that M. nilgirica placement in the genus was questioned because it has an aliphatic acid as a secondary metabolite.
      • Also, can Melanelia s. l. be reasonably interpreted as "brown parmelioid lichens"
    • Paraphrasing seems somewhat close, but I'd say it's reasonably the best one can achieve while writing a decent botanical description.
  • That's all I got.
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