Native Plants

Astrothelium Lichen

Astrothelium galbineum

USDA symbol: ASGA8

North America: native

Have you ever noticed small, crusty patches on tree bark in your yard and wondered what they were? Meet the astrothelium lichen (Astrothelium galbineum), a fascinating organism that’s quietly working as your garden’s air quality monitor. While you can’t plant this little guy like your favorite flowers, understanding what it ...

Astrothelium Lichen: A Tiny Guardian of Your Garden’s Air Quality

Have you ever noticed small, crusty patches on tree bark in your yard and wondered what they were? Meet the astrothelium lichen (Astrothelium galbineum), a fascinating organism that’s quietly working as your garden’s air quality monitor. While you can’t plant this little guy like your favorite flowers, understanding what it is and what it means for your outdoor space is pretty amazing.

What Exactly Is Astrothelium Lichen?

Before we dive in, let’s clear up what a lichen actually is – because it’s not quite what you might expect! Lichens aren’t plants at all. They’re actually a partnership between fungi and algae, working together like the ultimate garden buddies. The astrothelium lichen forms small, yellowish-green crusty patches that might look unremarkable at first glance, but they’re doing some pretty important work.

This native North American species (also known by its scientific synonym Astrothelium ochrothelizum) has been quietly living on tree bark across eastern temperate forests for ages, and if you’re lucky enough to spot it in your yard, that’s actually great news for your garden’s health.

Where You’ll Find This Little Wonder

Astrothelium lichen calls eastern North America home, thriving in regions with clean air and moderate humidity. You’ll typically find it growing on the bark of various trees, forming those characteristic crusty patches that blend into the bark’s natural texture.

Why Having This Lichen Around Is Actually Pretty Cool

Here’s where things get exciting – astrothelium lichen is like having a natural air quality detector in your garden! These lichens are incredibly sensitive to air pollution, which means if you spot them thriving on your trees, you can feel good knowing your garden enjoys relatively clean air.

While this lichen doesn’t provide nectar for pollinators (since it doesn’t produce flowers), it plays an important role in your garden’s ecosystem by:

  • Contributing to biodiversity in small but meaningful ways
  • Serving as a habitat for tiny organisms
  • Acting as an indicator of environmental health

How to Identify Astrothelium Lichen

Spotting astrothelium lichen requires looking closely at tree bark in your garden. Here’s what to look for:

  • Small, crusty patches with a yellowish-green coloration
  • Growth directly on tree bark, forming tight, flat patches
  • Texture that’s rough and somewhat granular
  • Size that’s typically quite small and easy to overlook

What This Means for Your Garden

You can’t plant or cultivate astrothelium lichen – it’s not something you’ll find at the garden center! This lichen appears naturally when conditions are right, specifically when air quality is good and humidity levels are appropriate. Think of it as nature’s seal of approval for your garden’s environmental health.

If you’re interested in supporting the kind of environment where native lichens like astrothelium can thrive, focus on:

  • Maintaining healthy, mature trees in your landscape
  • Avoiding excessive use of chemicals that might impact air quality
  • Supporting overall biodiversity in your garden space

The Bottom Line

While you won’t be adding astrothelium lichen to your shopping list for next season’s garden projects, discovering it growing naturally in your yard is definitely something to celebrate. It’s a sign that you’re providing a healthy environment for all sorts of life – both the obvious and the wonderfully overlooked.

Keep your eyes peeled during your next garden stroll. You might just discover these tiny environmental champions quietly doing their thing on your trees, adding another layer of natural wonder to your outdoor space.

Astrothelium galbineum is also known as...

Often we refer to plants by their common names. When shopping for plants the scientific name is the best way to positively identify the plant species you desire. But some plants have more than one name! While it doesn't happen often, nurseries might display one name while you're searching for another. Astrothelium galbineum is also known as:

Astrothelium ochrothelizum Müll. | USDA symbol: ASOC4

Why do some plants have more than one name? Over time plant species may be renamed for a few reasons:

  1. Botanists in different regions named the same plant without knowing it had already been classified.
  2. A species was reclassified after scientific advances in, for example, DNA analysis.
  3. Slight variations within a species are sometimes mistakenly identified as entirely new species.

Classification

Group: Lichen
Kingdom: Fungi - Fungi
Division: Ascomycota - Sac fungi
Class: Ascomycetes
Order: Pyrenulales
Family: Trypetheliaceae Eschw.
Genus: Astrothelium Eschw. - astrothelium lichen

Species: Astrothelium galbineum Krempelh. - astrothelium lichen

Plant data source: USDA, NRCS 2025. The PLANTS Database. https://plants.usda.gov,. 2/25/2025. National Plant Data Team, Greensboro, NC USA