Experiments under controlled conditions have shown that net photosynthesis (NP) of many lichens is depressed when their thalli are highly hydrated. In this study we characterise the light and water content (WC) dependency of CO exchange for selected epilithic lichens in the laboratory and match this against samples monitored in their natural habitat by a novel, fully automatic cuvette. Laboratory measurements showed that, at a photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) of 1500 μmol m s, NP of the epilithic foliose lichen Xanthoria calcicola was reduced by about 85% (compared to NP at optimal water content) when the thallus was suprasaturated (maximal hydration was defined as WC after spraying, submerging and subsequent removal of adhering water droplets by shaking). Only after loss of about 80% of its maximal WC were the highest rates of NP possible. This depression was still substantial at 50 μmol m s PPFD. Responses were similar for the crustose epilithic species Lecanora muralis. CO exchange of both lichens was monitored under natural conditions by means of the cuvette built into a man-made wall-a common habitat of the species-in the Botanical Garden, Würzburg. For both species, rates of NP were low during and after heavy rain even if incident PPFD and temperature were favourable. This situation occurred frequently and could last through all daylight hours, resulting in a negative carbon balance when nocturnal rates of respiration were high. Often, after rainfall, there was a brief, high peak of NP when optimal WC was transiently attained before metabolic activity finally ceased through desiccation. Other periods with profitable rates of NP occurred after moderate moistening of the lichens by dew, fog or light rain. The lichens were found to perform identically in the field and laboratory. When the two data sets were compared it was clear that the full range of WC produced in the laboratory also occurred in nature and that the productivity of the epilithic lichens was regularly and severely limited by high WC. It is concluded that blockage of diffusive pathways for CO in the thallus through high water contents is an important ecological factor for productivity of these central European epilithic lichens.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00333209 | DOI Listing |
Front Microbiol
November 2024
Biodiversity and Conservation Biology, Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research (WSL), Birmensdorf, Switzerland.
communities (TCs) mainly comprise Cyanobacteria developing on rock substrates and forming physical structures that are strictly connected to the rock itself. Endolithic and epilithic bacterial communities are important because they contribute to nutrient release within run-off waters flowing on the rock surface. Despite TCs being ubiquitous, little information about their ecology and main characteristics is available.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrob Ecol
June 2024
University of Belgrade-Faculty of Biology, Studentski Trg 16, 11 000, Belgrade, Serbia.
The primary purpose of the study, as part of the planned conservation work, was to uncover all aspects of autochthonous biofilm pertaining to the formation of numerous deterioration symptoms occurring on the limestone Rožanec Mithraeum monument in Slovenia. Using state-of-the-art sequencing technologies combining mycobiome data with observations made via numerous light and spectroscopic (FTIR and Raman) microscopy analyses pointed out to epilithic lichen Gyalecta jenensis and its photobiont, carotenoid-rich Trentepohlia aurea, as the origin of salmon-hued pigmented alterations of limestone surface. Furthermore, the development of the main deterioration symptom on the monument, i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
February 2024
Key Laboratory of Arable Land Conservation in North China, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs/College of Land Science and Technology, China Agricultural University, Beijing 100193, China; State Key Laboratory of Soil Erosion and Dryland Farming on the Loess Plateau, Institute of Soil and Water Conservation, Chinese Academy of Sciences and Ministry of Water Resources, Yangling 712100, China.
Regardless of lithology and plant cover, chemical composition of floodwater in the Negev show a consistent enrichment in K and Mg ions, which could not have been explained by the rock or clay minerals or (due to the scarcity of plants) by plant decomposition. Hypothesizing that rock-dwelling (lithobionts) or soil (loess)-dwelling biocrusts may shed light on the phenomena, we conducted sprinkling experiments in the Negev Highlands. Sprinkling was conducted on 4 types of lithobionts: cyanobacteria which inhabit the south-facing bedrock (ENC), epilithic lichens, inhabiting the inclined (EPI) and the flat (EPI) north-facing bedrocks, and endolithic lichens (ENL) inhabiting south-facing boulders.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phycol
August 2022
Research Group Mycology, Ghent University, K.L. Ledeganckstraat 35, Gent, BE-9000, Belgium.
Trentepohliales are a group of both free-living and lichenized algae, with most diversity occurring in tropical regions. Recent studies showed that the abundance of lichens with a trentepohlioid photobiont has been increasing in temperate habitats, probably because of global warming, which makes them an interesting study case. A detailed molecular study of the diversity of lichenized Trentepohliales, epiphytic as well as epilithic, was performed in three forests of north-western Europe.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Microbiol
December 2021
School of Archaeological and Forensic Sciences, University of Bradford, Bradford, BD7 1DP, UK.
A systematic review of literature data on the antifungal potential of extracted lichen compounds and individual secondary metabolites against mold species of the genus Aspergillus is provided. Crude extracts from 49 epiphytic, 16 epigeic and 22 epilithic species of lichens and 44 secondary metabolites against 10 species, Aspergillus candidus, A. flavus, A.
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