Difference between revisions of "Lichen"

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=Types of Lichen=
 
=Types of Lichen=
 
Lichen occur in one of four growth forms. These include crustose, squamulose, foliose, and fruticose. (5)
 
Lichen occur in one of four growth forms. These include crustose, squamulose, foliose, and fruticose. (5)
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=Biology=
 
=Biology=

Revision as of 16:24, 10 May 2018

Lichen is a compound organism, made up of two species. A fungus and a cyanobacteria or green algae live symbiotically, and both are benefited from this mutualistic relationship. In exchange for a safe habitat to live in, the cyanobacteria or green algae provide food to the fungus from their photosynthetic processes. (1) The body of a lichen is a thallus, or a plant body that is not differentiated into stems and leaves, and lacks roots and a vascular system.


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03a Lichen, orange fruits Irongate July 2010.jpg
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Types of Lichen

Lichen occur in one of four growth forms. These include crustose, squamulose, foliose, and fruticose. (5)

Lichen types.jpg


Biology

Unlike plants, lichen do not have a vascular system. This means they do not have a xylem or phloem to move nutrients and water around their plant body. Lichen get their water and nutrients by absorbing them from their surroundings. (3)

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Cortex

The outer layer of the lichen is called the cortex. The cells in the cortex are thicker and more closely packed, providing a small amount of protection for the organism. (3)

Medulla

Fungal filaments, or medulla, make up most of the lichen organism. Fungal cells are loosely packed in the middle of the lichen body, with thin cell walls and a threadlike structure. (3)

Attachments

Rhizines

Some lichen use rhizines to attach to their substrate. Rhizines are fungal filaments extending out from the medulla. Rhizines do not move water or help the lichen breathe. Their sole purpose is stabilizing the lichen down. (3)

Holdfast

Holdfast.png

Some lichen use holdfasts to fasten themselves down. This is a central peg that extends out from the lichen thallus. (3)

Ecology

Lichen play a huge role in the development of ecosystems, and also a huge role in established ecosystems. They play an important role in the water cycle in forests, greatly increasing the interception and absorption of precipitation. (4) Lichen are able to sequester limiting nutrients from the atmosphere, and these in turn become available to other organisms when lichen die, fall, and decompose, or through leachate. (4) The presence of lichen also provides increased habitat complexity for small organisms. There is a close relationship between lichen and invertebrates, including Arachnids such as orabitid mites, insects, rotifers, tardigrades, and spiders. (4) Providing habitat for these micro organisms is the base of the food chain, and provides food sources for the rest of the food web.

Pioneer Species

Lichen are considered pioneer species, or the first organism to appear in areas of primary succession. (2) They are able to colonize bare rocks, and an ecosystem is then able to begin developing on them.

Indication

An indicator species is a species that tells something about the environment by their presence, or absence, in that environment. Lichens are indicators of environmental pollution. They have no way to detoxify and excrete harmful chemicals from the air, so absence of lichen in an ecosystem can be an indicator of environmental stress due to pollution. (1)


References

[1] Lewis, Ricki. "Lichen." Biology, edited by Melissa Sue Hill, 2nd 2d., vol. 3, Macmillan Reference USA, 2016, pp 12-13. Science in Context

[2] Discovery Education Science, Primary and Secondary Succession

[3] “Lichen Biology.” Lichen Biology - Structure, www.fs.fed.us/wildflowers/beauty/lichens/biology/index.shtml.

[4] Ellis, Christopher J. “Lichen Epiphyte Diversity: A Species, Community and Trait-Based Review.” Perspectives in Plant Ecology, Evolution and Systematics, vol. 14, no. 2, 2012, pp. 131–152., doi:10.1016/j.ppees.2011.10.001.

[5] http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/fungi/lichens/lichenmm.html