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    Buckley, Hannah L. Rafat, Arash Ridden, Johnathon D. Cruickshank, Robert H. Ridgway, Hayley J. and Paterson, Adrian M. 2014. Phylogenetic congruence of lichenised fungi and algae is affected by spatial scale and taxonomic diversity. PeerJ, Vol. 2, Issue. , p. e573.

    Grube, Martin Berg, Gabriele S. Andrésson, Ólafur Vilhelmsson, Oddur Dyer, Paul S. and Miao, Vivian P.W. 2013. The Ecological Genomics of Fungi. p. 191.

    Bačkor, Martin Péli, Evelin Ramóna and Vantová, Ivana 2011. Copper tolerance in the macrolichens Cladonia furcata and Cladina arbuscula subsp. mitis is constitutive rather than inducible. Chemosphere, Vol. 85, Issue. 1, p. 106.

    WERTH, Silke 2010. Population genetics of lichen-forming fungi – a review. The Lichenologist, Vol. 42, Issue. 05, p. 499.

    Bačkor, Martin Klemová, Katarína Bačkorová, Miriam and Ivanova, Veneta 2010. Comparison of the Phytotoxic Effects of Usnic Acid on Cultures of Free-Living Alga Scenedesmus quadricauda and Aposymbiotically Grown Lichen Photobiont Trebouxia erici. Journal of Chemical Ecology, Vol. 36, Issue. 4, p. 405.

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  • Print publication year: 2008
  • Online publication date: September 2012

13 - Individuals and populations of lichens

Summary

Individuals?

In lichenology the term “thallus” or “body” is less contentious than “individual,” as a lichen thallus is not a single genetic entity. The status of “individual” has sometimes been applied loosely to physically distinct thalli, such as the stalked umbrella-shaped structure of Umbilicaria, or to discrete thalli of any lichen species. A more sophisticated approach, and one which is more meaningful biologically, is to consider a lichen “individual” as any thallus material which is genetically uniform with respect to the dominant, or fungal, symbiont. This, of course, requires genetic information which may not always be available.

Even defined according to genetic properties of the mycobiont, lichen “individuals” do not correspond to individuals of most other species. The reason is the high degree of internal thallus complexity. Not only are two or more interdependent primary symbiotic partners closely associated with one another, but there may be more than one strain of each and possibly even an array of other symbionts. In some ways lichens are as much like little communities or ecosystems (Section 1.6) as individuals.

The primary partners

Lichens are often presented as an association of two symbionts, but because they have evolved several times (Gargas et al. 1995; Lutzoni et al. 2001) few generalizations are applicable to all. Not only the nature, but also the number of participating symbionts may differ.

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Lichen Biology
  • Online ISBN: 9780511790478
  • Book DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511790478
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