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The Use of Average number of Neighbours for Predicting Lichen Sensitivity: a Case Study

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2007

T. Herben
Affiliation:
Botanical Institute, Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences, CS-252 43 Průhonice, near Praha, Czechoslovakia.
J. Liška
Affiliation:
Botanical Institute, Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences, CS-252 43 Průhonice, near Praha, Czechoslovakia.

Abstract

The sensitivity of lichen species to air pollution was assessed by examining aspects of their rate of disappearance over a 5 year period in an area with rising SO2 concentration. These rates of disappearance were compared with the ecological index of species proposed by LeBlanc & DeSloover in 1970, i.e. the index of average number of neighbours for a given species. Linear correlation showed that this ecological index is a reasonably accurate indicator of species sensitivity. When the selection of species was performed according to criteria other than SO2 sensitivity, viz. according to the predilection of lichens for eutrophicated bark, the ecological index proved reliable only when trees whose conditions were non-optimal for this group were excluded. When applied to the group of species that avoids eutrophicated bark the ecological index proved most reliable, although the group of ‘ nitrophilous ’ species may also be used in air pollution indicator studies.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British Lichen Society 1984

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