The fencepost which forms the basis of the eco-system we see in the image was put in position around 50 years ago. A series of lichens would have appeared very quickly in succession, each one preparing the post for the next. As the lichens died they would leave dead fungal matter, dead algae and rotted wood. Sooner or later a moss spore will have found this mixture suitable as a substrate and the moss began to live (and die) there. This decomposed vegetation eventually provided sufficient soil for the Bilberry to take root. So in a very short number of years, we have a sterile fencepost being turned into a habitat suitable for fruiting plants. It should be noted that the post still hosts a number of lichens and mosses in addition to the Bilberry. The process on stone takes slightly longer.
If you read any literature on lichens, you will be told in no uncertain terms that "lichens are a symbiotic relationship between a fungus and one or more algae or cyanobacterium". Whilst it's true that each lichen contains a fungus and one or more algae, with the combination being named after the fungal partner, I think the relationship is rather one-sided:
- Firstly, the algal partner can - and often does - survive on its own, whereas the fungus cannot. (Typical examples are Trebouxia and Nostoc, both of which I have found growing freely in a number of places.)
- Secondly, the reproductive system of a lichen is either purely fungal, or a combination of a fungal component with a captive parcel of algae.
The following image shows the fruitbodies of a lichen that clearly demonstrates the fungal nature of the reproductive system. Lichenomphalia umbelliferae is a lichen that grows in association with mosses. The fruitbodies are about 10 mm across the cap.
The actual situation is much more complex, of course, with some fungi that can be part-time or opportunistic lichens. A couple of years ago, I took this picture of Boletus erythropus with a golfball-sized lump of algae on its stipe. Notice the lichen-like appearance of the surface of the lump.
This 'skill' of harnessing the photosynthetic properties of algae must be deeply embedded in fungi.
Nice page - though "basically a house for the alga, which is constrained by the lichen, and is only able to reproduce within the confines of that structure, and is unable to free any part of itself as independent offspring." doesn'ts quite fit with "Firstly, the algal partner can - and often does - survive on its own, whereas the fungus cannot. "
ReplyDeleteFine shot of the 'baby mushroom' fruiting bodies.
Hmm...the "basically a house...." sentence can be interpreted in two ways. I was meaning within the context of a lichenised alga, not a free one.
ReplyDeleteSo, rewriting....
When free-range, the alga can reproduce freely. When housed inside a lichen, the alga can only reproduce within the bounds of that lichen as the lichen grows and has no way to make any part of itself free range.
I could also have added that the ejected fungal spores must conveniently end up on an appropriate alga in order to become a new lichen specimen, which implies some wastage. Hence the alternative reproductive system employed by some lichens, whereby a bundle of fungal hyphae and encapsulated alga are ejected to start new lichens. Some lichens employ yet another reproductive system whereby parts of the lichen body simply break off to start a new specimen. Some lichens grow on crumbly substrates for just that purpose.
Thanks :-)
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