Lichens Lichens

Lichens

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Publisher Description

INTRODUCTION

Lichens are, with few exceptions, perennial aerial plants of somewhat lowly organization. In the form of spreading encrustations, horizontal leafy expansions, of upright strap-shaped fronds or of pendulous filaments, they take possession of the tree-trunks, palings, walls, rocks or even soil that afford them a suitable and stable foothold. The vegetative body, or thallus, which may be extremely long-lived, is of varying colour, white, yellow, brown, grey or black. The great majority of lichens are Ascolichens and reproduction is by ascospores produced in open or closed fruits (apothecia or perithecia) which often differ in colour from the thallus. There are a few Hymenolichens which form basidiospores. Vegetative reproduction by soredia is frequent.

Lichens abound everywhere, from the sea-shore to the tops of high mountains, where indeed the covering of perpetual snow is the only barrier to their advance; but owing to their slow growth and long duration, they are more seriously affected than are the higher plants by chemical or other atmospheric impurities and they are killed out by the smoke of large towns: only a few species are able to persist in somewhat depauperate form in or near the great centres of population or of industry.

The distinguishing feature of lichens is their composite nature: they consist of two distinct and dissimilar organisms, a fungus and an alga, which, in the lichen thallus, are associated in some kind of symbiotic union, each symbiont contributing in varying degree to the common support: it is a more or less unique and not unsuccessful venture in plant-life. The algae—Chlorophyceae or Myxophyceae—that become lichen symbionts or “gonidia” are of simple structure, and, in a free condition, are generally to be found in or near localities that are also the customary habitats of lichens. The fungus is the predominant partner in the alliance as it forms the fruiting bodies. It belongs to the Ascomycetes except in a few tropical lichens (Hymenolichens), in which the fungus is a Basidiomycete. These two types of plants (algae and fungi) belonging severally to many different genera and species have developed in their associated life this new lichen organism, different from themselves as well as from all other plants, not only morphologically but physiologically. Thus there has arisen a distinct class, with families, genera and species, which through all their varying forms retain the characteristics peculiar to lichens.

GENRE
Science & Nature
RELEASED
2020
March 16
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
442
Pages
PUBLISHER
Rectory Print
SELLER
Babafemi Titilayo Olowe
SIZE
35.4
MB

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