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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Physiologia plantarum 52 (1981), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1399-3054
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: The total resistances to CO2 uptake by Sticta latifrons Rich, and Pseudocyphellaria amphisticta Kremp. were separated into transport and carboxylation components by calculation after transformation of net photosynthesis rate against CO2 concentration curves into a linear form. The use of this technique circumvented the problem of measuring the internal CO2 concentration of the lichen thalli. Both species exhibited an increase in transport resistance at high thallus water contents and an increase in both transport and carboxylation resistances at low water contents. At low and intermediate water contents internal transport resistances were larger than carboxylation resistances when measured at limiting CO2 concentrations. However, at ambient CO2 concentrations carboxylation processes were the dominant factors limiting photosynthesis at all, except the high, water contents.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Physiologia plantarum 52 (1981), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1399-3054
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: The gaseous exchange pathways of Sticla latifrons Rich. and Pseudocyphellaria amphisticta Kremp. were examined using both light and scanning electron microscopes. The size and frequency of the pores in the gas exchange structures (cyphellae and pseudocyphellae) and in the medulla were measured and from these CO2 diffusion resistances were calculated. Pseudocyphellae were found to be smaller and more widely spaced than cyphellae, consequently the resistance of the pseudocyphellae, was much greater than that of the cyphellae. Medulla resistances were low in both lichens and are probably unimportant, even at high water contents. No evidence of hyphal swelling was found. Gas exchange structure resistances were more than five fold greater than medulla resistances. It is suggested that this arrangement of resistances may simultaneously encourage refixation of respired CO2 and maintain a non desiccating environment for the lichen algae. The internal transport resistances calculated in this work approximate experimentally obtained values.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1432-2056
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The importance of snowmelt as a source of moisture for the crustose lichen Buellia frigida in the early austral summer was investigated at Cape Geology, Granite Harbour, southern Victoria Land (77°01′S, 162°32′E). Surface and air temperatures and irradiance were recorded on the surface of a slightly inclined granite boulder for 5 weeks. Observations were made of lichen thallus hydration during a 5-day period. The results confirmed the strong warming effect of high irradiance; the rock surface and hydrated lichen were up to 19K above air temperature and, overall, the rock surface averaged 5.5K warmer. Therefore water condensation on the rock surface (dew or hoarfrost) was not possible during that period. Thalli were moistened by meltwater from both a small area of snow pack and from occasional snowfalls. The distribution of lichen thalli on the rock surface can be explained by the frequency and duration of meltwater moistening. Despite the very high irradiance whilst moist, the lichens seem well adapted to the combination of hydration, low temperatures and strong light.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Key words:Bryum (photosynthesis) ; Chlorophyll a fluorescence ; Electron transport ; Lichen (photosynthesis) ; Photosynthesis ; Respiration
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract. The relationship between CO2 exchange and relative electron-transport rate through photosystem II (ETR, measured using chlorophyll a fluorescence) was determined for a moss and a green algal lichen, photobiont probably Trebouxia sp., in the field in Antarctica. Net photosynthesis (NP) and dark respiration (DR) were measured over temperatures from zero to 25 °C and gross photosynthesis (GP) calculated (GP = NP + DR). The strong response of DR to temperature in these organisms resulted in substantial changes in CO2 exchange rates. The moss Bryum argenteum Hedw. showed a strong, linear relationship between GP and ETR. This was an unexpected result since mosses are C3 plants and, in higher plants, this group normally has a curvilinear GP versus ETR relationship. It is suggested that suppression of DR in the light might be involved. The lichen, Umbilicaria aprina Nyl., had nonlinear relationships between ETR and GP that were different at each measurement temperature. In some cases the lowest ETR was at the higher CO2 exchange rates. It is suggested that these relationships are the result of strong quenching mechanisms that are inversely proportional to GP. The results support a growing impression that the relationships between ETR and CO2 exchange are complex in these organisms and different from those found for higher plants.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 5
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Carbon dioxide (diffusion and carboxylation resistance) ; Helox ; Lichen ; Photosynthesis (lichen) ; Water content (lichen)
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Measurements were made of net rates of CO2 assimilation in lichens at various ambient concentrations of CO2 in air and in helox (79% He, 21% O2). Because of the faster rate of CO2 diffusion in the pores of lichen thalli when filled with helox than when filled with air, a given net rate of assimilation was achieved at a lower ambient concentration of CO2 in helox. The differences were used to estimate resistances to diffusion through the gas-filled pore systems in lichens. The technique was first tested with five lichen species, and then applied in a detailed study with Ramalina maciformis, in which gas-phase resistances were determined in samples at four different states of hydration and with two irradiances. By assuming, on the basis of previous evidence, that the phycobiont in R. maciformis is fully turgid and photosynthetically competent at the smallest hydration imposed (equilibration with vapour at 97% relative humidity), and that, with this state of hydration, diffusion of CO2 to the phycobiont takes place through continuously gas-filled pores, it was possible also to determine both the dependence of net rate of assimilation in the phycobiont on local concentration of CO2 in the algal layer, and, with the wetter samples, the extents to which diffusion of CO2 to the phycobiont was impeded by water films. In equilibrium with air of 97% relative humidity, the thallus water content being 0.5 g per g dry weight, the resistance to CO2 diffusion through the thallus was about twice as large as the resistance to CO2 uptake within the phycobiont. Total resistance to diffusion increased rapidly with increase in hydration. At a water content of 2 g per g it was about 50 times as great as the resistance to uptake within the phycobiont and more than two-thirds of it was attributable to impedance of transfer by water. The influences of water content on rate of assimilation at various irradiances are discussed. The analysis shows that the local CO2 compensation concentration of the phycobiont in R. maciformis is close to zero, indicating that photorespiratory release of CO2 does not take place in the alga, Trebouxia sp., under the conditions of these experiments.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 6
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Key wordsUmbilicaria aprina ; CO2 exchange ; Chlorophyll a fluorescence ; Low temperatures ; Photoinhibition
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A lichen growing in a continental Antarctic region with low temperatures and strong irradiance in summer was investigated for evidence of photoinhibition. Field experiments with Umbilicaria aprina from a sheltered site with heavy snowpack showed no effects of photoinhibition when the lichen was exposed to strong sun irradiance for nearly 11 h a day. This was evident from CO2 exchange and simultaneous chlorophyll a fluorescence measurements. CO2 exchange was also not affected if quartz glass allowing greater UV penetration, was used as a lid for the cuvette. The dependency of net photosynthesis on photosynthetic photon flux density suggests that the lichen is photophilous.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 7
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Key words Lichen acid ; Lichen substances ; Photosynthesis ; Lichen ; Water content
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Many lichens show seriously depressed net photosynthesis (NP) at high thallus water contents due to increased carbon dioxide diffusion resistance through blockage of diffusion pathways by water. The soil lichen Diploschistes muscorum, however, shows no depression and NP is close to maximal even at the highest thallus water content. We investigated whether lichen substances (lecanoric and diploschistesic acids) in the cortex and medulla contributed to this ability to maintain high NP. Dry thalli were extracted with water-free acetone and, after this treatment, were found to be fully viable to the extent of continued growth after replanting in the field. No differences were found in the response of NP to thallus water content between the normal and extracted thalli, in fact the response curves were often nearly identical. Thus, in this species it seems that lichen substances did not maintain the water-free diffusion pathways and some other explanation, possibly structural, needs to be sought.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 8
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Key words Electromagnetic Tracker ; Three-dimensional mapping ; Species composition ; Species distribution ; Topography
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A trial was undertaken with an electromagnetic position-tracking (Tracker) system by mapping a small section of a lichen habitat near Cape Royds, Ross Island, Antarctica. This method facilitated the simultaneous collection of precise information about both the topography of the site and the distribution of lichen species. These data were used to produce accurate maps and three-dimensional reconstructions of the mapped area. The technique offers considerable savings in time over conventional methods used in plant and lichen surveys, and has potential to enhance the information collected from broader-scale transect surveys.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 9
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Photosymbiodeme ; Phycosymbiodeme ; Delta13C ; Lichen ; Photosynthesis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Green lichens have been shown to attain positive net photosynthesis in the presence of water vapour while blue-green lichens require liquid water (Lange et al. 1986). This behaviour is confirmed not only for species with differing photobionts in the genusPseudocyphellaria but for green and blue-green photobionts in a single joined thallus (photosymbiodeme), with a single mycobiont, and also when adjacent as co-primary photobionts. The different response is therefore a property of the photobiont. The results are consistent with published photosynthesis/water content response curves. The minimum thallus water content for positive net photosynthesis appears to be much lower in green lichens (15% to 30%, related to dry weight) compared to blue-greens (85% to 100%). Since both types of lichen rehydrate to about 50% water content by water vapour uptake only green lichens will show positive net photosynthesis. It is proposed that the presence of sugar alcohols in green algae allow them to retain a liquid pool (concentrated solution) in their chloroplasts at low water potentials and even to reform it by water vapour uptake after being dried. The previously shown difference in δ13C values between blue-green and green lichens is also retained in a photosymbiodeme and must be photobiont determined. The wide range of δ13C values in lichens can be explained by a C3 carboxylation system and the various effects of different limiting processes for photosynthetic CO2 fixation. If carboxylation is rate limiting, there will be a strong discrimination of13CO2, at high internal CO2 partial pressure. The resulting very low δ13C values (-31 to-35‰) have been found only in green lichens which are able to photosynthesize at low thallus water content by equilibraiton with water vapour. When the liquid phase diffusion of CO2 becomes more and more rate limiting and the internal CO2 pressure decreases, the13C content of the photosynthates increases and less negative δ13C values results, as are found for blue-green lichens.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 10
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Lichen ; Water content ; Photosynthesis ; Rainforest ; Diffusive resistance
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract CO2 exchange rate in relation to thallus water content (WC, % of dry weight) was determined for 22 species of lichens, mainly members of the genera Pseudocyphellaria and Sticta, from a temperate rainforest, Urewere National Park, New Zealand. All data were obtained in the field, either using a standard technique in which the lichens were initially wetted (soaked or sprayed, then shaken) and allowed to slowly dry, or from periodic measurements on samples that were continuously exposed in their natural habitat. A wide range of WC was found, with species varying from 357 to 3360% for maximal WC in the field, and from 86 to 1300% for optimal WC for photosynthesis. Maximal WC for lichens, wetted by the standard technique, were almost always much less than the field maxima, due to the presence of water on the thalli. The relationships between CO2 exchange rate and WC could be divided into four response types based on the presence, and degree, of depression of photosynthesis at high WC. Type A lichens showed no depression, and Type B only a little at maximal WC. Type C had a very large depression and, at the highest WC, CO2 release could occur even in the light. Photosynthetic depression commenced soon after optimal WC was reached. Type D lichens showed a similar depression but the response curve had an inflection so that net photosynthesis was low but almost constant, and never negative, at higher WC. There was little apparent relationship between lichen genus or photobiont type and the response type. It was shown that high WC does limit photosynthetic CO2 uptake under natural conditions. Lichens, taken directly from the field and allowed to dry under controlled conditions, had net photosynthesis rates that were initially strongly inhibited but rose to an optimum, before declining at low WC. The limiting effects of high WC were clearly shown when, under similar light conditions, severe photosynthetic depression followed a brief, midday, rain storm. Over the whole measuring period the lichens were rarely at their optimal WC for photosynthesis, being mostly too wet or, occasionally, too dry. Photosynthetic performance by the lichens exposed in the field was similar to that expected from the relationship between the photosynthetic rate and WC established by the standard procedure.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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