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1.
Oecologia ; 173(1): 59-72, 2013 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23440504

RESUMEN

Antarctica, with its almost pristine conditions and relatively simple vegetation, offers excellent opportunities to investigate the influence of environmental factors on species performance, such information being crucial if the effects of possible climate change are to be understood. Antarctic vegetation is mainly cryptogamic. Cryptogams are poikilohydric and are only metabolically and photosynthetically active when hydrated. Activity patterns of the main life forms present, bryophytes (10 species, ecto- and endohydric), lichens (5 species) and phanerogams (2 species), were monitored for 21 days using chlorophyll a fluorescence as an indicator of metabolic activity and, therefore, of water regime at a mesic (hydration by meltwater) and a xeric (hydration by precipitation) site on Léonie Island/West Antarctic Peninsula (67°36'S). Length of activity depended mainly on site and form of hydration. Plants at the mesic site that were hydrated by meltwater were active for long periods, up to 100 % of the measurement period, whilst activity was much shorter at the xeric site where hydration was entirely by precipitation. There were also differences due to life form, with phanerogams and mesic bryophytes being most active and lichens generally much less so. The length of the active period for lichens was longer than in continental Antarctica but shorter than in the more northern Antarctic Peninsula. Light intensity when hydrated was positively related to the length of the active period. High activity species were strongly coupled to the incident light whilst low activity species were active under lower light levels and essentially uncoupled from incident light. Temperatures were little different between sites and also almost identical to temperatures, when active, for lichens in continental and peninsular Antarctica. Gradients in vegetation cover and growth rates across Antarctica are, therefore, not likely to be due to differences in temperature but more likely to the length of the hydrated (active) period. The strong effect on activity of the mode of hydration and the life form, plus the uncoupling from incident light for less active species, all make modelling of vegetation change with climate a more difficult exercise.


Asunto(s)
Briófitas/metabolismo , Cambio Climático , Ecosistema , Líquenes/metabolismo , Agua/metabolismo , Regiones Antárticas , Briófitas/fisiología , Clorofila/metabolismo , Clorofila A , Líquenes/fisiología , Microclima , Temperatura , Factores de Tiempo
2.
New Phytol ; 160(1): 177-183, 2003 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33873530

RESUMEN

• The cyanobionts of lichens and free-living Nostoc strains from Livingston Island (maritime Antarctica) were examined to determine both the cyanobiont specificity of lichens and the spatial distribution of Nostoc strains under extreme environmental conditions. • We collected five different lichen species with cyanobacteria as primary or secondary photobiont (Massalongia carnosa, Leptogium puberulum, Psoroma cinnamomeum, Placopsis parellina and Placopsis contortuplicata) and free-living cyanobacteria from different sample sites and analysed them using the tRNALeu (UAA) intron as a genetic marker to identify the cyanobacterial strains. • Our results showed that the same Nostoc strain was shared by all five lichen species and that an additional strain was present in two of the lichens. Both Nostoc strains associated with lichen fungi also occurred free-living in their surrounding. Bi- and tri-partite lichens were not different in their cyanobiont selectivity. • Contrary to studies on different lichen species in temperate regions, the Antarctic lichen species here did not use species-specific cyanobionts; this could be because of a selection pressure in this extreme environment. Limiting factors under these ecological conditions favor more versatile mycobionts. This results in selection against photobiont specificity, a selection pressure that may be more important for lichen distribution than the effect of cold temperatures on metabolism.

3.
Oecologia ; 130(2): 191-198, 2002 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28547141

RESUMEN

Photosystem activity status of the green algal (Pseudocyphellaria lividofusca) and cyanobacterial (P. knightii) components of a photosymbiodeme were continuously monitored in the field over a period of 35 days. The photosymbiodeme grew on a Nothofagus menziesii tree at Lake Waikaremoana, Urewera National Park, North Island, New Zealand. Two Mini-PAM fluorometers were placed so that the chlorophyll a fluorescence, temperature and PPFD (photosynthetically active photon flux density) could be recorded every 30 min for green algal and cyanobacterial parts of the thallus. Microclimate conditions were also recorded with a datalogger. The study confirmed the already known ability of green algal lichens to reactivate from high humidity alone whilst cyanobacterial species need liquid water, here obtained from rainfall. The photosystems of P. lividofusca were activated on every day and positive ETR (relative electron transport rate) occurred on all but 3 days. Activation level depended on the overnight relative humidity. P. knightii was activated and had positive ETR on only 13 days when rainfall had occurred. Both species were mostly inactive above 12°C but differed at low temperatures. P. knightii showed no activation at very low temperatures, -2 to 0°C, since these only occurred on clear, rain-free nights. PPFD was always very low, mostly below 80 µmol m-2 s-1, and both species were inactive at higher PPFD. The three-dimensional structure of the thallus seemed to contribute to the hydration. The cyanobacterial sectors were more appressed to the trunk and needed substantial rainfall to rewet whereas the green algal lobes were more distant from the trunk and this probably caused more rapid desiccation as well as lower temperatures. It is suggested that the longer active periods for photosynthesis by P. lividofusca are balanced by several factors: first, depressed net photosynthesis at high thallus water contents after rainfall, a feature not shown by P. knightii; second, possible lower maximal net photosynthetic rates; and third, the possibility of greater respiratory rates when thalli have been hydrated by high relative humidity. There is little evidence for high PPFD differently affecting the photosymbiodeme components since sustained, high PPFD did not occur. It has been reported that the photosystems of cyanobacterial species from photosymbiodemes can reactivate at high relative humidity but the results obtained here suggest that it is not ecologically significant.

4.
Biodivers Conserv ; 23: 1639-1658, 2014.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24954978

RESUMEN

Here we report details of the European research initiative "Soil Crust International" (SCIN) focusing on the biodiversity of biological soil crusts (BSC, composed of bacteria, algae, lichens, and bryophytes) and on functional aspects in their specific environment. Known as the so-called "colored soil lichen community" (Bunte Erdflechtengesellschaft), these BSCs occur all over Europe, extending into subtropical and arid regions. Our goal is to study the uniqueness of these BSCs on the regional scale and investigate how this community can cope with large macroclimatic differences. One of the major aims of this project is to develop biodiversity conservation and sustainable management strategies for European BSCs. To achieve this, we established a latitudinal transect from the Great Alvar of Öland, Sweden in the north over Gössenheim, Central Germany and Hochtor in the Hohe Tauern National Park, Austria down to the badlands of Tabernas, Spain in the south. The transect stretches over 20° latitude and 2,300 m in altitude, including natural (Hochtor, Tabernas) and semi-natural sites that require maintenance such as by grazing activities (Öland, Gössenheim). At all four sites BSC coverage exceeded 30 % of the referring landscape, with the alpine site (Hochtor) reaching the highest cyanobacterial cover and the two semi-natural sites (Öland, Gössenheim) the highest bryophyte cover. Although BSCs of the four European sites share a common set of bacteria, algae (including cyanobacteria) lichens and bryophytes, first results indicate not only climate specific additions of species, but also genetic/phenotypic uniqueness of species between the four sites. While macroclimatic conditions are rather different, microclimatic conditions and partly soil properties seem fairly homogeneous between the four sites, with the exception of water availability. Continuous activity monitoring of photosystem II revealed the BSCs of the Spanish site as the least active in terms of photosynthetic active periods.

5.
Oecologia ; 135(1): 30-8, 2003 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12647101

RESUMEN

Photosynthetic activity, detected as chlorophyll a fluorescence, was measured for lichens under undisturbed snow in continental Antarctica using fibre optics. The fibre optics had been buried by winter snowfall after being put in place the previous year under snow-free conditions. The fibre optics were fixed in place using specially designed holding devices so that the fibre ends were in close proximity to selected lichens. Several temperature and PPFD (photosynthetic photon flux density) sensors were also installed in or close to the lichens. By attaching a chlorophyll a fluorometer to the previously placed fibre optics it proved possible to measure in vivo potential photosynthetic activity of continental Antarctic lichens under undisturbed snow. The snow cover proved to be a very good insulator for the mosses and lichens but, in contrast to the situation reported for the maritime Antarctic, it retained the severe cold of the winter and prevented early warming. Therefore, the lichens and mosses under snow were kept inactive at subzero temperatures for a prolonged time, even though the external ambient air temperatures would have allowed metabolic activity. The results suggest that the major activity period of the lichens was at the time of final disappearance of the snow and lasted about 10-14 days. The activation of lichens under snow by high air humidity appeared to be very variable and species specific. Xanthoria mawsonii was activated at temperatures below -10 degrees C through absorption of water from high air humidity. Physcia dubia showed some activation at temperatures around -5 degrees C but only became fully activated at thallus temperatures of 0 degrees C through liquid water. Candelariella flava stayed inactive until thallus temperatures close to zero indicated that liquid water had become available. Although the snow cover represented the major water supply for the lichens, lichens only became active for a brief time at or close to the time the snow disappeared. The snow did not provide a protected environment, as reported for alpine habitats, but appeared to limit lichen activity. This provides at least one explanation for the observed negative effect of extended snow cover on lichen growth.


Asunto(s)
Líquenes/crecimiento & desarrollo , Líquenes/fisiología , Nieve , Adaptación Fisiológica , Regiones Antárticas , Clorofila/análisis , Clorofila A , Monitoreo del Ambiente , Tecnología de Fibra Óptica , Fluorescencia , Humedad , Fotosíntesis
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