Abstract

Terrestrial mosses and lichens in the steppe of Washington were buried under volcanic ash from the 18 May 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens. Unlike adult vascular plants in these communities, these cryptogams died following the deposition of silt‐size ash. Death within as little as four months was demonstrated by anatomical deterioration and these organisms' inability to fix CO2, to fluoresce in IR radiation, and to absorb vital stains. Although cryptogams in the steppe have probably been destroyed repeatedly by ash falls during the Holocene, this recent destruction is the first since the arrival of alien plants in the nineteenth century. Death of cryptogams may allow the initiation of further colonization by alien plants because a cryptogamic crust forms a barrier to seedling establishment.

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