Abstract

Some of the principal advances in our knowledge of lichens made since the time of E. M. Holmes are briefly reviewed. Floristic studies on British lichens have continued and distribution maps of particular species are now being produced. These studies have shown that many species have disappeared from areas affected by air pollution by sulphur dioxide. Lichen taxonomy has seen the acceptance of chemical characters as valid taxonomic criteria, and the realization that ascus types, ascocarp structure and ascocarp ontogeny are more important at the generic level than ascospore characters alone. Lichens are not now thought of as a single taxonomic group but as fungi related to various orders of non-lichenized Ascomycotina, united only in their common method of nutrition (symbiosis with algae); some lichenized and non-lichenized species with identical types of ascocarps are consequently being treated as members of the same genus. Considerable progress has been made in describing lichen communities characteristic of particular substrates and situations and in understanding the factors which may affect the occurrence of particular species. Lichens have proved to be particularly valuable indicators of mean air pollution levels and scales for the estimation of these levels based solely on the lichen vegetation have been devised. Physiological and ultrastructural studies on lichens have progressed rapidly in the last decade. Carbohydrates have been demonstrated to move from the algal to the fungal component and the mobile carbohydrates found to differ in lichens with different genera of algae. The algal and fungal partners have been isolated and studied in pure culture. Most attempts to synthesize lichens have met with little success but in 1970 a thallus was formed from its components in culture. It is now possible to grow some lichens under controlled conditions in the laboratory and these techniques, together with transplant experiments, will clearly assume considerable importance in the investigation of taxonomic and ecological problems in the future. Little progress has been made in the study of lichen cytology or the factors affecting the establishment of lichen thalli. Lichens constitute an important part of some ecosystems and their decline due to anthropogenic influences is consequently a matter of concern for all biologists.

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