Abstract

The quantity and the qualitative composition (for some species) of phenolic compounds (PC) washed out of the intact thalli of lichens of the orders Peltigerales (the genera Peltigera, Solorina, and Nephroma) and Lecanorales (the genera Cladonia, Alectoria, and Cetraria) were studied. It was shown that the quantity of leachable PCs in Peltigerales was on average 2–3 times higher than in Lecanorales. At the same time, the extractability of PC from intact thalli by water was higher in Lecanorales than in Peltigerales: 48–88% and 34–70%, respectively, of the PC content in ethanol extracts from crushed thalli (i.e., of the total content of soluble PC). Water-soluble PC in the lichens Peltigera aphthosa, Solorina crocea, Cetraria islandica, Flavocetraria nivalis, Cladonia uncialis, and Cladonia arbuscula were represented by 7–12 phenolic compounds with similar qualitative composition in the species of the same order. The most part of water soluble PC were phenylpropanoids. All of the studied species showed the presence of p-hydroxybenzoic acid derivatives; vanillic and protocatechuic acid derivatives were found in Cetraria and Cladonia species, respectively.

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