Artificial Reestablishment of Lichens. II. Secondary Products of Resynthesized Cladonia cristatella and Lecanora chrysoleuca
- 1 January 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Mycologia
- Vol. 72 (1) , 90-109
- https://doi.org/10.2307/3759422
Abstract
Successful resyntheses of the C. cristatella mycobiont with its normal phycobiont and with Trebouxia isolates from 12 other species of lichens all produced the characteristic depside barbatic acid as the major secondary product. Many also produced the dibenzofuran didymic acid, but none yielded detectable amounts of the cortical pigment usnic acid. No characteristic lichen products were found in cultures of the C. cristatella mycobiont either alone, under a variety of cultural conditions, or mixed with Pseudotrebouxia phycobionts under the same conditions that led to successful resyntheses with Trebouxia phycobionts. Well-developed soredia from successful resyntheses of the L. chrysoleuca mycobiont with Pseudotrebouxia phycobionts showed traces of usnic acid. The production of characteristic lichen products is affected primarily by the establishment of a successful symbiosis and secondarily by as yet poorly defined environmental factors. The formation of many characteristic lichen products may involve algal inhibition of fungal enzymes.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Artificial Reestablishment of Lichens. I. Morphological Interactions between the Phycobionts of Different Lichens and the Mycobionts Cladonia cristatella and Lecanora chrysoleucaMycologia, 1980
- Fruticose and Foliose Lichens of the High-Mountain Areas of the Southern AppalachiansThe Bryologist, 1978
- Cetrelia cetrarioides and C. monachorum (Parmeliaceae) in the New WorldThe Bryologist, 1978