DIVERSITY, ECOLOGICAL ROLES, AND ENVIRONMENTAL SENSITIVITY OF LICHENS: A COMPREHENSIVE STUDY OF SYMBIOTIC ORGANISMS AS BIOINDICATORS
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Abstract
Lichens represent a remarkable symbiotic association between fungi (mycobiont) and photosynthetic partners (photobiont)—either green algae or cyanobacteria—forming composite organisms with unique biological characteristics and ecological functions. This comprehensive study investigated lichen diversity, distribution patterns, ecological roles, and sensitivity to environmental changes across multiple habitat types including urban, forest, and alpine ecosystems. Field surveys conducted over 18 months across 45 sampling sites documented 187 lichen species representing three major growth forms: crustose (42.2%), foliose (35.8%), and fruticose (22.0%). Species richness varied significantly among habitat types, with maximum diversity observed in mature forest ecosystems (mean 34.6 ± 6.8 species per site) compared to urban environments (mean 12.3 ± 4.2 species per site, p<0.001). Functional group analysis revealed that 47.6% of identified species were nitrophobic (nitrogen-sensitive), 31.2% were nitrotolerant, and 21.2% were nitrophilous (nitrogen-loving), reflecting varying adaptations to atmospheric nitrogen deposition. Assessment of air quality using lichen diversity indices demonstrated strong negative correlations between pollution levels and lichen species richness (r = -0.78, p<0.001), with particularly pronounced effects on fruticose and foliose macrolichens. Heavy metal accumulation analysis in lichen thalli revealed bioaccumulation capacities ranging from 15.4 to 487.3 μg/g dry weight for various pollutants, with highest concentrations of copper, zinc, and lead detected in lichens from industrial and traffic-dense urban areas. Climate sensitivity assessments indicated that 34.5% of surveyed species exhibited restricted geographic distributions potentially vulnerable to climate change, particularly alpine and arctic-alpine species. Secondary metabolite profiling identified 42 distinct lichen substances with diverse biological activities, including compounds with antimicrobial, antioxidant, and potential pharmaceutical properties. Our findings demonstrate that lichens serve critical ecological functions including primary productivity in nutrient-poor ecosystems, nitrogen fixation through cyanolichens, soil stabilization, and provision of habitat and food resources for invertebrates and vertebrates. The marked sensitivity of lichen communities to environmental stressors, coupled with their global distribution and ease of identification, establishes lichens as valuable bioindicators for monitoring air quality, climate change impacts, and ecosystem health. Conservation implications emphasize the need for habitat protection, pollution reduction, and climate change mitigation to preserve lichen diversity and the essential ecosystem services these organisms provide.
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References
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