Lichen meadow

pineypointpineypoint2In a low winter sun: Cladonia lichens growing around a sandstone outcrop on the Cumberland Plateau, Sewanee, TN. Few plants can survive the thin soil and extreme summer heat near these outcrops. Masters of difficult conditions, lichens move in.

Further north, this genus of lichen blankets parts of the tundra (and feeds caribou). The tundra is another place that is too challenging for most plants, as are mountain tops, rocky coasts, bare cliffs — all places that lichens spread their slow-growing algal-fungal fingers. Another winning mutualism.

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15 Responses to Lichen meadow

  1. Your post reminded me that I had taken some photos of lichens during many of my hikes through the Pisgah National Forest. Well, I found the negatives and have scanned them. One I’ve titled ‘Lichen Flowers’ as I think that the emerging pink tuber-shaped items might be the lichen’s way of getting ready to spread some spores. Do you have any suggestions as where I could turn to find out more about this? By the way, I recently read ‘The Forest Unseen’ and really appreciated your take an selecting a spot and returning to it over a period of time. It was like reading notes from a friend who knew what the heck we were looking at!

  2. Karen Idoine says:

    Looks like places on Cape Cod! The color and texture always draw me in.

  3. flatland57 says:

    The meadow is lovely. I’ve been looking at lichen patterns on trees in the woods where I walk, and also noticing a darkening of the bark that looks like an oil stain, but it’s patchy. Is this a precursor to lichen or a disease? Any idea?

  4. Forget the science – enter fairyland!

  5. Mary Ellen Newport says:

    are lichens classified after the fungi in them?

  6. Don says:

    Thank you, sir; I enjoy your posts.

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