Ultraviolet radiation: a double-edged sword in old forest Lobaria lichens—reducing growth while enhancing acclimation
Ida Karina Kann, Knut Asbjørn Solhaug, Yngvar Gauslaa

TL;DR
This study shows that UV radiation slows lichen growth but helps them adapt to environmental stress, revealing a trade-off between growth and resilience.
Contribution
The study reveals a trade-off between UV-induced growth reduction and enhanced acclimation in old forest lichens.
Findings
UV exposure significantly reduced lichen growth rates but did not affect photobiont processes.
Lobaria pulmonaria synthesized more melanin under UV-B, protecting chlorophylls and preventing photoinhibition.
Increased melanic pigmentation correlated with higher drought tolerance, suggesting a role in acclimation.
Abstract
This study examines the effects of three light regimes—1) photosynthetic light (PAR) only, 2) PAR + UV-A, and 3) PAR + UV-A + UV-B radiation—on area and biomass growth in two old forest lichens: the widely distributed Lobaria pulmonaria, noted for rapid growth, and the rarer L. virens, with previously undocumented growth rates but known susceptibility to high light. To overcome the constraints of artificial light sources, we utilized solar filters in sun-exposed field conditions to assess how UV impacts growth and influences mycobiont traits (melanic pigmentation, thallus thickness) and photobiont responses (Chl content, Chl fluorescence, CO2 uptake). While UV exposure significantly reduced growth rates, it did not impact photobiont processes. Lobaria pulmonaria demonstrated robust melanin synthesis under UV-B, preventing photoinhibition and safeguarding chlorophylls, whereas L. virens,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLichen and fungal ecology · Biocrusts and Microbial Ecology · Mycorrhizal Fungi and Plant Interactions
