Photoinhibition in lichens depends on cortical characteristics and hydration

Author:

GAUSLAA Yngvar,SOLHAUG Knut Asbjørn

Abstract

Two shade-adapted (Lobaria pulmonaria and Cetraria islandica) and two sun-adapted lichen populations (Xanthoria parietina and Cetraria nivalis) were exposed to three irradiance regimes (1: photosynthetic radiation—PAR, 2: PAR+UV-A, 3: PAR+UV-A+UV-B) and two hydration regimes (1: no hydration, 2: daily hydration) in a growth cabinet for three weeks. Shade-adapted thalli had transparent upper cortices without coloured pigments, whereas sun-adapted thalli had coloured UV-B absorbing cortical pigments masking the photobiont. Manipulation of pigment concentration was the third factor used in the factorial design (1: pigments intact, 2: pigments non-destructively extracted from air-dry living thalli by acetone). Inhibition of the photobiont due to PAR alone was severe in the two shade-adapted populations, but no applied UV wavelength bands caused additional aggravation of photoinhibition. Shade-adapted thalli of the ubiquitous C. islandica were more PAR-susceptible than of the rare old forest lichen L. pulmonaria, suggesting that screening by the mycobiont rather than photobiont characteristics, account for their different success in sun-exposed localities. Hydration of shade-adapted species during exposure reduced their photoinhibition substantially, probably because of moisture-activated repair mechanisms. On the contrary, the sun-adapted X. parietina was most phototolerant in the desiccated state, whereas hydration caused increased photoinhibition. When removing the orange cortical pigment parietin, the photoinhibition in moist thalli was aggravated, confirming a PAR-protective function of parietin. No effects of irradiance treatment, pigment extraction (usnic acid), or hydration level were observed in C. nivalis.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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