Thursday, March 5, 2009

Lichens of Ecuador

Lichens are symbiotic associations between fungi and algae. The fungus provides the alga with a place to live, and the alga photosynthesizes and shares some of the resulting 'food' with the fungus. One provides room; the other provides board. It benefits both species to hang out together, and provides a nice example of two phylogenetic 'branches' of the 'tree of life' merging into one. There are many varieties of lichens, living in a diversity of habitats, but they're easiest to spot in colder zones where they are first in line to colonize raw rock surfaces.

When I was in Ecuador in January, I saw a lot of lichens, and took some photos of them. I'm not a lichen expert, and I won't attempt to name these varieties. I'm more interested in them as aesthetic phenomena. I find them beautiful.

This one reminds me of ripples on a pond's surface, spreading out over decades and centuries:
lichens_02

The orange here is also a lichen:
lichens_04

These wispy lichens were three-dimensional structures that were found all over the ground surface (not encrusted on a rock) in the paramo ecosystem.
lichens_05

They were present in such profusion in Cotopaxi National Park that the ground looked from a distance as if it had a light layer of snow on it:
lichen_landscape_distance

Other ground lichens:
lichens_06

lichens_03

Lichen-bearded goofball:
lichens_01

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3 Comments:

Anonymous Jules said...

Wonderful photos!

The amazing profusion of those beautiful lichens is also indicative of the exceptional air quality there.

According to this link there is still some questions about whether the relationship between the two species in lichens is exclusively symbiotic:

http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Lichen

Many of them are difficult to botanize without chemical analysis.

A seemingly mundane organism that over the millenia quietly and persistently alters the rocks it makes as its "home".

March 5, 2009 8:29 PM  
Blogger Mel said...

Besides their amazing shapes and colors, I still find it amazing that people can use lichens to date the age of a rocks surface. Lichenometry. Gotta love it.

March 7, 2009 5:44 PM  
Anonymous Alexander said...

Very nice lichen photos ! Please show more of them!

November 6, 2009 11:40 AM  

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