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Techniques & Methods

Broadly, we use six interconnected realms of knowledge to recognize, study, classify and name lichens:

  1. Partner identity: what type of fungi, algae and other organisms form the lichen thallus?
  2. Morphology: what growth form is the thallus? What types of vegetative and sexual reproductive structures are present?
  3. Anatomy: what tissue types are present? How are the hyphae organized with relation to the photobiont?
  4. Chemistry: chemistry and photobiont together produce a lichen’s color. Secondary metabolites play a host of additional functions. We use color, spot tests, thin layer chromatography, and more advanced laboratory techniques to examine a lichen’s chemistry.
  5. Genetics: increasingly we use genetic barcoding loci, protein-coding gene segments, or genomic-level molecular data to classify lichens into species, genera, and higher taxonomic levels.
  6. Ecology: what substrate, microclimate, or climatic niche does the lichen occupy?

Here we provide a few tips and tutorials to help you characterize these realms.

License

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Lichens of Alberta Copyright © by Diane L. Haughland is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.