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Nitrogen and carbon isotope variability in the green‐algal lichen X anthoria parietina and their implications on mycobiont–photobiont interactions
Author(s) -
Beck Andreas,
Mayr Christoph
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
ecology and evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.17
H-Index - 63
ISSN - 2045-7758
DOI - 10.1002/ece3.417
Subject(s) - lichen , botany , δ15n , isotopes of nitrogen , stable isotope ratio , biology , δ13c , substrate (aquarium) , environmental chemistry , nitrogen , chemistry , ecology , physics , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics
Stable isotope patterns in lichens are known to vary largely, but effects of substrate on carbon and nitrogen stable isotope signatures of lichens were previously not investigated systematically. N and C contents and stable isotope (δ 15 N , δ 13 C ) patterns have been measured in 92 lichen specimens of X anthoria parietina from southern B avaria growing on different substrates (bark and stone). Photobiont and mycobiont were isolated from selected populations and isotopically analyzed. Molecular investigations of the internal transcribed spacer of the nuclear ribosomal DNA ( ITS nrDNA ) region have been conducted on a subset of the specimens of X . parietina . Phylogenetic analysis showed no correlation between the symbionts X . parietina and T rebouxia decolorans and the substrate, isotope composition, or geographic origin. Instead specimens grown on organic substrate significantly differ in isotope values from those on minerogenic substrate. This study documents that the lichens growing on bark use additional or different N sources than the lichens growing on stone. δ 15 N variation of X . parietina apparently is controlled predominantly by the mass fraction of the mycobiont and its nitrogen isotope composition. In contrast with mycobionts, photobionts of X . parietina are much more 15 N ‐depleted and show less isotopic variability than mycobionts, probably indicating a mycobiont‐independent nitrogen acquisition by uptake of atmospheric ammonia.

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