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Research article2010Peer reviewed

Lichen diversity and red-listed lichen species relationships with tree species and diameter in wooded meadows

Thor Göran, Johansson Per, Jönsson Mari

Abstract

This study provides a unique large dataset of total epiphytic lichen diversity (fruticose, foliose and crustose species) and composition on 1,294 trees of 17 tree species in wooded meadows in Sweden and Estonia, the Baltic region. The inventory (25,380 observations and 246 lichen taxa) clearly illustrated that Ulmus minor, Quercus robur and Fraxinus excelsior contributed most significantly to epiphytic lichen richness and number of red-listed species. In Sweden, average single tree a richness was 22.2 on Ulmus (only in Sweden), 21.6 on Quercus (25.0 in Estonia) and 19.8 on Fraxinus (16.7 in Estonia), respectively. Ulmus hosted on average one red-listed species per tree, compared with 0.7 on Fraxinus (0.6 in Estonia), 0.4 on Quercus (0.7 in Estonia) and only 0.05 on Betula (same in Estonia). Lichen species composition and the average number of red-listed lichens were influenced by tree diameter on Fraxinus and Quercus, whilst no such pattern was evident on Ulmus. Randomized species accumulation curves of the dominating tree species illustrated that Fraxinus, Quercus and Ulmus supported a dominated lichen communities where individual trees hosted a substantial part of the total richness. Betula, on the other hand, supported b dominated communities where individual trees tended to be dissimilar and, therefore, more of the total richness existed as species turnover among host trees. Lichen species composition was influenced by tree species, and most notably, lichen species on Ulmus had a strong consistent clumping in ordination graphs, with many rare and red-listed lichens. The broadleaved deciduous trees within the wooded meadows clearly contribute greatly to the biodiversity of the Baltic region

Keywords

Baltic Sea region; Betula spp.; Epiphytic lichens; Fraxinus excelsior; Quercus robur; Rare species; Species composition; Species evenness; Species richness; Ulmus minor

Published in

Biodiversity and Conservation
2010, Volume: 19, number: 8, pages: 2307-2328

      SLU Authors

    • UKÄ Subject classification

      Environmental Sciences related to Agriculture and Land-use

      Publication identifier

      DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10531-010-9843-8

      Permanent link to this page (URI)

      https://res.slu.se/id/publ/31696