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Effects of manganese on the viability of vegetative diaspores of the epiphytic lichen Hypogymnia physodes
Affiliation:1. Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, University of Tabriz, Tabriz, Iran;2. School of Metallurgy and Materials Engineering, Iran University of Science and Technology, Tehran, Iran;3. School of Chemical and Biological Engineering, College of Engineering, Seoul National University, Seoul 151-742, Republic of Korea
Abstract:Soredia of the lichen Hypogymnia physodes cultivated with Bold's basal medium on agar plates for 8 days exhibited decreasing growth rates along with increasing Mn concentrations above 3 mM. Ca and Mg added separately or in combination, alleviated Mn toxicity. The chlorophyll a and b content of the soredia was reduced under the influence of Mn and was positively correlated with the rate of grown soredia. Trebouxia cells of the soredia grown with excess Mn were smaller than control cells, had reduced chloroplasts and were partly collapsed; fungal hyphae were shortened and strongly swollen. Disintegrated cell walls occurred both in algal and fungal cells. Excess Mn was sequestered in extracellular encrustations together with phosphate as corresponding anion. Intracellularly, Mn was accumulated in polyphosphate granules both in algal and fungal cells. Mn uptake was correlated with significant loss of Na, Mg and Ca, particularly from the mycobiont. Fungal cell walls also lost significant amounts of P. The same damage symptoms occurred in cells of soredia both grown or not, but the former had a higher share of intact cells. Damaged cells of both types of soredia had equally increased Mn concentrations, whereas the total Mn content was higher in not grown soredia than in the grown ones due to the greater amount of damaged cells in the former. The Si–Mn ratio in cell walls of intact Trebouxia cells was significantly higher than in collapsed cells. The experimental evidence of Mn sensitivity of H. physodes soredia corresponds to studies of epiphyte vegetation in montane spruce forests of northern Germany that revealed decreasing cover values of H. physodes with an increasing Mn content of the substrate.
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