Published August 3, 2020
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Data from: The weight of the crust: biomass of crustose lichens in tropical dry forest represents more than half of foliar biomass
Description
In recent years, our ecological knowledge of tropical dry forests
has increased dramatically. However, the functional contributions of whole
ecosystem components, such as lichens, remain mostly unknown. In these
forests, the abundance of epiphyte crustose lichens is responsible for the
characteristic white bark on most woody plants, conspicuous during the dry
season, but the amount of resources that the lichen component represents
remains unexplored. We estimated lichen biomass in a Mexican tropical dry
forest using the bark area of trees, the dry mass of lichens per unit area
and the percentage of bark covered by lichens, together with previously
known tree densities. The lowest 2.5 m of the forests main trunks contained
188 kg/ha of lichen biomass, with lichens covering 85% of the available
bark for trees <12 cm DBH and 38% for trees >12 cm. Total epiphytic lichen
biomass was 1.34–1.99 Mg/ha. Lichen biomass represented 61% of the foliar
biomass in the forest. To our knowledge, this is the first time that a
lichen biomass estimate is provided for an ecosystem in which crustose
lichens are the dominant lichen growth form. Crustose lichens are typically
considered to contribute little to the total lichen biomass and to be
difficult to include in ecological analyses. The high lichen biomass in
this ecosystem implies a significant ecological role which so far is
unexplored. We suggest the crustose lichen component should not be
underestimated a priori in ecological studies, especially in ecosystems
with abundant lichen cover.
Notes
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