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Carbon based secondary compounds do not provide protection against heavy metal road pollutants in epiphytic macrolichens.

Authors :
Gauslaa, Yngvar
Yemets, Olena A.
Asplund, Johan
Solhaug, Knut Asbjørn
Source :
Science of the Total Environment. Jan2016, Vol. 541, p795-801. 7p.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Lichens are useful monitoring organisms for heavy metal pollution. They are high in carbon based secondary compounds (CBSCs) among which some may chelate heavy metals and thus increase metal accumulation. This study quantifies CBSCs in four epiphytic lichens transplanted for 6 months on stands along transects from a highway in southern Norway to search for relationships between concentrations of heavy metals and CBSCs along a gradient in heavy metal pollutants. Viability parameters and concentrations of 21 elements including nutrients and heavy metals in these lichen samples were reported in a separate paper. Medullary CBSCs in fruticose lichens ( Ramalina farinacea , Usnea dasypoga ) were reduced in the most polluted sites, but not in foliose ones ( Parmelia sulcata , Lobaria pulmonaria ), whereas cortical CBSC did not change with distance from the road in any species. Strong positive correlations only occurred between the major medullary compound stictic acid present in L. pulmonaria and most heavy metals, consistent with a chelating role of stictic acid, but not of other studied CBSCs or in other species. However, heavy metal chelating did not protect L. pulmonaria against damage because this species experienced the strongest reduction in viability in the polluted sites. CBSCs with an accumulation potential for heavy metals should be quantified in lichen biomonitoring studies of heavy metals because they, like stictic acid, could overshadow pollutant inputs in some species rendering biomonitoring data less useful. In the two fruticose lichen species, CBSCs decreased with increasing heavy metal concentration, probably because heavy metal exposure impaired secondary metabolism. Thus, we found no support for a heavy metal protection role of any CBSCs in studied epiphytic lichens. No intraspecific relationships occurred between CBSCs versus N or C/N-ratio. Interspecifically, medullary CBSCs decreased and cortical CBSCs increased with increasing C/N-ratio. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00489697
Volume :
541
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Science of the Total Environment
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
111056506
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2015.09.114