lichen - Hutchinson encyclopedia article about lichen Printer Friendly
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lichen

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lichen

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A lichen is a symbiotic association between an alga and a fungus - in other words, each lichen is not one organism but two. Lichens grow very slowly, usually as encrustations on rocks, walls, or wood. They are found throughout the world but are unable to survive where the atmosphere is polluted, so they are good indicators of clean air.

Any organism of a unique group that consists of associations of a specific fungus and a specific photosynthetic organism (an alga or a cyanobacterium) living together in a mutually beneficial relationship (symbiosis). Found as coloured patches or spongelike masses on trees, rocks, and other surfaces, lichens flourish in harsh conditions, for example on exposed rock faces in Antarctica. (Group Lichenes.)

Some lichens are edible, for example, reindeer moss and Iceland moss; others are a source of colour dyes, such as litmus, or are used in medicine. They are sensitive to pollution in the air (see indicator species).


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It was brown with age, weather-worn at the angles, spotted with moss and lichen.
The gabled brick, tile, and freestone houses had almost dried off for the season their integument of lichen, the streams in the meadows were low, and in the sloping High Street, from the West Gateway to the mediaeval cross, and from the mediaeval cross to the bridge, that leisurely dusting and sweeping was in progress which usually ushers in an old-fashioned market-day.
It was the same rich green that one sees on forest moss or on the lichen in caves: plants which like these grow in a perpetual twilight.
 
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