The Capital

Lichens offer subtle beauty every season

- By Margaret Roach

What are lichens? They are neither plant nor animal.

If that doesn’t make them inscrutabl­e enough, there is also this: A lichen might, at first glance, be mistaken for an errant wad of chewing gum or a misplaced splatter of paint.

But they are very much living creatures and are thought to be one of the earliest land-dwelling forms of life. They are among the most widespread, too, present on every continent, covering an estimated 8% of the planet’s land. They inhabit even Antarctica and the harshest deserts, including some places where plants and animals cannot thrive.

Closer to home, you may find them happily taking up residence on your wooden garden bench or picket fence, stone walls or other rock surfaces, or on the trunks and branches of trees and shrubs.

These subtle beauties offer plenty to look at in every season. So don’t try telling the scientists who study them that your garden is winding down.

It’s always lichen season, say Jessica L. Allen and James C. Lendemer, authors of “Urban Lichens: A Field Guide for Northeaste­rn North America,” out this month from Yale University Press. But fall is the time when these organisms can really command our attention, after the visual distractio­n of fall leaves fades.

The book aims to get us to notice — and try to identify — the major types and most familiar species of lichen.

“It’s not an onerous task of microscopy and chemistry,” Lendemer said. At a recent National Park Service educationa­l event he attended, about 20 high school students unfamiliar with lichens were given lichen-covered branches and asked to make observatio­ns.

“They picked up on the things we’d use to identify them — the main growth forms and diagnostic features,” he said. “And they picked out the basic types, even without knowing the terms for them. They intuited a lot.”

So can you. Ready for a backyard lichen quest, before some of them are hidden by snow?

If it’s not a plant, what is it?

Allen and Lendemer have been on many such quests together since they met in 2012 at the New York Botanical Garden. Allen, now an assistant professor of integrativ­e plant biology at Eastern Washington University, was pursuing her doctorate in a joint program with City University of New York.

At the botanical garden, where he is an associate curator, Lendemer oversees the Western Hemisphere’s largest lichen collection. He is also an assistant professor at CUNY.

The two are forever on the trail of these composite symbiotic organisms, which they describe in the book as “an intensive cooperatio­n between a fungus and an alga or a cyanobacte­rium, and sometimes all three.”

Most of a lichen’s structure is the fungus. The alga lives with it, and in return for shelter it provides photosynth­esis, producing sugars that sustain the fungus. But the two are not alone.

“In many ways, lichen are miniature universes,” Allen and Lendemer write, as a diverse community of bacteria, non-lichen fungi, nematodes and tardigrade­s (also known as water bears) live in and on a lichen.

The three types (and many colors) of lichens

Although they have no roots, lichens need a home base, called a substrate, to attach to. Common substrates include stone, wood or bark, and soil, but lichens can live on anything.

“They seem to have arrived at the perfect way to live on land,” Lendemer said. “They end up all looking pretty similar as a result, because it’s a recipe for success.”

There are three types of lichens, and figuring out which type you’re looking at is the first step in identifyin­g it.

Crustose lichens are completely attached to the substrate they grow on; no lower surface can be seen, and to remove the lichen means removing some substrate, too. Foliose species have lobed, leaflike bodies, or thalli; you can see both their upper and lower surfaces, which are different colors. Fruticose lichens have thalli that are branch-, cup- or club-like, imparting the look of tiny shrubs.

Lichens also come in various colors, the result of chemicals secreted by the fungus and not found anywhere else in nature. “Lichens produce the full rainbow of visible colors that we can see, and beyond,” Allen said.

“A rainbow of color in the forest,” Lendemer concurred.

Those substances serve various functions, including providing the lichens with protection from ultraviole­t radiation, and some have biomedical or bioactive properties. Where to Look for Them The key to lichens’ happiness, Allen said, is the long-term stability of the surface they grow on. Areas of the garden where you don’t disturb the soil frequently — perennial beds, for example

— are more likely to have soil-dwelling species of lichen.

Allen recommends starting your backyard hunt at eye level, on the bark of trees and shrubs. Look for gray or brownish patches — or even splotches of yellow, a hallmark of goldspecks (Candelarie­lla) and candleflam­e (Candelaria concolor).

Next, look at areas around the base of woody plants, where extra humidity may support lichen. And have a careful look in the cracks and crevices of unpainted wood furniture and between panels of wood fencing.

Stone walls are common substrates as well, and concrete can be home to lichens like sidewalk firedot (Caloplaca feracissim­a), “a very lovely yellow-to-orange one that literally grows under your feet,” Allen said.

But even with lichens that you can see from a distance: Get closer and use a magnifying lens. “Then the magic really happens,” she said, “to reveal patterns, variations in color and some crustose types that are otherwise hidden.”

There are more than 25,000 known lichen species globally, with about 300 to 400 new ones identified every year. In New York City alone, there are about 120 — a sharp increase from a century ago, thanks to cleaner air.

Despite what Lendemer calls their “often-humble common names,” like Old Gray Dust, Board-Dweller and Curly Biscuits, lichens can have lofty — or positively celestial — associatio­ns. The biblical manna from heaven was a lichen.

 ?? MARGARET ROACH/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Unpainted wood garden furniture is a popular substrate for colonies of certain lichens.
MARGARET ROACH/THE NEW YORK TIMES Unpainted wood garden furniture is a popular substrate for colonies of certain lichens.

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