By Hannah Gardner

Published: Wednesday, 04 January 2023 at 12:00 am


The chances are that lichens are growing closer to hand than you might think. Small in stature, their subtle and furtive beauty passes unnoticed by the casual eye. I first discovered lichens as a coral-like cluster hanging from the branches of a gnarly tree on the edge of Dartmoor, but I also see them as blackened blotches on shoreline rocks and in chartreuse blue-grey on the legs of my wooden garden bench.

Jump to more on

 

"Moss
© Kreetta Järvenpää

 

What are lichens?

Not one, but two organisms

Lichens are tough and intricate structures that are not quite a fungus, nor are they a moss. The very first lichens probably occurred before the evolution of land plants, cup fungi species having evolved during the Carboniferous period 358-298 million years ago. A lichen is not a single organism, rather a group of at least two organisms that closely interact in a stable, mutually beneficial (symbiotic) association. This produces a more elaborate and longer lived organism than either partner can form alone. The relationship is between a fungus and at least one alga (most commonly a green alga) or cyanobacterium.

Watch: lichens at Wistman’s Wood on Dartmoor