The importance and abundance of lichens and mosses on the restored landscape in the nickel-copper city of Sudbury, Ontario, Canada

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
P J. Beckett T Miller S Wainio
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
3
File Size:
148 KB
Publication Date:
Aug 2, 2023

Abstract

Lichens are a symbiosis of fungi and algae. Air borne elements and gases are absorbed very efficiently over the entire surface of the lichen, because they have no protective structures such as a waxy cuticle or stomata. A survey in 1977 (one year before the Sudbury Regreening program began), indicated that several Cladonia spp had invaded the soil in Sudbury’s open birch woodlands. Pollution sensitive species such as Cladonia rangiferina and C. mitis occurred 20–25 km from the smelters. It was anticipated that the improvements in air quality and reclamation efforts would allow a natural invasion of pollution sensitive species into what once was a lichen desert that surrounded the smelters. The purpose of this project was to study the invasion of terricolous (soil-inhabiting) communities of lichens and mosses on reclaimed land in the Sudbury region 45 years after commencement of the Sudbury Regreening Program.
Citation

APA: P J. Beckett T Miller S Wainio  (2023)  The importance and abundance of lichens and mosses on the restored landscape in the nickel-copper city of Sudbury, Ontario, Canada

MLA: P J. Beckett T Miller S Wainio The importance and abundance of lichens and mosses on the restored landscape in the nickel-copper city of Sudbury, Ontario, Canada . The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2023.

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