nena masthead
SENA Home Staff & Editors For Readers For Authors

Diversity of Lichens in Northern Alabama Yields Evidence of an Exceptionally Diverse Biota

Erin A. Manzitto-Tripp1,2,*, Seth J. Raynor1, and Carly R. Anderson Stewart2

1Museum of Natural History, 350 UCB, Clare Small Building Basement, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309.2Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, 334 UCB, Ramaley Hall, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309. *Corresponding author.

Southeastern Naturalist, Volume 22, Issue 2 (2023): 170–191

Abstract
Our recent fieldwork to collect lichens in northern Alabama, with an emphasis on the terminus of the southern Appalachian Mountains, illuminated previously undocumented lichen species in this region of exceptional biodiversity. Numerous new and significant records are presented, including species disjunct both from more northerly latitudes as well as subtropical southerly latitudes: Dibaeis sorediata, Lobaria pulmonaria, Ricasolia quercizans, and the extremely rare Rinodina chrysomeleana. Despite exceptional and noteworthy lichen biodiversity, there exist only 2 large blocks of relatively high quality, undisturbed land in the northern half of the state: Bankhead National Forest and Skyline Wildlife Management Area. This situation, in combination with discovery of exceptional lichen biodiversity, calls for urgency in conservation measures and land protection throughout northern Alabama.

pdf iconDownload Full-text pdf (Accessible only to subscribers. To subscribe click here.)

 



Access Journal Content

Open access browsing of table of contents and abstract pages. Full text pdfs available for download for subscribers.

Issue-in-Progress: Vol. 23( 4) ... early view

Current Issue: Vol. 23 (3)
SENA 23(3)

Check out SENA's latest Special Issue:

Special Issue 12
SENA 22(special issue 12)

All Regular Issues

Monographs

Special Issues

 

submit

 

subscribe

 

JSTOR logoClarivate logoWeb of science logoBioOne logo EbscoHOST logoProQuest logo