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Question
practical activity: lichens
find out: what is a lichen? what organisms are working together to create lichen?
what kind of symbiosis does the make-up of lichen represent?
do lichens have roots?
why not? (hint: find out if either algae or fungus has roots)
1. What is a lichen? What organisms work together to create lichen?
A lichen is a composite organism resulting from a symbiotic relationship. A fungus (usually an ascomycete or basidiomycete) and a photosynthetic partner (either a green alga or a cyanobacterium, or sometimes both) work together. The fungus provides a protective structure and absorbs water and minerals, while the photosynthetic partner produces food via photosynthesis.
The symbiosis in lichen is mutualism. In mutualism, both organisms benefit. The fungus gets organic carbon (food) from the photosynthetic partner (alga/cyanobacterium) which does photosynthesis. The photosynthetic partner gets a protected environment, water, and minerals from the fungus.
Lichens do not have true roots. True roots are structures found in vascular plants that absorb water and nutrients from the soil. Lichens attach to surfaces (like rocks, bark) using structures called rhizines (in some lichens) or holdfasts, which are not roots as they don't have the same function or structure as plant roots. Also, the fungal and algal components of lichen (fungus and alga/cyanobacterium) do not have roots (algae are simple and lack roots, fungi have hyphae not roots).
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A lichen is a composite organism from a fungus - photosynthetic partner (alga/cyanobacterium) symbiosis. A fungus (ascomycete/basidiomycete) and a photosynthetic partner (green alga/cyanobacterium) work together to create lichen.