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Lichen Data

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Hi Team Linne!

I am so interested to read about your work with lichen.  Can you tell me what you have learned from thier growth rates since the '80s? 

Maggie

Matt Moore's picture
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Joined: Mar 12 2007
Lichens in Svalbard

Hi, Maggie.

There are a few things we know about lichens. They grow to agreat age and in some habitats can have rapid early growth as they pioneer an area that is undergoing primary succession, like a newly formed moraine from glacial retreat. It is not entirely clear if these lichens exhibit the rapid early growth soon after they arrive on a stone in these cool climates. It is my understanding that the jury is still out on that.

Anyway we can still get a pretty good understanding of the lichen age by measurements, weather/climate data and collaborating with a lichenologist (yes, they exist. They even have their own professional journal!). What Al has found is that these lichens are in the neighborhood of 200 years old which tell us that the glacier (linnebreen) was at this point of the upper valley at this time and created the moraine that the lichens have colonized. This was the nearing the end of the little ice age. So, the glacier has retreated over 1 kilometer since the last death throes of the little ice age. Significant retreat in this part of the world.

Matt