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| Aleksandr Paukov, Associate Professor at the Department of Biodiversity and Bioecology at UrFU Credit: Ural Federal University |
Lichens growing on substrates with different chemical properties have a different spectrum of secondary metabolites. This is probably how lichens adapt to unfavorable conditions - low pH of the substrate or toxic elements. Biologists of the Ural Federal University who studied more than 740 species of lichens discovered this new property of these organisms. Samples were collected from rocks and trees (spruce, pine, birch, alder, aspen, poplar) of the Middle Urals. The results were published in the journals Frontiers in Forest and Global Change and Diversity.
According to biologists from the UrFU, secondary metabolites help lichens adapt. These are peculiar "biochemical tools" with which the organism defends itself and survives under stressful conditions. Both animals and plants have primary metabolites, while plants have secondary metabolites only. In other words, to escape, unlike an animal which can escape, a plant produces a certain set of secondary metabolites which endow it with protective properties (taste, smell, color) and allow it to survive in drought, high temperatures, the spread of infections, etc.
In lichens, secondary metabolites accumulate in large amounts. They do not participate in metabolic processes, and the role of many in lichen life is not clear. The patterns of their formation are only beginning to be studied.









