Ascospore germination, thallus initiation, and areole and
prothallus development in the lichen Rhizocarpon
lecanorinum Anders were examined using light, fluorescence and
scanning electron microscopy. The ascospore
germ hyphae remain very short and do not form a prothallus-like
mycelium. Instead, a compact soredium-like
granule develops directly from sporeling contact with a
compatible species of Trebouxia. Diffuse initial stages
involving non-trebouxioid algae are lacking. The onset of thallus
differentiation is marked by the deposition of
rhizocarpic acid in an incipient cortical layer within the apical part
of the granule. As pigmentation and cortex-formation transform this
structure into a typical areole, radiating prothallus hyphae are simultaneously
initiated
from its basal margin. Most areoles formed subsequently in
the marginal prothallus lack subtending melanized
hyphae and apparently stem from overgrowth by the prothallus of
photobiont cells on, or in, the substratum.
Apothecia reach maturity in thalli as small as 2 mm in diameter.
It is proposed that the lack of diffuse hyphal
growth in sporelings and telescoped morphogenesis of R. lecanorinum
are part of a life history strategy geared to
precocious, heavy investment in ascospore production. The
R. lecanorinum–Trebouxia symbiosis has a number
of
features which make it well-suited for further studies of the
life history and development of prothallus-forming
crustose lichens with sexually reproducing mycobionts.