Lichens have long been regarded as bioindicators of air pollution,
and structural studies typically have indicated negative impacts in
highly polluted areas. In this research, Parmelia sulcata and
Platismatia glauca were collected from one clean and two
polluted sites in the Pacific Northwest forests of the United States to
investigate the anatomical and ultrastructural responses of relatively
resistant lichens to moderate air pollution. Light microscopy of
polluted materials revealed only slight increases in the algal cell
proportions of the thallus, and a decrease in the fungal cells of the
medulla. Using transmission electron microscopy, increased lipid
droplets in the cytoplasm and an increase in the cell wall thickness of
the photobionts were found in the polluted lichens. These results were
compared with physiological data in which the net carbon uptake did not
show any significant differences; however, the total chlorophyll
content was heightened in the polluted samples. The increased total
chlorophyll content and the absence of any changes in the algal cell
proportions of the polluted samples suggest that the photobionts
possessed a higher chlorophyll content per unit volume of the
photobiont at polluted sites. The results also indicate that lichens
have altered their storage allocation in different cellular
compartments. This may be a result of symbiotic readjustment(s) between
the photobiont and the mycobiont. In comparison with the physiological
results from these two species, these changes do not represent damaging
effects by low-level air pollution.