Patterns of photobiont diversity were examined in some Nostoc-containing lichens using the nucleotide sequence
of the cyanobacterial tRNALeu (UAA) intron. Lichen specimens collected in northwestern USA were analysed and
the sequence data were compared with tRNALeu(UAA) intron sequences previously obtained from lichens in
northern Europe. Generally, it is the species identity of a lichen rather than the geographical origin of the specimen
that determines the identity of the cyanobiont. Identical intron sequences were found in Peltigera membranacea
specimens collected in Oregon (USA) and in Sweden, and very similar sequences were also found in Nephroma
resupinatum thalli collected in Oregon and Finland. Furthermore, in mixed assemblages where two Peltigera
species grew in physical contact with each other, the different lichen species housed different photobiont strains.
There is however not a one-to-one relation between mycobiont and photobiont as some intron sequences were
found in more than one lichen species, and different intron sequences were found in different samples of some
lichen taxa. Peltigera venosa exhibited a higher level of photobiont diversity than any other lichen species studied,
and several intron sequences could for the first time be obtained from a single thallus. It is not clear whether this
is evidence of lower cyanobiont specificity, or reflects an ability to exhibit different degrees of lichenization with
different Nostoc strains. In one specimen of P. venosa, which contained bipartite cyanosymbiodemes and tripartite,
cephalodiate thalli, both thallus types contained the same intron sequence.