Distribution and habitat preference of protected reindeer lichen species ( Cladonia
arbuscula , C. mitis and C. rangiferina ) in the Balaton Uplands (Hungary)
The maintenance of protected lichen species and their biodiversity in general depends
on good management practices based on their distribution and habitat preferences.
To date, 10 of the 17 protected lichen species of Hungary have been recorded in the
Bakony Mts including the Balaton Uplands region. Habitat preferences of three protected
Cladonia species (C. arbuscula, C. mitis
and C. rangiferina) growing on underlying rocks of red
sandstone, basalt, Pannonian sandstone and gravel were investigated by detailed sampling.
We recorded aspect, underlying rock type, soil depth, pH and CaCO3
content, habitat type (as defined by the General National Habitat Classification System
Á-NÉR), all species of lichen, bryophyte and vascular plants as well as percentage
cover of exposed rock, total bryophytes, lichens, vascular plants and canopy, degree
of disturbance and animal impacts. Sporadic populations of these species mostly exist
at the top of hills and mountains in open acidofrequent oak forests, but they may
occur in other habitats, such as closed acidofrequent oak forests, slope steppes on
stony soils, siliceous open rocky grasslands, open sand steppes, wet and mesic pioneer
scrub and dry Calluna heaths. Cladonia rangiferina
was found to grow beneath higher canopy cover than either C. arbuscula
or C. mitis in the Balaton Uplands. Furthermore, there
were significant differences in canopy cover between occupied and unoccupied quadrats
in the case of all three species. Cladonia rangiferina
is a good indicator species of natural habitats in Hungary due to its restricted distribution
and low ecological tolerance. These results may lead to the adoption of effective
conservation methods (e.g. game exclusion, artificial dispersal) in the future.