Lichens play an essential role in northern ecosystems as important contributors to the water, nutrient and carbon cycles, as well as the main winter food resource for reindeer (Rangifer tarandus, also called caribou in North America), the most abundant herbivores in arctic and subarctic regions. Today, climate change and several types of land use are rapidly transforming northern ecosystems and challenging lichen growth. Since lichens are important indicators of ecosystem health and habitat suitability for reindeer, large-scale assessments are needed to estimate their past, present and future status. In our study, we aimed to develop models and equations that can be used by stakeholders to identify the occurrence of lichen-dominated boreal ...
Several species of terricolous fruticose lichens are important as winter forage for a threatened spe...
Lichens are the most sensitive part of vegetation cover to reindeer grazing. In this study we analys...
The study was carried out in Kuusamo (66°15'N, 29°05'E) and Inari (68°30'N, 28°15'E)...
Lichens play an essential role in northern ecosystems as important contributors to the water, nutrie...
Reindeer lichens are important in the structure and function of tundra and taiga ecosystems, as exem...
Lichen species in the genera Cladonia (subgenus Cladina), Cetraria, Stereocaulon and Alectoria are i...
Reindeer lichens are on a dramatic decline in Sweden, with a 71 % decrease in abundance over the las...
Quantification of lichen abundance is important for management of reindeer populations. We measured ...
The survival of reindeer during winter, their period of greatest food stress, is largely dependent u...
There are indications that lichen-rich areas in northern Sweden, commonly used for winter grazing by...
Alpine lichen heaths are found on nutrient-poor and deep soils in the mountain plateaus in southern ...
In northern Sweden, the availability of arboreal lichens (Bryoria fuscescens, Alectoria sarmentosa) ...
The impacts of reindeer grazing on Cladonia lichen ranges have been receiving increasing attention f...
AbstractReindeer and caribou are keystone species in the circumpolar region, and rely on lichens as ...
Understanding the recovery rate of overgrazed lichen communities has value to mangers of lands in no...
Several species of terricolous fruticose lichens are important as winter forage for a threatened spe...
Lichens are the most sensitive part of vegetation cover to reindeer grazing. In this study we analys...
The study was carried out in Kuusamo (66°15'N, 29°05'E) and Inari (68°30'N, 28°15'E)...
Lichens play an essential role in northern ecosystems as important contributors to the water, nutrie...
Reindeer lichens are important in the structure and function of tundra and taiga ecosystems, as exem...
Lichen species in the genera Cladonia (subgenus Cladina), Cetraria, Stereocaulon and Alectoria are i...
Reindeer lichens are on a dramatic decline in Sweden, with a 71 % decrease in abundance over the las...
Quantification of lichen abundance is important for management of reindeer populations. We measured ...
The survival of reindeer during winter, their period of greatest food stress, is largely dependent u...
There are indications that lichen-rich areas in northern Sweden, commonly used for winter grazing by...
Alpine lichen heaths are found on nutrient-poor and deep soils in the mountain plateaus in southern ...
In northern Sweden, the availability of arboreal lichens (Bryoria fuscescens, Alectoria sarmentosa) ...
The impacts of reindeer grazing on Cladonia lichen ranges have been receiving increasing attention f...
AbstractReindeer and caribou are keystone species in the circumpolar region, and rely on lichens as ...
Understanding the recovery rate of overgrazed lichen communities has value to mangers of lands in no...
Several species of terricolous fruticose lichens are important as winter forage for a threatened spe...
Lichens are the most sensitive part of vegetation cover to reindeer grazing. In this study we analys...
The study was carried out in Kuusamo (66°15'N, 29°05'E) and Inari (68°30'N, 28°15'E)...