After doing part one of this post I started looking into lichen identification a little bit. (Not even intentionally, really; I just got sidetracked while looking up something else.) I’ve started to have a general idea of some of the lichens I’ve seen around, but I haven’t gotten too far yet. One of the lichens I was able to most clearly figure out was one I had been saving for the second part, because it was distinctive and I took quite a few pictures of it.
2 thoughts on “Lichens in New Mexico (Part 2)”
Magnificent, Brennah! A lesson in lichen. Does Spanish Moss, so prevalent in the South, fall into this category?
Thanks, Marika! Also, apparently not! I had been wondering the same thing about the spanish moss, so I looked it up shortly after we got back from New Mexico. Turns out it’s in the bromeliad family! Not what I was expecting, but pretty fascinating. The beard lichen was definitely reminding me of the spanish moss, though, especially where it was extra long.
Magnificent, Brennah! A lesson in lichen. Does Spanish Moss, so prevalent in the South, fall into this category?
Thanks, Marika! Also, apparently not! I had been wondering the same thing about the spanish moss, so I looked it up shortly after we got back from New Mexico. Turns out it’s in the bromeliad family! Not what I was expecting, but pretty fascinating. The beard lichen was definitely reminding me of the spanish moss, though, especially where it was extra long.