My journey home from my recent Scottish trip took me through Glen Coe and to the Ben Lawers NNR for a lunch break. Some years ago, I read about the alpine flora at Ben Lawers and I was interested to familiarise myself with the area with a view to possibly having a break there in the future.
The visitor centre was closed, which was disappointing, and I travelled on, up the mountain road beyond the centre to a damn where, to avoid the horizontal rain, I had my picnic lunch in the car. Near to where I was parked was this small clump of Purple Saxifrage (
Saxifraga oppositifolio) ...
Later I parked near the visitor centre and had a short walk into part of the Reserve where I observed the following two species of lichen on a sapling. The first two pictures are of
Physcia aipolia, the first 20mm in diameter, the second 20mm x 40mm. Both are
young examples but have typical
apothecia with their dark brown to black discs developing.
On the same tree, the following and again young,
Toad lichen (
Melanohalea exasperata), 20mm in diameter, well named in one sense, because I have been totally exasperated in trying to identify it and in another, because mature examples look like the skin of a toad. After posting my photographs to a Scottish Lichen group, experts have given me advice and positive identifications.
I have read recently that a tree might host as many as twenty different lichens. The picture confirms this to some extent, including the tiny crustose lichen
Rinodina sophodes (top, and bottom left immediately under the M. exasperata),
Xanthoria polycarpa (centre bottom under the M. exasperata), as well as a few immature lobes of a
Physcia species, possibly the Physcia aipolia, as presented above.