Algal Biodiversity of Nine Megaliths in South-East Bulgaria.

Maya Stoyneva-G��rtner, Miroslav Androv, Blagoy Uzunov, Kristian Ivanov, Georg G��rtner
Author Information
  1. Maya Stoyneva-G��rtner: Department of Botany, Faculty of Biology, Sofia University "St. Kliment Ohridski", 8 blvd. Dragan Tsankov, 1164 Sofia, Bulgaria. ORCID
  2. Miroslav Androv: Department of Botany, Faculty of Biology, Sofia University "St. Kliment Ohridski", 8 blvd. Dragan Tsankov, 1164 Sofia, Bulgaria.
  3. Blagoy Uzunov: Department of Botany, Faculty of Biology, Sofia University "St. Kliment Ohridski", 8 blvd. Dragan Tsankov, 1164 Sofia, Bulgaria. ORCID
  4. Kristian Ivanov: Department of Botany, Faculty of Biology, Sofia University "St. Kliment Ohridski", 8 blvd. Dragan Tsankov, 1164 Sofia, Bulgaria.
  5. Georg G��rtner: Institute of Botany, Innsbruck University, Sternwartestrasse 15, 6020 Innsbruck, Austria.

Abstract

This paper presents the first data on the biodiversity of lithophytic algae from Bulgarian megaliths obtained after the application of the direct sampling method, subsequent cultivation, and processing by light microscopy. A rich algal flora was found: 90 species and 1 variety of 65 genera from Cyanoprokaryota/Cyanobacteria (29 species, 13 genera), Chlorophyta (40 species and 1 variety, 38 genera), Streptophyta (5 species, 1 genus), and Ochrophyta (16 species, 13 genera). Among them were the globally rare (Chlorophyta), found for the first time in such lowland and warm habitats, and (Chlorophyta), for which this is the first finding in the country. Three of the recorded species are conservationally important. The low floristic similarity between the sites (0-33%) shows the diversity of the algal flora, with no common species found for all the megaliths studied. The most widespread were the strongly adaptive and competitive , , and (Chlorophyta). The correlations estimated between the species number and substrate temperature (18.1-49.6 ��C) suggest the prospect of future research related to the impact of global warming. In addition, the study points to the safety aspects as it revealed species from nine potentially toxin-producing cyanoprokaryotic genera that could be harmful to visitors' health.

Keywords

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Grants

  1. BG-RRP-2.004-0008/the European Union-NextGenerationEU, through the National Recovery and Resilience Plan of the Republic of Bulgaria
  2. 80-10-47/10.05.2022/the Scientific Fund of Sofia University "St Kliment Ohridski"

Word Cloud

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