Accumulation of lead in the crustose lichen Acarospora smaragdula sensu lato is reported in the vicinity of an ore-
processing plant where it is subjected to acidification and metal particulate fallout. A combination of light
microscopy, X-ray element mapping, field emission scanning electron microscopy (FESEM) and other analytical
techniques identifies Pb accumulation within specific fungal tissues derived from smelter particles (PM10s). No
Pb was detected within the photobiont layer. Our studies suggest that Pb is highly mobile under the prevailing
acidic conditions, and is fixed within the lichen cortex and melanized apothecia. Lead is also accumulated within
the medulla and at the rock–lichen interface where it may precipitate as amorphous botryoidal encrustations on
medullary hyphae and iron-rich particles. Modern FESEMs and microprobes enable analysis of minute quantities
of material, and are important tools in understanding the fate of metals within lichens necessary to develop their
use as predictive and sensitive bioindicators of aerial particulate contaminants. We suggest that crustose lichens,
hitherto largely ignored in metal pollution studies, may be useful bioindicators of aerial particulate contaminants
in polluted areas where macrolichens are absent.