Literature DB >> 25792281

Community Analyses Uncover High Diversity of Lichenicolous Fungi in Alpine Habitats.

Antonia Fleischhacker1, Martin Grube, Theodora Kopun, Josef Hafellner, Lucia Muggia.   

Abstract

Lichens are frequently colonized by specialized, lichenicolous fungi. Symptomatic lichenicolous fungi usually display typical phenotypes and reproductive structures on the lichen hosts. The classification based on these structures revealed different host specificity patterns. Other fungi occur asymptomatically in the lichen thalli and are much less known. We aimed at studying the diversity of lichen-associated fungi in specific, lichen-rich communities on rocks in the Alps. We tested whether lichenicolous fungi developing symptomatically on their known hosts also occur asymptomatically in other thalli of the same or of different host species. We collected lichen thalli according to a uniform sampling design comprising individuals adjacent to thalli that showed symptoms of lichenicolous fungal infections. The total fungal communities in the selected lichen thalli were further studied by single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) fingerprinting analyses and sequencing of internal transcribed spacer (ITS) fragments. The systematic, stratified sampling strategy helped to recover 17 previously undocumented lichenicolous fungi and almost exhaustively the species diversity of symptomatic lichenicolous fungi in the studied region. The results from SSCP and the sequencing analyses did not reveal asymptomatic occurrence of normally symptomatic lichenicolous fungi in thalli of both the same and different lichen host species. The fungal diversity did not correlate with the species diversity of the symptomatic lichenicolous fungus-lichen host associations. The complex fingerprint patterns recovered here for fungal communities, in associations of well-delimited lichen thalli, suggest lichen symbiosis as suitable subjects for fungal metacommunity studies.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25792281     DOI: 10.1007/s00248-015-0579-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Microb Ecol        ISSN: 0095-3628            Impact factor:   4.552


  19 in total

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3.  Extremotolerant fungi from alpine rock lichens and their phylogenetic relationships.

Authors:  Lucia Muggia; Antonia Fleischhacker; Theodora Kopun; Martin Grube
Journal:  Fungal Divers       Date:  2015-08-22       Impact factor: 20.372

Review 4.  Fungal Diversity in Lichens: From Extremotolerance to Interactions with Algae.

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