4.1 Article

Occurrence, hyphal growth rate, and carbon source utilization of fungi from continental Antarctica

Related references

Note: Only part of the references are listed.
Article Biodiversity Conservation

Inhibitory effects of climate change on the growth and extracellular enzyme activities of a widespread Antarctic soil fungus

Marta Misiak et al.

Summary: Research has shown that raising temperatures above 20 degrees Celsius in Antarctic barren fellfield soils during summer can significantly reduce the abundance of decomposer fungi, such as Pseudogymnoascus roseus. High temperatures and high water availability also lead to decreased hyphal extension rates and enzyme activities in these cold-adapted microbes, indicating potential inhibitory effects of climate change on their metabolism.

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY (2021)

Article Plant Sciences

It Is Hot in the Sun: Antarctic Mosses Have High Temperature Optima for Photosynthesis Despite Cold Climate

Alicia Perera-Castro et al.

FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE (2020)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Abundant deposits of nutrients inside lakebeds of Antarctic oligotrophic lakes

Yukiko Tanabe et al.

POLAR BIOLOGY (2017)

Review Plant Sciences

Origins, roles and fate of organic acids in soils: A review

R. Adeleke et al.

SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY (2017)

Article Microbiology

The metabolic footprint of the airway bacterial community in cystic fibrosis

Vaishnavi Narayanamurthy et al.

MICROBIOME (2017)

Article Mycology

Branching out: Towards a trait-based understanding of fungal ecology

Carlos A. Aguilar-Trigueros et al.

FUNGAL BIOLOGY REVIEWS (2015)

Review Ecology

The spatial structure of Antarctic biodiversity

Peter Convey et al.

ECOLOGICAL MONOGRAPHS (2014)

Article Biotechnology & Applied Microbiology

Functional Diversity of Microbial Communities in Soils in the Vicinity of Wanda Glacier, Antarctic Peninsula

Igor Stelmach Pessi et al.

MICROBES AND ENVIRONMENTS (2012)

Article Mycology

Fungal colonization of exotic substrates in Antarctica

Brett E. Arenz et al.

FUNGAL DIVERSITY (2011)

Article Ecology

An Antarctic Hot Spot for Fungi at Shackleton's Historic Hut on Cape Royds

Robert A. Blanchette et al.

MICROBIAL ECOLOGY (2010)

Article Soil Science

Fungal diversity in soils and historic wood from the Ross Sea Region of Antarctica

Brett E. Arenz et al.

SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY (2006)

Article Biotechnology & Applied Microbiology

Wood-destroying soft rot fungi in the historic expedition huts of Antarctica

RA Blanchette et al.

APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY (2004)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Fungi isolated from Antarctic mosses

S Tosi et al.

POLAR BIOLOGY (2002)

Review Plant Sciences

Cold adaptation in Arctic and Antarctic fungi

CH Robinson

NEW PHYTOLOGIST (2001)