期刊
FUNGAL ECOLOGY
卷 1, 期 -, 页码 13-18出版社
ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.funeco.2007.07.001
关键词
Spore morphology; Spore size; Aquatic hyphomycete; Conidial settlement; Leaf roughness
资金
- Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
Aquatic hyphomycetes are primary colonizers and decomposers of deciduous leaves decaying in streams. Conidial attachment to new Substrata is a crucial first step in their life cycle, and the dominant spore morphologies - multiradiate or sigmoid - are assumed to have been shaped by convergent evolution to increase the probability of attachment to a substratum. Another factor influencing attachment success is roughness of the leafs surface. In SEM preparations, we estimated the three toughness parameters Ra, Rz and Rq of upper and lower surfaces of linden (Tilia cordata), maple (Acer rubrum) and elin (Ulmus americana) leaves. Generally, roughness values were highest with linden and lowest with maple leaves, but the greatest roughness was measured on the lower surface of elm. In 48 h, target leaf disks captured approx. 20 % of the conidia released from stream-exposed inoculum disks in microcosms. Capture rates of the six surfaces correlated significantly with all three roughness parameters, Estimated R-2 Was around 0.4, indicating Surface fac tors other than roughness influenced conidial attachment. The sigmoid conidia of Anquiliospora filiformis were captured at a greater rate than the tetraradiate conidia of Articulospora tetracladia and Clavariopsis aquatica Crown Copyright (C) 2008 Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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