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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, January 2000, p. 180-185, Vol. 66, No. 1
Marine Institute, University of Georgia,
Sapelo Island, Georgia 313271;
Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Virginia,
Charlottesville, Virginia 229032;
Waquoit Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve, Waquoit,
Massachusetts 025363; Virginia Institute
of Marine Science, College of William and Mary, Gloucester Point,
Virginia 230624; and Wells National
Estuarine Research Reserve, Wells, Maine 040905
Received 19 August 1999/Accepted 22 October 1999
It has been established that substantial amounts of fungal mass
accumulate in standing decaying smooth cordgrass (Spartina alterniflora) marshes in the southeastern United States (e.g., in
standing decaying leaf blades with a total fungal organic mass that
accounts for about 20% of the decay system organic mass), but it has
been hypothesized that in marshes farther north this is not true. We
obtained samples of autumnal standing decaying smooth cordgrass from
sites in Florida to Maine over a 3-year period. The variation in
latitude could not explain any of the variation in the living fungal
standing crop (as determined by ergosterol content) or in the
instantaneous rates of fungal growth (as determined by acetate
incorporation into ergosterol at a standard temperature, 20°C), which
led to the conclusion that the potential levels of fungal production
per unit of naturally decaying grass are not different in northern and
southern marshes. Twenty-one percent of the variation in the size of
the living fungal standing crop could be explained by variation in the
C/N ratio (the higher the C/N ratio the smaller the fungal crop), but
the C/P ratio was not related to the size of the fungal crop.
Instantaneous rates of fungal growth were negatively related to the
size of the living fungal crop (r =
0099-2240/0/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Autumnal Biomass and Potential Productivity of Salt
Marsh Fungi from 29° to 43° North Latitude along the United
States Atlantic Coast
0.35), but these
rates were not correlated with C/nutrient ratios. The same two
predominant species of ascomycetes (one Phaeosphaeria
species and one Mycosphaerella species) were found ejecting
ascospores from standing decaying smooth cordgrass blades at all of the
sites examined from Florida to Maine.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Marine
Institute, University of Georgia, Sapelo Island, GA 31327. Phone: (912)
485-2290. Fax: (912) 485-2133. E-mail: newell{at}uga.edu.
Contribution number 843 of the University of Georgia Marine Institute.
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