Abstract

Three hundred and sixty woody litter samples naturally deposited in a stream and dammed section of the River Kali in southwest India were assessed for the diversity of lignicolous fungi (ascomycetes and anamorphic fungi) via damp chamber incubation and aquatic hyphomycetes (Ingoldian fungi) via bubble chamber incubation. Fifty-six fungal taxa were recorded with the highest of 47 taxa in the stream and 34 taxa in the dam. Twenty-five taxa were common to both sites. The core group (≥10%) comprised one ascomycete (Massarina australiensis), two anamorphic taxa (Acrogenospora sphaerocephala and Sporoschisma saccardoi) and 11 Ingoldian fungi (Anguillospora crassa, A. longissima, Clavariana aquatica, Cylindrocarpon sp., Flagellospora curvula, F. penicillioides, Lunulospora curvula, L. cymbiformis, Lunulospora sp., Triscelophorus acuminatus, T. monosporus). The species richness, average taxa per wood sample, richness of core group fungi and fungal diversity were higher in the Kaiga stream than in the Kadra dam. Species abundance curves showed higher frequency of occurrence of fungi in the stream than in the dam woody litter. The rarefaction indices of fungal species against number of wood samples revealed similar pattern of ascomycetes in both locations, while the richness of anamorphic and Ingoldian taxa was higher in the stream than in the dam. The anamorph/teleomorph ratio ranged between 2.4:1 (Kadra dam) and 3.3:1 (Kaiga stream), which is higher than the ratios reported from other geographical locations (0.7:1−2:1). This study reconfirmed that the method of incubation influences the assessment of fungal communities in woody litter and that Ingoldian fungi also constitute an important component of woody litter.

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