Abstract

The microbiological analysis of 78 samples taken from a high bog in Western Siberia and from a tundra wetland soil in Alaska showed the presence of 23 yeast species belonging to the genera Bullera, Candida, Cryptococcus, Debaryomyces, Hanseniaspora, Metschnikowia, Mrakia, Pichia, Rhodotorula, Saccharomyces, Sporobolomyces, Torulaspora, and Trichosporon.Peat samples from the high bog were dominated by eurytopic anamorphic basidiomycetous species, such as Rhodotorula mucilaginosaand Sporobolomyces roseus, and by the ascomycetous yeasts Candidaspp. and Debaryomyces hansenii.These samples also contained two rare ascomycetous species (Candida paludigenaand Schizoblastosporion starkeyi-henricii), which so far have been found only in taiga wetland soils. The wetland Alaskan soil was dominated by one yeast species (Cryptococcus gilvescens), which is a typical inhabitant of tundra soils. Therefore, geographic factors may serve for a more reliable prediction of yeast diversity in soils than the physicochemical or ecotopic parameters of these soils.

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