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Research article - Peer-reviewed, 2006

Wood-inhabiting fungal communities in woody debris of Norway spruce (Picea abies(L.) Karst.), as reflected by sporocarps, mycelial isolations and T-RFLP identification

Allmer J, Vasiliauskas R, Ihrmark K, Stenlid J, Dahlberg A

Abstract

Wood-inhabiting fungi play a key role in forest ecosystems and constitute an essential part of forest biodiversity. We therefore examined the composition and abundance of wood-inhabiting fungi by three methods: sporocarp counts, mycelial culturing and direct amplification of internal transcribed spacer terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism from wood combined with sequencing of reference rDNA. Seven-year-old slash piles left after a thinning were analyzed in a 50-year-old Norway spruce plantation. Fifty-eight fungal species were detected from the piled branches and treetops. More species were revealed by sporocarp counts and cultured mycelia than by direct amplification from wood. In principle, sporocarp monitoring may reveal all fruiting taxa, but it poorly reflects their relative abundance in the wood. In contrast, terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism will record the most frequent fungal taxa in the wood, but it may overlook uncommon taxa. Culturing mycelia from wood gives a bias towards species favoured by the cultural medium. The results demonstrate the advantage and the limitations of these methods to be considered in analyses of fungal communities in wood

Keywords

wood--inhabiting fungi; diversity; sporocarps; mycelial cultures; T-RFLP; slash; stumps

Published in

FEMS Microbiology Ecology
2006, volume: 55, number: 1, pages: 57-67
Publisher: BLACKWELL PUBLISHING

Authors' information

Allmer, Johan
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Forest Mycology and Pathology
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Forest Mycology and Pathology
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Forest Mycology and Plant Pathology
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Forest Mycology and Pathology
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Forest Mycology and Pathology
Allmer, Johan

UKÄ Subject classification

Environmental Sciences related to Agriculture and Land-use

Publication Identifiers

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1574-6941.2005.00010.x

URI (permanent link to this page)

https://res.slu.se/id/publ/7632