Utilize este identificador para referenciar este registo: https://hdl.handle.net/10316/98720
Título: Contamination by uranium mine drainages affects fungal growth and interactions between fungal species and strains
Autor: Ferreira, Verónica 
Gonçalves, Ana Lúcia 
Pratas, João 
Canhoto, Cristina 
Palavras-chave: aquatic hyphomycetes; growth; interspecific interactions; intraspecific interactions; mine contamination; strains
Data: 2010
Título da revista, periódico, livro ou evento: Mycologia
Volume: 102
Número: 5
Resumo: The presence of aquatic hyphomycetes has been reported for several heavy metal-contaminated waters. Tolerance probably is one adaptation to coping with heavy metals. To help clarify this issue strains of two species of aquatic hyphomycetes (Tricladium splendens Ingold and Varicosporium elodeae Kegel) were isolated from a reference stream and a stream contaminated with heavy metals and grown on malt extract agar prepared with reference and contaminated water to characterize colony morphology, growth rate, growth inhibition and interaction among species and strains. In V. elodeae the morphology of colonies differed between strains. Colony diameter increased linearly over time with growth rates being lower for strains isolated from contaminated than from reference streams (mostly for V. elodeae). Strains from the contaminated stream grew faster in medium prepared with contaminated water than in medium prepared with reference water, while for strains from the reference stream there was no significant difference in growth rates on the two media. In interacting isolates radial growth toward the opposing colony was generally lower than toward the dish edge. Percentage growth inhibition was higher for isolates in intraspecific interactions (13–37%) than in interspecific interactions (3–27%). However differences in growth inhibition experienced by interacting isolates were observed only in three cases out of 16. The difference between the percentage inhibition caused and experienced by a given isolate was highest in interactions involving isolates with distinct growth rates. Our results suggest that strains from the reference stream tolerate heavy metals while strains from the contaminated stream seem to be adapted to contaminated waters. We hypothesize that in natural environments fungal species-specific limits of tolerance to metal contamination might determine an abrupt or gradual response of the original fungal community to mine pollution giving origin to a poorer fungal community dominated by adapted strains with distinct functional efficiency.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10316/98720
DOI: 10.3852/09-248
Direitos: openAccess
Aparece nas coleções:FCTUC Ciências da Vida - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais

Ficheiros deste registo:
Ficheiro Descrição TamanhoFormato
Ferreira&al2010_Mycologia.pdf4.91 MBAdobe PDFVer/Abrir
Mostrar registo em formato completo

Citações SCOPUSTM   

25
Visto em 9/nov/2022

Citações WEB OF SCIENCETM

25
Visto em 2/mai/2023

Visualizações de página

118
Visto em 23/abr/2024

Downloads

58
Visto em 23/abr/2024

Google ScholarTM

Verificar

Altmetric

Altmetric


Todos os registos no repositório estão protegidos por leis de copyright, com todos os direitos reservados.