Abstract
Forty-eight fungi (34 Acomycota, 13 anamorphic fungi and one Basidiomycota) were collected from 141 driftwood samples collected from one sandy and one rocky beach around Yokosuka city in two seasons (summer and winter). Of these, 28 (58%) fungi are new records for Japan including 16 (33%) potentially new taxa. Thirty-six and 26 fungi were recorded from Hakkeijima and Umikaze beaches, respectively, in both seasons. Ceriosporopsis halima and Corollospora maritima were the dominant taxa at both locations. Common fungi include: Clavatospora bulbosa, Corollospora portsaidica, Lignincola laevis and Naufragella spinibarbata. Fungi recorded from the two beaches were markedly different, with only 14 species common to both sites. Members of the order Halosphaeriales with 30 species (representing 62.5% of the fungi) were the dominant mycota at the two sites. Anamorphic fungi included eight hyphomycetes and one coelomycete, a Phoma species. Potentially new species were sequenced (partial LSU and SSU rDNA) to determine their identity.
©2011 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin New York
Articles in the same Issue
- Research Articles
- Succession patterns in algal turf vegetation on a Caribbean coral reef
- Carpospore and tetraspore release and survival in Chondracanthus squarrulosus (Rhodophyta: Gigartinaceae) from the Gulf of California
- Morphology and taxonomy of Anadyomene species (Cladophorales, Chlorophyta) from Bahia, Brazil
- Sargassum polyceratium (Phaeophyceae, Fucaceae) surface molecule activity towards fouling organisms and embryonic development of benthic species
- Colpomenia claytonii sp. nov. (Scytosiphonaceae, Phaeophyceae) based on morphology and mitochondrial cox3 sequences
- A survey of the benthic aquatic flora in transitional water systems of Greece and Cyprus (Mediterranean Sea)
- Morphological study of the genus Cocconeis Ehrenberg (Bacillariophyceae) collected during the 1897–1899 Belgian Antarctic Expedition
- Cloning differentially expressed salt induced cDNAs from Dunaliella salina under super saturated salt stress using subtractive hybridization
- Antioxidant response of the microalga Dunaliella salina under salt stress
- Temporal variation in growth and reproduction of Enhalus acoroides (L.f.) Royle in a monospecific meadow in Haad Chao Mai National Park, Trang Province, Thailand
- Lignicolous marine fungi from Yokosuka, Japan
Articles in the same Issue
- Research Articles
- Succession patterns in algal turf vegetation on a Caribbean coral reef
- Carpospore and tetraspore release and survival in Chondracanthus squarrulosus (Rhodophyta: Gigartinaceae) from the Gulf of California
- Morphology and taxonomy of Anadyomene species (Cladophorales, Chlorophyta) from Bahia, Brazil
- Sargassum polyceratium (Phaeophyceae, Fucaceae) surface molecule activity towards fouling organisms and embryonic development of benthic species
- Colpomenia claytonii sp. nov. (Scytosiphonaceae, Phaeophyceae) based on morphology and mitochondrial cox3 sequences
- A survey of the benthic aquatic flora in transitional water systems of Greece and Cyprus (Mediterranean Sea)
- Morphological study of the genus Cocconeis Ehrenberg (Bacillariophyceae) collected during the 1897–1899 Belgian Antarctic Expedition
- Cloning differentially expressed salt induced cDNAs from Dunaliella salina under super saturated salt stress using subtractive hybridization
- Antioxidant response of the microalga Dunaliella salina under salt stress
- Temporal variation in growth and reproduction of Enhalus acoroides (L.f.) Royle in a monospecific meadow in Haad Chao Mai National Park, Trang Province, Thailand
- Lignicolous marine fungi from Yokosuka, Japan