Taxonomic and ecologic aspects of zoosporic fungi in coastal and steppe soils

Certain criteria used to distinguish chytrid taxa are highly variable and unstable. This variability is evident from a study of ten single-spore isolates of an Entophlyctis species collected in Western Canada, Oregon, California and Nevada. The observed variations place these Entophlyctis isolates i...

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Main Author: Booth, Thomas
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2011
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/33105
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-331052018-01-05T17:46:58Z Taxonomic and ecologic aspects of zoosporic fungi in coastal and steppe soils Booth, Thomas Certain criteria used to distinguish chytrid taxa are highly variable and unstable. This variability is evident from a study of ten single-spore isolates of an Entophlyctis species collected in Western Canada, Oregon, California and Nevada. The observed variations place these Entophlyctis isolates in different species, genera, subfamilies, families, and series, thus demonstrating that various current taxonomic dispositions and concepts are of questionable value. Zoosporic fungi, mainly Chytridiales, are widely distributed in coastal and steppe soils. Based on distributional records and determination of physical and chemical parameters for each soil collection, eleven chytrid and chytridiaceous species are divisible into four groups: a) obligately marine, b) marine, c) facultatively marine and d) marine occasionals. Certain aspects of this study are problematic which emphasizes the necessity of a more sophisticated line of approach. Temperature-salinity growth responses of fifty-seven axenic single-spore cultures of zoosporic fungi, maintained under similar controlled conditions for a minimum of six months, correlate with habitat types and certain environmental parameters. These responses, similar over several isolates of a species from the same soil collection, are temporally constant and, thus, are ecotypic. Science, Faculty of Botany, Department of Graduate 2011-03-30T20:36:08Z 2011-03-30T20:36:08Z 1971 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/33105 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. University of British Columbia
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language English
sources NDLTD
description Certain criteria used to distinguish chytrid taxa are highly variable and unstable. This variability is evident from a study of ten single-spore isolates of an Entophlyctis species collected in Western Canada, Oregon, California and Nevada. The observed variations place these Entophlyctis isolates in different species, genera, subfamilies, families, and series, thus demonstrating that various current taxonomic dispositions and concepts are of questionable value. Zoosporic fungi, mainly Chytridiales, are widely distributed in coastal and steppe soils. Based on distributional records and determination of physical and chemical parameters for each soil collection, eleven chytrid and chytridiaceous species are divisible into four groups: a) obligately marine, b) marine, c) facultatively marine and d) marine occasionals. Certain aspects of this study are problematic which emphasizes the necessity of a more sophisticated line of approach. Temperature-salinity growth responses of fifty-seven axenic single-spore cultures of zoosporic fungi, maintained under similar controlled conditions for a minimum of six months, correlate with habitat types and certain environmental parameters. These responses, similar over several isolates of a species from the same soil collection, are temporally constant and, thus, are ecotypic. === Science, Faculty of === Botany, Department of === Graduate
author Booth, Thomas
spellingShingle Booth, Thomas
Taxonomic and ecologic aspects of zoosporic fungi in coastal and steppe soils
author_facet Booth, Thomas
author_sort Booth, Thomas
title Taxonomic and ecologic aspects of zoosporic fungi in coastal and steppe soils
title_short Taxonomic and ecologic aspects of zoosporic fungi in coastal and steppe soils
title_full Taxonomic and ecologic aspects of zoosporic fungi in coastal and steppe soils
title_fullStr Taxonomic and ecologic aspects of zoosporic fungi in coastal and steppe soils
title_full_unstemmed Taxonomic and ecologic aspects of zoosporic fungi in coastal and steppe soils
title_sort taxonomic and ecologic aspects of zoosporic fungi in coastal and steppe soils
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/33105
work_keys_str_mv AT booththomas taxonomicandecologicaspectsofzoosporicfungiincoastalandsteppesoils
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