Fungal diversity of mangrove-associated sponges from New Washington, Aklan, Philippines

Sponge-associated fungi are the least explored marine fungal groups. It is only in recent years that fungal symbionts of marine sponges have received attention mainly due to the isolation of bioactive metabolites while not much attention was given to their specificity, biogeography and exact roles i...

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Main Authors: Mark S. Calabon, Resurreccion B. Sadaba, Wilfredo L. Campos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2019-01-01
Series:Mycology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21501203.2018.1518934
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spelling doaj-74654d1394f94affa25d798a5bab1c812020-11-25T02:41:57ZengTaylor & Francis GroupMycology2150-12032150-12112019-01-0110162110.1080/21501203.2018.15189341518934Fungal diversity of mangrove-associated sponges from New Washington, Aklan, PhilippinesMark S. Calabon0Resurreccion B. Sadaba1Wilfredo L. Campos2University of the Philippines VisayasCollege of Arts and Sciences, University of the Philippines VisayasCollege of Arts and Sciences, University of the Philippines VisayasSponge-associated fungi are the least explored marine fungal groups. It is only in recent years that fungal symbionts of marine sponges have received attention mainly due to the isolation of bioactive metabolites while not much attention was given to their specificity, biogeography and exact roles in marine sponges. The diversity of fungi associated with mangrove sponges (Axinella sp., Halichondria cf. panicea, Haliclona sp., Tedania sp.) collected from New Washington, Aklan, Philippines were investigated using morphological observation. A total of 110 species of sponge-associated fungi belonging to 22 genera of ascomycetes with 18 genera of asexual morphs whose sexual stage is unknown, 2 genera of basidiomycetes, 21 morphospecies of Mycelia sterilia, 1 unidentified yeast species and 11 unidentified hyphomycetes were isolated from four species of mangrove sponges. This is the first study that explored the diversity and ecology of sponge-associated fungi in mangrove habitats from the Philippines. The results of the study suggest host-preference by various fungal taxa and the development of fungi on these hosts appeared to be strongly influenced by the characteristics or nature of the immediate environment.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21501203.2018.1518934Host-preferencemangrove spongesmarine fungisponge-associated fungitropical mycology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mark S. Calabon
Resurreccion B. Sadaba
Wilfredo L. Campos
spellingShingle Mark S. Calabon
Resurreccion B. Sadaba
Wilfredo L. Campos
Fungal diversity of mangrove-associated sponges from New Washington, Aklan, Philippines
Mycology
Host-preference
mangrove sponges
marine fungi
sponge-associated fungi
tropical mycology
author_facet Mark S. Calabon
Resurreccion B. Sadaba
Wilfredo L. Campos
author_sort Mark S. Calabon
title Fungal diversity of mangrove-associated sponges from New Washington, Aklan, Philippines
title_short Fungal diversity of mangrove-associated sponges from New Washington, Aklan, Philippines
title_full Fungal diversity of mangrove-associated sponges from New Washington, Aklan, Philippines
title_fullStr Fungal diversity of mangrove-associated sponges from New Washington, Aklan, Philippines
title_full_unstemmed Fungal diversity of mangrove-associated sponges from New Washington, Aklan, Philippines
title_sort fungal diversity of mangrove-associated sponges from new washington, aklan, philippines
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Mycology
issn 2150-1203
2150-1211
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Sponge-associated fungi are the least explored marine fungal groups. It is only in recent years that fungal symbionts of marine sponges have received attention mainly due to the isolation of bioactive metabolites while not much attention was given to their specificity, biogeography and exact roles in marine sponges. The diversity of fungi associated with mangrove sponges (Axinella sp., Halichondria cf. panicea, Haliclona sp., Tedania sp.) collected from New Washington, Aklan, Philippines were investigated using morphological observation. A total of 110 species of sponge-associated fungi belonging to 22 genera of ascomycetes with 18 genera of asexual morphs whose sexual stage is unknown, 2 genera of basidiomycetes, 21 morphospecies of Mycelia sterilia, 1 unidentified yeast species and 11 unidentified hyphomycetes were isolated from four species of mangrove sponges. This is the first study that explored the diversity and ecology of sponge-associated fungi in mangrove habitats from the Philippines. The results of the study suggest host-preference by various fungal taxa and the development of fungi on these hosts appeared to be strongly influenced by the characteristics or nature of the immediate environment.
topic Host-preference
mangrove sponges
marine fungi
sponge-associated fungi
tropical mycology
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21501203.2018.1518934
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