Species composition, seasonal changes and comm-unity ordination of alkalotolerant micro fungal diversity in a natural scrub jungle ecosystem of Tamil Nadu, India

One hundred and seven species of alkalotolerant fungi were isolated from different layers of litter of the Guindy Reserve Forest, Chennai, South India during a 2-year period. They comprised Zygomycota (7 species), Ascomycetes (4 species), hyphomycetes (86 species) and coelomycetes (10 species). The...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jahir HK, Sanjayan KP, Muthukrishnan S
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Guizhou Academy of Agricultural Sciences 2012-03-01
Series:Mycosphere
Subjects:
Online Access:http://mycosphere.org/pdfs/MC3_2_No1.pdf
id doaj-f4396cdd93d1484781806741ea191e75
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f4396cdd93d1484781806741ea191e752020-11-24T22:26:27ZengGuizhou Academy of Agricultural SciencesMycosphere2077-70002077-70192012-03-01329210910.5943/mycosphere/3/2/1Species composition, seasonal changes and comm-unity ordination of alkalotolerant micro fungal diversity in a natural scrub jungle ecosystem of Tamil Nadu, IndiaJahir HKSanjayan KPMuthukrishnan SSanjayan KPJahir HKOne hundred and seven species of alkalotolerant fungi were isolated from different layers of litter of the Guindy Reserve Forest, Chennai, South India during a 2-year period. They comprised Zygomycota (7 species), Ascomycetes (4 species), hyphomycetes (86 species) and coelomycetes (10 species). The F1 litter layer, just beneath the recently fallen leaves, had the richest composition of fungi and the fungi were most abundant during the North East monsoons (September to November). Shannon's diversity index and Simpson diversity index λ indicate F1 layer to have the maximum species. The species distribution fell into the log series model and Fishers alpha was also highest for the F1 layer. Species richness indices computed also indicated that none of the species was more predominant. Values of species evenness computed hovered around 0.6 indicating a tilt towards even distribution of the species. The fungal community is a heterogenous assembly of species derived from a homogenous habitat with a log normal pattern of distribution formed due to the interplay of many independent factors governing the relative abundance of the species. Principal component ordination analysis reveals that the greatest variation in the species composition was due to the South West monsoon. Also, detrended correspondence data put the species abundance data for the four seasons in a linear arrangement. http://mycosphere.org/pdfs/MC3_2_No1.pdfAlkalotolerant fungi – Fungal diversity – Micro fungi – Plant Litter
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jahir HK
Sanjayan KP
Muthukrishnan S
Sanjayan KP
Jahir HK
spellingShingle Jahir HK
Sanjayan KP
Muthukrishnan S
Sanjayan KP
Jahir HK
Species composition, seasonal changes and comm-unity ordination of alkalotolerant micro fungal diversity in a natural scrub jungle ecosystem of Tamil Nadu, India
Mycosphere
Alkalotolerant fungi – Fungal diversity – Micro fungi – Plant Litter
author_facet Jahir HK
Sanjayan KP
Muthukrishnan S
Sanjayan KP
Jahir HK
author_sort Jahir HK
title Species composition, seasonal changes and comm-unity ordination of alkalotolerant micro fungal diversity in a natural scrub jungle ecosystem of Tamil Nadu, India
title_short Species composition, seasonal changes and comm-unity ordination of alkalotolerant micro fungal diversity in a natural scrub jungle ecosystem of Tamil Nadu, India
title_full Species composition, seasonal changes and comm-unity ordination of alkalotolerant micro fungal diversity in a natural scrub jungle ecosystem of Tamil Nadu, India
title_fullStr Species composition, seasonal changes and comm-unity ordination of alkalotolerant micro fungal diversity in a natural scrub jungle ecosystem of Tamil Nadu, India
title_full_unstemmed Species composition, seasonal changes and comm-unity ordination of alkalotolerant micro fungal diversity in a natural scrub jungle ecosystem of Tamil Nadu, India
title_sort species composition, seasonal changes and comm-unity ordination of alkalotolerant micro fungal diversity in a natural scrub jungle ecosystem of tamil nadu, india
publisher Guizhou Academy of Agricultural Sciences
series Mycosphere
issn 2077-7000
2077-7019
publishDate 2012-03-01
description One hundred and seven species of alkalotolerant fungi were isolated from different layers of litter of the Guindy Reserve Forest, Chennai, South India during a 2-year period. They comprised Zygomycota (7 species), Ascomycetes (4 species), hyphomycetes (86 species) and coelomycetes (10 species). The F1 litter layer, just beneath the recently fallen leaves, had the richest composition of fungi and the fungi were most abundant during the North East monsoons (September to November). Shannon's diversity index and Simpson diversity index λ indicate F1 layer to have the maximum species. The species distribution fell into the log series model and Fishers alpha was also highest for the F1 layer. Species richness indices computed also indicated that none of the species was more predominant. Values of species evenness computed hovered around 0.6 indicating a tilt towards even distribution of the species. The fungal community is a heterogenous assembly of species derived from a homogenous habitat with a log normal pattern of distribution formed due to the interplay of many independent factors governing the relative abundance of the species. Principal component ordination analysis reveals that the greatest variation in the species composition was due to the South West monsoon. Also, detrended correspondence data put the species abundance data for the four seasons in a linear arrangement.
topic Alkalotolerant fungi – Fungal diversity – Micro fungi – Plant Litter
url http://mycosphere.org/pdfs/MC3_2_No1.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT jahirhk speciescompositionseasonalchangesandcommunityordinationofalkalotolerantmicrofungaldiversityinanaturalscrubjungleecosystemoftamilnaduindia
AT sanjayankp speciescompositionseasonalchangesandcommunityordinationofalkalotolerantmicrofungaldiversityinanaturalscrubjungleecosystemoftamilnaduindia
AT muthukrishnans speciescompositionseasonalchangesandcommunityordinationofalkalotolerantmicrofungaldiversityinanaturalscrubjungleecosystemoftamilnaduindia
AT sanjayankp speciescompositionseasonalchangesandcommunityordinationofalkalotolerantmicrofungaldiversityinanaturalscrubjungleecosystemoftamilnaduindia
AT jahirhk speciescompositionseasonalchangesandcommunityordinationofalkalotolerantmicrofungaldiversityinanaturalscrubjungleecosystemoftamilnaduindia
_version_ 1725753604030070784