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Contribution of Leaf-Surface Fungi to the Air Spora. Estelle Levetin and Kip Dorsey. Air Spora and Leaf Surfaces. Phylloplane fungi considered major contributors to air spora In Tulsa leaves appear by mid-April and remain on the trees till November
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Contribution of Leaf-Surface Fungi to the Air Spora Estelle Levetin and Kip Dorsey
Air Spora and Leaf Surfaces • Phylloplane fungi considered major contributors to air spora • In Tulsa leaves appear by mid-April and remain on the trees till November • High concentration of airborne spores occur during this same period • Few studies have compared taxa on leaf surfaces with those in the atmosphere
Leaf Surfaces • Leaf surfaces colonized by many types of bacteria and fungi • Both saprobic and pathogenic species • Leaf surfaces can also serve as traps for airborne fungi that settle on surface • Both colonizers and settled spores may become entrained (or reentrained) into the atmosphere
Purpose of Study • Examine the phylloplane fungi on two common trees in the Tulsa area • Look for patterns in the communities on leaves throughout the growing season • Compare these taxa to those appearing in the atmosphere • Look for possible parallels in changes of air spora and leaf surface fungi
Daily Air Sampling • Air sampling was carried out with a Burkard Spore Trap on the roof of biology building on the University of Tulsa campus • Sample drums were changed every 7 days and cut into 24 hour segments • Slides were examined at 1000x using the single longitudinal transverse method
Tree Types • Quercus (Oak) and Ulmus (Elm) are two dominant tree types in eastern Oklahoma • Quercus palustris and Ulmus americana were chosen for this studies
Leaf Surface Fungi • Leaves collected weekly from Apr. 18 - Nov. 23 • Three leaves from each tree were aseptically picked, placed in sterile plastic bags and immediately taken to the Aerobiology Lab • Various methods tested for fungal isolation from leaf surfaces • 4cm2 areas on both adaxial and abaxial surfaces were separately wiped with sterile cotton swabs that were dampened with sterile distilled water • Swabs were each put in a sterile tube with 1ml of sterile distilled water and vortexed for 30 seconds • Swabs were removed and 0.5ml of each spore suspension was pipetted onto petri dishes containing malt extract agar plus streptomycin
Leaf Surface Fungi • 12 plates were prepared each week – total 360 plates • Cultures were incubated at room temperature for 5 to 7 days • Colonies were counted and fungi identified to genus level with standard keys
23 Taxa identified: Cladosporium, Ascospores, Basidiospores, and Alternaria Comprised 90% of Total
21,624 colonies isolated from leaf surfaces 23 taxa identified 15 taxa appeared on first sample, April 18 Most prevalent taxa (over 90%): Yeast – 62.3% Phoma-type – 12.3% Cladosporium – 10.8% Alternaria – 4.7% Results of leaf surface cultures
Leaf Surface Concentrations • Generally there was a greater number of colonies isolated from the abaxial surface but no significant difference • Generally there was a greater number of colonies isolated from elm leaves but no significant difference between oak and elm • Mean concentrations of leaf surface fungi (CFU/cm2):
Yeasts • A general term to describe unicellular fungi that reproduce by budding • No attempt was made to identify yeast other than Aureobasidium • Several different types of yeasts were routinely isolated based on pigmentation and cell shape • Yeasts generally dispersed by rain splash; however, Taylor recently reported that Aureobasidium was the most abundant taxa identified on Burkard air samples from a southern California location
Phoma • A large genus (223 spp) of anamorphic fungi in the Ceolomycetes that are characterized by conidia formation in a pycnidium ~ spore dispersal by rain splash • Many common ascomycetes have a Phoma anamorph including species in • Leptosphaeria • Didymella • Mycosphaerella • Pleospora • Phaeosphaeria • Diaporthe • Phoma - like genera: Phomopsis, Plenodomus, Peyronellaea, etc • Some Epicoccum isolates have a Phoma synanamorph
Correlation of Airborne Spores and Leaf Surface Fungi • When individual genera examined there was no significant correlation between leaf surface fungi and airborne concentration • Phoma did show a significant correlation with airborne ascospore levels • Nine fungal taxa were found on both leaf surface cultures and the airborne samples • The mean concentrations for the season were compared using a Spearman Correlation • There was a significant correlation between leaf surface fungi and airborne fungi (r=0.74, p=0.035)
Comparison of Airborne Ascospore Concentration to Leaf Surface Phoma Positive correlation r = 0.41, p<0.05
Correlation with meteorological variables • Temperature was the most important factor of airborne spore levels • Airborne spore concentrations were significantly related to average daily temperature during the April to November study period • Rainfall was the most important factor for leaf surface fungal concentrations • Several taxa showed significant correlations with weekly rainfall totals
Comparison of total weekly rainfall and number of colonies from leaf surfaces
Leaf Surface Significance • The leaf surface concentrations Oak: 27.00 CFU/cm2 Elm: 33.68 CFU/cm2 • Approximate surface area of elm and oak leaves Oak: 50 cm2 Elm: 23 cm2 • Total number of leaves per tree estimated using average branch-to-branchlet technique Oak: 100,000 leaves Elm: 325,000 leaves • Surface area estimate for trees: Oak: ~5.0 x 106 cm2 Elm: ~7.5 x 106 cm2 • Estimate of CFU per tree: Oak: 1.35 x 108 CFU Elm: 2.53 x 108 CFU
Conclusion • Leaf surface fungi include taxa with airborne dispersal and those with rain splash dispersal • Leaf surface fungi with airborne dispersal can be major contributors to the air spora • Questions remain about • Population changes on leaf surface • Contribution of Phoma-complex and yeast to the air spora
Acknowledgments Assistance of Claudia Owens for help with air sample analysis is greatly appreciated.