skip to main content
Guest
e-Shelf
My Account
Sign out
Sign in
This feature requires javascript
Tags
e-Journals
e-Books
Databases
USP Libraries
Help
Help
Language:
English
Spanish
Portuguese (Brazil)
This feature required javascript
This feature requires javascript
Primo Search
General Search
General Search
Physical Collection
Physical Collections
USP Intelectual Production
USP Production
Search For:
Clear Search Box
Search in:
General Search
Or hit Enter to replace search target
Or select another collection:
Search in:
General Search
Advanced Search
Browse Search
This feature requires javascript
Resource type
criteria input
anywhere in the record
in the title
as author/creator
in subject
Creation Date
lsr01
lsr02
lsr03
lsr04
Supervisor
Show Results with:
in the title
Show Results with:
anywhere in the record
in the title
as author/creator
in subject
Creation Date
lsr01
lsr02
lsr03
lsr04
Supervisor
Show Results with:
criteria input
that contain my query words
with my exact phrase
starts with
Show Results with:
Index
criteria input
AND
OR
NOT
This feature requires javascript
Revisiting the isolation source after half a century: Emericellopsis mirabilis on a yellow-green alga
Takashima, Yusuke ; Nakayama, Takeshi ; Degawa, Yousuke
Mycoscience, 2021/04/15, pp.MYC540
[Peer Reviewed Journal]
The Mycological Society of Japan
Full text available
Citations
Cited by
View Online
Details
Reviews & Tags
More
Times Cited
This feature requires javascript
Actions
Add to e-Shelf
Remove from e-Shelf
E-mail
Print
Permalink
Citation
EasyBib
EndNote
RefWorks
Delicious
Export RIS
Export BibTeX
This feature requires javascript
Title:
Revisiting the isolation source after half a century: Emericellopsis mirabilis on a yellow-green alga
Author:
Takashima, Yusuke
;
Nakayama, Takeshi
;
Degawa, Yousuke
Subjects:
cleistothecia
;
fungi-algae interaction
;
homothallism
;
soil algae
;
Xanthophyceae
Is Part Of:
Mycoscience, 2021/04/15, pp.MYC540
Description:
Fungi-algae interactions, such as lichen-forming fungi and parasitic chytrids on phytoplankton, are common in ecosystems. In contrast, interactions between filamentous fungi and soil algae that can be observed with the naked eye have been given little attention and remain unexplored. Here, we report a fungus that was associated with a visible symptom of dead algae on a soil surface in Sugadaira-kogen, Nagano, central Japan. Acremonium-like conidiophores were growing on vesicles and dead bodies of a yellow-green alga, Botrydium granulatum. The fungus was identified as Emericellopsis mirabilis based on its morphology by microscopic observation, phylogenetic analysis, and the similarity of the isolation substrate with the first description of the species. Co-culture experiments showed a filamentous cell differentiation of the alga by the fungus, but no harmful or beneficial effects on algal growth. Therefore, we speculate that E. mirabilis is a facultative parasite of B. granulatum under natural conditions.
Publisher:
The Mycological Society of Japan
Language:
English
This feature requires javascript
This feature requires javascript
Back to results list
Previous
Result
10
Next
This feature requires javascript
This feature requires javascript
Searching Remote Databases, Please Wait
Searching for
in
scope:(USP_VIDEOS),scope:("PRIMO"),scope:(USP_FISICO),scope:(USP_EREVISTAS),scope:(USP),scope:(USP_EBOOKS),scope:(USP_PRODUCAO),primo_central_multiple_fe
Show me what you have so far
This feature requires javascript
This feature requires javascript