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Journal ArticleDOI

Diversity of marine fungi from Egyptian Red Sea mangroves

Mohamed A. Abdel-Wahab
- 01 Dec 2005 - 
- Vol. 48, pp 348-355
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TLDR
The diversity of fungi recorded in Red Sea mangroves is comparable to that recorded from subtropicalMangroves, and lower than that recorded in tropical mangrove communities.
Abstract
The current study extends our knowledge of the biogeography of subtropical mangrove fungi from the Red Sea, which has not been well explored. Diversity of marine fungi in Red Sea mangroves in Egypt was assessed, and fungi dominating the communities were recorded and compared with those from other mangroves in subtropical and tropical regions. Intertidal decayed mangrove wood samples were collected from six mangrove stands located on the Red Sea coast in Egypt. Thirty-nine fungal species were identified on decayed wood of Avicennia marina. Of these, 19 are new records for Egypt and the Red Sea. The most frequent fungus was Swampomyces armeniacus. Other common fungi include: Hypoxylon sp., Lineolata rhizophorae, Kallichroma tethys, Swampomyces aegyptiacus and Lulworthia grandispora. Common fungi in the northern sites were different from those recorded from southern sites. Six fungi were recorded on Rhizophora mucronata prop roots for the first time in Red Sea mangroves. The diversity of fungi recorded in Red Sea mangroves is comparable to that recorded from subtropical mangroves, and lower than that recorded from tropical mangroves.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Refined families of Sordariomycetes

Kevin D. Hyde
- 31 Mar 2020 - 
TL;DR: This treatment of the class Sordariomycetes provides up-to-date DNA based phylogenies for 45 orders and 163 families and provides general descriptions and illustrate the type genus or another genus, where the placement has generally been confirmed with molecular data.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biodiversity and biotechnological potential of microorganisms from mangrove ecosystems: a review

TL;DR: The present paper makes an attempt to review the microbial diversity in mangrove ecosystems and explore their potential applications in various fields such as agriculture, pharmaceutical, industrial, environmental and medical sciences.
Journal ArticleDOI

Putative cross-kingdom horizontal gene transfer in sponge (Porifera) mitochondria

TL;DR: It is suggested that the horizontal gene transfer of a mitochondrial intron was facilitated by a symbiotic relationship between fungus and sponge, and an ecological relationship between sponge and fungus is suggested based on the genomic analysis.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Distribution and Ecology of Marine Fungi in Sierra Leone (Tropical West Africa)

A. A. Aleem
- 01 Jan 1980 - 
TL;DR: The close affinITIES of mangrove fungi in the 3 oceans, paralleled with similar affinities ofMangrove floras lend support to the theory of a common center in the West-Indo Pacific for the mangroves flora and associated mycota from which a drift took place in various directions into the3 oceans in question.
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Observations on manglicolous fungi from Malaysia

TL;DR: Thirty-two marine fungi are reported from drift and intertidal wood collected in a mangrove stand at Sungei Geylang Patah, Malaysia, with the most common species being Rosellinia sp.
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Observations on mangrove fungi from Macau and Hong Kong, with the description of two new ascomycetes: Diaporthe salsuginosa and Aniptodera haispora

TL;DR: Two new species: Diaporthe salsuginosa and Aniptodera haispora are described and a key to the genus Aniptadera is included.
Journal ArticleDOI

Geographic and host distribution of lignicolous mangrove microfungi

TL;DR: It is concluded that microfungal communities are more similar within a single ocean basin than between ocean basins, but mangrove trees that are close phylogenetically do not necessarily harbor microfunkal communities that are distinctly different from less closely related hosts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Marine fungi of Queensland, Australia

TL;DR: The annotated list contains 43 ascomycetes, one basidiomycete and five anamorphic ('imperfect') fungi, of which 28 are new records for Australia, and is a new species on wood of R. stylosa from Lizard Island.
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