6533b834fe1ef96bd129ccb4

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Macrofungi in Mediterranean maquis along seashore and altitudinal transects

Gi ZervakisA. La RosaPaola AngeliniGiancarlo BistocchiRoberto VenanzoniAndrea ArcangeliAlessandro SaittaElias PolemisLorenzo PecoraroMaria Letizia GarganoD. LunghiniAndrea Rubini

subject

Mediterranean climategeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologySclerophyllSettore BIO/02 - Botanica SistematicaPlant ScienceBiologyEvergreenMediterranean BasinShrublandTaxonEctomycorrhizal specieswood-inhabiting fungiHabitatmacromycetesBotanyMediterranean ecosystemsmolecular analysisEctomycorrhizal species macromycetes Mediterranean ecosystems molecular analysis saprotrophs wood-inhabiting fungi.TransectsaprotrophsEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics

description

In semi-arid Mediterranean environments, fungal activity is fundamental for buffering biotic and abiotic stress to the plant and for sustaining a vegetation cover. Despite the important role that fungi play in habitats stability, mycological data from Mediterranean ecosystems are scarce and fragmentary. We investigated fungal diversity in several areas characterized by Mediterranean maquis, from continental Italy, Sicily, and Greece in order to contribute to the analysis of distribution, ecology, and diversity of macrofungi in evergreen sclerophyllous shrublands at different elevation and distance from the seashore across the Mediterranean Basin. Several fungal taxa that are remarkable due to their ecology, rarity, and limited geographical distribution were recovered. Among them, the ectomycorrhizal species Amanita dunensis and A. valens were recorded for the first time in Italy. The wood-inhabiting macrofungi, Aleurodiscus dextrinoideocerussatus, Peniophorella tsugae, Perenniporia meridionalis, Phanerochaete martelliana, Vararia ochroleuca, and six Peniophora species were reported for the first time in Greece. Some species, such as Gloeodontia columbiensis, Ceriporia aurantiocarnescens, Peniophora pithya, and P. tamaricicola were collected on new substrates. For the two rare basidiomycetes Amanita eliae and Battarrea phalloides, molecular identification and phylogenetic analysis gave valuable information on their relationship with similar taxa. © 2014 © 2014 Società Botanica Italiana.

10.1080/11263504.2013.877535https://publications.cnr.it/doc/297342