Harpellales (Legeriomycetaceae, Zygomycota) or 'trichomycetes' are fungi that inhabit the digestive tracts of arthropods such as insects, millipedes, and crustaceans. In the current study we examined changes in 5 morphological characters of Smittium culisetae (Harpellales: Legeriomycetaceae) between the two dipteran (mosquito, black fly) hosts reared under 3 different temperatures (17, 22, 30 degrees C). Both host and temperature had a pervasive effect on the linear dimension of trichospores, their generative cells and hyphae width. At 30 degrees C the mean size of all 5 morphological characters were consistently larger in fungus taken from the mosquito host than from the black fly host. At 17 degrees C and 22 degrees C, however, there were no consistent patterns. The effect of host was so pronounced that it could be accurately determined which host S. culisetae colonised based on differences in linear morphology. Such changes in fungal morphology between hosts have important ramifications for the morphologically based taxonomy of this group.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mycres.2009.05.004 | DOI Listing |
Mycologia
December 2018
b Sugadaira Research Station, Mountain Science Center , University of Tsukuba, Sugadaira-Kogen, Ueda, Nagano 386-2204 , Japan.
Three new species of Harpellales, collected on Mt. Tsukuba, Kanto Plain on Honshu Island, are described. Stachylina philoricola, derived from midgut of Philorus sp.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMycol Res
September 2009
Department of Biological Sciences, Life Sciences Building, Rm 124, University of South Alabama, Mobile, AL 36688-0002, USA.
Harpellales (Legeriomycetaceae, Zygomycota) or 'trichomycetes' are fungi that inhabit the digestive tracts of arthropods such as insects, millipedes, and crustaceans. In the current study we examined changes in 5 morphological characters of Smittium culisetae (Harpellales: Legeriomycetaceae) between the two dipteran (mosquito, black fly) hosts reared under 3 different temperatures (17, 22, 30 degrees C). Both host and temperature had a pervasive effect on the linear dimension of trichospores, their generative cells and hyphae width.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMycol Res
December 2008
Department of Biology, Life Sciences Building Rm 124, University of South Alabama, 307 University Blvd., Mobile, AL 36688-0002, USA.
Smittium (Harpellales, Legeriomycetaceae) belongs to a cosmopolitan group of filamentous fungi (Trichomycetes, Zygomycota) that live as obligate commensals in the digestive tract of various marine, freshwater, and terrestrial arthropods. The outcome of the paired introductions of three species of Smittium was investigated within the individual hosts of the mosquito Aedes aegypti (Culicidae: Diptera). In the first set of experiments, the host was inoculated with a single species of Smittium to determine whether hyphae location within the host was species specific.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMycologia
October 2007
Department of Biological Sciences, Life Sciences Building Room 124, University of South Alabama, 307 University Boulevard, Mobile, Alabama 36688-0002, USA.
We examined the growth and development of the trichomycete Smittium culisetae (Harpellales: Legeriomycetaceae) in the larval hosts Simulium vittatum Zetterstedt (Diptera: Simuliidae) and Aedes aegypti (L.) (Diptera: Culicidae) at three temperatures, 17, 22 and 30 C. Trichospore maturation of Sm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMycol Res
September 2006
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 66045-7534, USA.
The Harpellales (Trichomycetes) are endosymbiotic microfungi, mostly unculturable and predominantly associated with larval aquatic insects worldwide. Molecular phylogenies including 'gut fungi' have included at most only four axenic isolates of the 38 genera of Harpellales. Cladistic analyses were used to infer the phylogeny of the Harpellales using partial 18S or 28S nu-rRNA sequences generated for 16 genera of Harpellales, with 64 of 72 sequences generated from unculturable samples.
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