Relative incidence of ascomycetous yeasts in arctic coastal environments.

Microb Ecol

Wine Research Centre, University of Nova Gorica, Vipavska 11c, 5270 Ajdovščina, Slovenia.

Published: May 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • Previous studies focused on fungi in polar areas showed that basidiomycetous yeasts are common in soil and under glaciers, while ascomycetous yeasts are rare in extreme cold environments.
  • Researchers isolated various yeast species from subglacial ice in the Arctic, finding a stable core of yeasts including Debaryomyces hansenii and Pichia guillermondii, with high counts.
  • Additional ascomycetous species, like Candida parapsilosis, were discovered along with a rare species, Protomyces inouyei, indicating these yeasts are mostly psychrotolerant and able to survive in harsh conditions.

Article Abstract

Previous studies of fungi in polar environments have revealed a prevalence of basidiomycetous yeasts in soil and in subglacial environments of polythermal glaciers. Ascomycetous yeasts have rarely been reported from extremely cold natural environments, even though they are known contaminants of frozen foods. Using media with low water activity, we have isolated various yeast species from the subglacial ice of four glaciers from the coastal Arctic environment of Kongsfjorden, Spitzbergen, including Debaryomyces hansenii and Pichia guillermondii, with counts reaching 10(4) CFU L(-1). Together with the basidiomycetes Cryptococcus liquefaciens and Rhodotorula mucilaginosa, these yeasts represent the stable core of the subglacial yeast communities. Other glacial ascomycetous species isolated included Candida parapsilosis and a putative new species that resembles Candida pseudorugosa. The archiascomycete Protomyces inouyei has seldom been detected anywhere in the world but was here recovered from ice in a glacier cave. The glacier meltwater contained only D. hansenii, whereas the seawater contained D. hansenii, Debaryomyces maramus, Pichia guilliermondii, what appears to represent a novel species resembling Candida galli and Metschnikowia bicuspidata. Only P. guilliermondii was isolated from sea ice, while snow/ice in the fjord tidal zone included C. parapsilosis, D. hansenii, P. guilliermondii and Metschnikowia zobellii. All of these isolated strains were characterized as psychrotolerant and xero/halotolerant, with the exception of P. inouyei.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00248-010-9794-3DOI Listing

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