Salt excretion in leaves of some mangrove species may serve as an important defense against fungal attack, reducing the vulnerability of typically high-density, monospecific forest stands to severe disease pressure. In field surveys of a Caribbean mangrove forest in Panama, Avicennia germinans suffered much less damage from foliar diseases than did Laguncularia racemosa or Rhizophora mangle. Similarly, Avicennia leaves supported the least superficial fungal growth, endophytic colonization, and diversity, followed by Laguncularia and Rhizophora. Host specificity of leaf-colonizing fungi was greater than expected at random. We hypothesize that the different salt tolerance mechanisms in the three mangrove species may differentially regulate fungal colonization. The mangroves differ in their salt tolerance mechanisms such that Avicennia (which excretes salt through leaf glands) has the highest salinity of residual rain water on leaves, Laguncularia (which accumulates salt in the leaves) has the greatest bulk salt concentration, and Rhizophora (which excludes salt at the roots) has little salt associated with leaves. The high salt concentrations associated with leaves of Avicennia and Laguncularia, but not the low salinity of Rhizophora, were sufficient to inhibit the germination of many fungi associated with mangrove forests.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00442-002-0966-9DOI Listing

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