Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 24 OF 177

Main Title Contribution of Fungi to Biodegradation of 'Spartina' and Other Brackish Marshland Vegetation.
Author Meyers., Samuel P. ;
CORP Author Louisiana State Univ., Baton Rouge. Dept. of Food Science.;National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Rockville, Md. Office of Sea Grant.;Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, D.C.
Year Published 1972
Report Number NOAA-2-35231; EPA-18080-GDJ; NOAA-75041801;
Stock Number COM-75-10535/3
Additional Subjects Biodeterioration ; Grasses ; Fungi ; Swamps ; Microorganisms ; Aquatic plants ; Detritus ; Ecology ; Louisiana ; Reprints ; Sea Grant program ; Spartina alterniflora ; Microbial degradation ; Cordgrass ; Salt marshes ; Ecosystems
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Status
NTIS  COM-75-10535/3 Some EPA libraries have a fiche copy filed under the call number shown. 07/26/2022
Collation 20p
Abstract
Transformation of marsh grass, Spartina alterniflora, to detritus is an initial energy transfer step in the coastal Louisiana estuarine ecosystem. Spartina is systematically attacked by a selective mycota throughout its development and decomposition. Fungi include, among others, species of Fusarium and Cephalosporium as well as representatives of the marine taxa Lulworthia and Leptosphaeria. Molds colonizing external plant surfaces differ from those isolated within the culm. Fungal attack is correlated with seasonal development and subsequent decomposition of the plant. A large yeast biomass, notably sporogenous taxa Pichia spartinae and Kluyveromyces drosophilarum, is prevalent in the oxidized portions of the Spartina rhizosphere and within the peripheral tissue and intercellular spaces of the culm. These species, with stron B-glucosidase activity, reach maximal populations during dieback of Spartina. A mutualistic yeast/mold association in turnover of plant substrates is suggested.