Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2053773 Fungal Ecology 2008 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

Although spore dispersal is the predominant mode of spread in fungi, the functional ecology of offspring (spore) size and shape has received little attention. We investigated the relationship between spore size (volume) and shape and various life history parameters among 303 European polypore species. In an analysis of variance, basidiocarp size, nutritional mode (parasitic vs. saprotrophic) and host (conifer vs. deciduous) accounted for a significant part of the variation in spore size. Species producing large basidiocarps also produce large spores, parasites produce larger spores than saprotrophs, and species colonizing deciduous trees generally produce larger spores than those colonizing conifers. There was a correlation between spore size and shape, with larger spores being more spherical. The most important factors accounting for variation in spore shape were rot type (white rot vs. brown rot) and nutritional mode, with white rot species and parasites having more spherical spores compared to brown rotters and saprotrophs.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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