Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2053774 Fungal Ecology 2008 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Nutrient assimilation by two mycotoxigenic spoilage fungi (Penicillium verrucosum, Aspergillus ochraceus) and four other food spoilage fungi (Penicillium coryolophilum, P. roqueforti, Cladosporium herbarum, Eurotium repens), of 32 key C-sources in wheat bread were examined in relation to abiotic factors of water availability, pH, temperature and the presence/absence of a preservative, potassium sorbate. These studies were to understand the relative potential co-existence, nutritional partitioning and niche exclusion in bread-based matrices. The niche size decreased significantly with decrease in water availability, temperature and pH. There were also significant interactive effects between pH and the preservative. The data were used to determine the niche overlap indices (NOI) of competing fungi relative to the two ochratoxigenic species. These showed that P. verrucosum and A. ochraceus were nutritionally dominant over the other species. The NOIs showed that potential co-existence and/or niche exclusion was influenced by environmental factors. Overall, the addition of the preservative increased the interspecific competition for nutrients. The level of co-existence and nutritional partitioning was significantly modified by abiotic factors, and this can help explain the dominance of specific fungal species in food matrices. This approach could also be useful for understanding competitiveness and dominance of fungal species in other ecosystems, especially in relation to impacts of abiotic and biotic factors.

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