{"title":"The Myxobiota of the Łagiewnicki Forest in Łódź (Central Poland)","authors":"Agnieszka Maria Salamaga","doi":"10.5586/am.561","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\n Herein, the results of studies conducted in the Łagiewnicki Forest in the city of Łódź (central Poland) in 2010–2012 are presented. These were the first long-term observations into myxomycetes in the Łagiewnicki Forest and in central Poland. Investigations were conducted using the route method for the entire forest complex (2010–2012). Additionally, twelve logs were selected in the “Las Łagiewnicki” forest reserve for detailed observations in 2011–2012; these logs belonged to four tree species:\n Betula pendula\n Roth,\n Carpinus betulus\n L.,\n Quercus\n sp., and\n Picea abies\n (L.) H. Karst. In total, 1,561 specimens were collected and were classified into 96 taxa (91 species and five varieties). Three species (\n Diderma saundersii\n ,\n Oligonema flavidum\n , and\n Didymium eximium\n ) are new to the biota of Poland, while five (\n Arcyria stipata\n ,\n Hemitrichia calyculata\n ,\n Oligonema schweinitzii\n ,\n Physarum flavicomum\n , and\n Physarum robustum\n ) are included on the red list of rare myxomycetes in Poland.\n Stemonitopsis amoena\n is also classified as a rare species; to date, this species has been reported in one locality in Poland. The scale by Stephenson et al. was used to determine the frequency of occurrence of individual taxa; 55 taxa were classified as rare, nine as sporadic, 26 as common, and six as abundant taxa. Three ecological groups of slime molds were identified based on the type of substrate they colonized: lignicolous (54 taxa), foliicolous (seven taxa), and corticolous (two taxa). No preference for the substrate was noticed in a group of 33 taxa that occurred on different substrate types. The phenology of myxomycete occurrence was also analyzed; 49 taxa occurred throughout the entire vegetative season, while only single records of species that were found in specific months were noted. The biota collected in the “Las Łagiewnicki” forest reserve and that in a Łagiewnicki Forest segment outside it (of the same size and the same occurrence of plant communities as in the reserve) in 2011–2012 were also compared.","PeriodicalId":37880,"journal":{"name":"Acta Mycologica","volume":"1 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-12-17","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Acta Mycologica","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5586/am.561","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"Agricultural and Biological Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Herein, the results of studies conducted in the Łagiewnicki Forest in the city of Łódź (central Poland) in 2010–2012 are presented. These were the first long-term observations into myxomycetes in the Łagiewnicki Forest and in central Poland. Investigations were conducted using the route method for the entire forest complex (2010–2012). Additionally, twelve logs were selected in the “Las Łagiewnicki” forest reserve for detailed observations in 2011–2012; these logs belonged to four tree species:
Betula pendula
Roth,
Carpinus betulus
L.,
Quercus
sp., and
Picea abies
(L.) H. Karst. In total, 1,561 specimens were collected and were classified into 96 taxa (91 species and five varieties). Three species (
Diderma saundersii
,
Oligonema flavidum
, and
Didymium eximium
) are new to the biota of Poland, while five (
Arcyria stipata
,
Hemitrichia calyculata
,
Oligonema schweinitzii
,
Physarum flavicomum
, and
Physarum robustum
) are included on the red list of rare myxomycetes in Poland.
Stemonitopsis amoena
is also classified as a rare species; to date, this species has been reported in one locality in Poland. The scale by Stephenson et al. was used to determine the frequency of occurrence of individual taxa; 55 taxa were classified as rare, nine as sporadic, 26 as common, and six as abundant taxa. Three ecological groups of slime molds were identified based on the type of substrate they colonized: lignicolous (54 taxa), foliicolous (seven taxa), and corticolous (two taxa). No preference for the substrate was noticed in a group of 33 taxa that occurred on different substrate types. The phenology of myxomycete occurrence was also analyzed; 49 taxa occurred throughout the entire vegetative season, while only single records of species that were found in specific months were noted. The biota collected in the “Las Łagiewnicki” forest reserve and that in a Łagiewnicki Forest segment outside it (of the same size and the same occurrence of plant communities as in the reserve) in 2011–2012 were also compared.
Acta MycologicaAgricultural and Biological Sciences-Plant Science
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
3
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍:
Acta Mycologica is an international, peer-reviewed, open access journal that publishes original research articles as well as review articles and short communications in all areas of mycology, including fungus-like organisms (slime moulds, yeasts, lichens, oomycetes, etc.), with respect to various ecosystems. Specifically, the journal covers: ecology, taxonomy, conservation, and systematics of fungi, fungal physiology, biochemistry, molecular genetics, fungus–plant (pathogens, mycorrhizas, endophytes), fungus–animal, and fungus–microbe interactions applied aspects of mycology in forestry, agriculture, and biotechnology. Reviews of books related to mycology and in memoriam are also welcome.