Zbiorowiska grzybów w rozkładającym się drewnie dębu i sosny

Communities of fungi in decomposed wood of oak and pine

Autorzy

  • Hanna Kwaśna Uniwersytet Przyrodniczy w Poznaniu, Wydział Leśny, Katedra Fitopatologii Leśnej, ul. Wojska Polskiego 71c, 60−625 Poznań;
    Tel. +48 61 8487710, e-mail: hanna.kwasna@up.poznan.pl
  • Andrzej Mazur Uniwersytet Przyrodniczy w Poznaniu, Katedra Entomologii Leśnej, ul. Wojska Polskiego 71 c, 60-625 Poznań
  • Andrzej Łabędzki Uniwersytet Przyrodniczy w Poznaniu, Katedra Entomologii Leśnej, ul. Wojska Polskiego 71 c, 60-625 Poznań
  • Robert Kuźmiński Uniwersytet Przyrodniczy w Poznaniu, Katedra Entomologii Leśnej, ul. Wojska Polskiego 71 c, 60-625 Poznań
  • Piotr Łakomy Uniwersytet Przyrodniczy w Poznaniu, Katedra Fitopatologii Leśnej, ul. Wojska Polskiego 71 c, 60-625 Poznań;

Abstrakt

The abundance and diversity of wood decomposing fungi were investigated by isolating and cultivating filamentous fungi from wood and by detection of fruit bodies of ascomycetous and basidiomycetous fungi. The objective was to study the impact of forest management on fungi in 100-year-old oak and 87-year-old Scots pine forests in Northern Poland. Fungi were found on coarse woody debris of decayed stumps and fallen logs, boughs and branches in each of the three (managed and unmanaged) examined stands. In total, 226 species of Oomycota and fungi were recorded. Oak wood was colonized by one species of Oomycota and 141 species of fungi including Zygomycota (19 species), Ascomycota (103 species) and Basidiomycota (19 species). Scots pine wood was also colonized by one species of Oomycota and 138 species of fungi including Zygomycota (19 species), Ascomycota (90 species) and Basidiomycota (29 species). In the first, second and third stages of decomposition, the oak wood was colonized by 101, 89 and 56 species of fungi respectively and pine wood was colonized by 82, 103 and 47 species respectively. Eighty three of the observed species (37%) occurred on both types of wood, while the other species displayed nutritional preferences. A decrease in the number of species with advancing decay indicates the necessity for a continuous supply of dead wood to the forest ecosystem.
This supply would secure the continuity of fauna and flora and guarantee a stable forest development. The nutritional and ecological preferences of many fungal species furthermore indicate the necessity of supplying the forests with wood of different species.
In commercially managed forests the results obtained here will aid in: (i) the development of strategies for effective dead wood management in the context of forest productivity and future wood stock growth, as well as (ii) finding a compromise between forest management requirements and environmental protection.

DOI DOI: 10.1515/frp-2016-0028
Source Leśne Prace Badawcze, 2016, 77 (3): 261–275
Print ISSN 1732-9442
Online ISSN
2082-8926
Type of article
Original article
Original title
Zbiorowiska grzybów w rozkładającym się drewnie dębu i sosny
Publisher Instytut Badawczy Leśnictwa, Sękocin Stary, Poland
Date 2016, September

in Polish:

in English:

Translate »