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Article | Open Access

Impact of fire on the macrofungal diversity in scrub jungles of south-west India

Ammatanda A. GreeshmaKandikere R. Sridhar( )Mundamoole PavithraSudeep D. Ghate
Department of Biosciences, Mangalore University, Mangalagangotri, Mangalore 574 199, Karnataka, India
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Abstract

Fortnightly survey in control and fire-impacted regions of scrub jungle of south-west coast of India during south-west monsoon (50 m2 quadrats up to 10 weeks) yielded 34 and 25 species of macrofungi, respectively. The species as well as sporocarp richness were the highest during the fourth week, while the diversity attained the highest during the second week in control region. In fire-impacted region, the species and sporocarp richness and diversity peaked at sixth week. Seven species common to both regions were Chlorophyllum molybdites, Lepiota sp., Leucocoprinus birnbaumii, Marasmius sp. 3, Polyporus sp., Schizophyllum commune and Tetrapyrgos nigripes. The overall sporocarp richness was higher in fire-impacted than in control region. The Jaccard’s similarity between regions was 13.5%, while fortnights of regions ranged from 0% (10th week) to 11.7% (eighth week). Control region showed single-species dominance by Xylaria hypoxylon, while multispecies dominance by Cyathus striatus and Lentinus squarrosulus in fire-impacted region. Except for air temperature, nine abiotic factors significantly differed between control and fire-impacted regions. The Pearson correlation was positive between species richness and phosphorus content in fire-impacted region (r = 0.696), while sporocarp richness was negatively correlated with pH in control region (r = −0.640). Economically viable species were 12 and 10 without overlap in control and fire-impacted regions, respectively.

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Mycology
Pages 15-28
Cite this article:
Greeshma AA, Sridhar KR, Pavithra M, et al. Impact of fire on the macrofungal diversity in scrub jungles of south-west India. Mycology, 2016, 7(1): 15-28. https://doi.org/10.1080/21501203.2016.1147090

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Received: 21 July 2015
Accepted: 23 January 2016
Published: 19 February 2016
© 2016 The Author(s).

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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