Microfungal succession on living leaves of Populus tremuloides

Abstract
The microfungal succession on the surfaces and interior of attached aspen poplar leaves was followed throughout a growing season at three heights in the tree canopy using a number of isolation and observational techniques. The fungal succession on and within the leaves was in general similar to that reported for other angiosperm leaves. The outer sheathing bud scales were colonized by a limited range of fungi, but the enclosed leaves were free from fungal colonization. The adaxial surfaces of young newly expanded leaves were sparsely colonized by fungi. As the leaves matured they were extensively colonized by the common phylloplane fungi (pink and white yeasts, Aureobasidium pullulans, Cladosporium spp., Alternaria alternata, and Epicoccum purpurascens) especially on the adaxial surface. At senescence both leaf surfaces had extensive hyphal growth on them and a greater internal colonization by phylloplane fungi had occurred. Common phylloplane fungi were less frequently isolated from freshly fallen leaves than from the senescent leaves, but a sterile dark species was frequently isolated from within them. The height of the leaves in the canopy was shown to influence the mycoflora of the aspen poplar leaves, with certain species (the yeasts, Aureobasidium pullulans, Cladosporium spp., and Botrytis cinerea) showing changes in their frequency with sampling height.

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