Seasonal fluctuations of the fungusflora in mull and mor of an oak forest

On agar plates more colonies and species of fungi developed from oak leaves from calcareous mull (loose mixed litter and mineral matter) than from those from mor (usually compact litter layer abruptly distinct from underlying soil; without free calcium). Fungal plate counts, mycelial growth and concentration from soil under calcareous mull were lower and plate counts of bacteria and actinomycetes higher than those from mor; those from acid mull were usually intermediate. The characteristics of the fungal flora seemed influenced by water and calcium content through the chemical composition of the vegetation and its litter, and secondly by the physical factors of soil, the saprophagous soil fauna and the non-fungal microflora. The numbers of micro-organisms and mycelial growth in the mineral soil were influenced by temperature, moisture and added fresh litter. Maximum mycelium concentrations in oak soils were in autumn or winter, but not in pine soils.Mycelium was decomposed almost equally fast in mull and mor. The mull had 4-10 times as much chitin-decomposing and mycolytic micro-organisms than mor; mor had more mycophagous oribatid mites, consuming individually 3 times as much in summer than in winter. Fruiting bodies of toadstools were most frequent (partly dependent on soil moisture content) about 2.5 months before mycelium reached maximum concentration. The toadstools were mostly humus and litter fungi in mull, and mycorrhizal fungi in acid mull and mor. Litter fungi occurred in all types.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Witkamp, M.
Other Authors: Oort, A.J.P.
Format: Doctoral thesis biblioteca
Language:English
Published: G.W. van der Wiel
Subjects:forest litter, forestry, litter (plant), microbial flora, microorganisms, soil flora, soil science, trees, bodemflora, bodemkunde, bomen, bosbouw, bosstrooisel, micro-organismen, microbiële flora, strooisel,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/seasonal-fluctuations-of-the-fungusflora-in-mull-and-mor-of-an-oa
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-5255802024-10-16 Witkamp, M. Oort, A.J.P. Doctoral thesis Seasonal fluctuations of the fungusflora in mull and mor of an oak forest 1960 On agar plates more colonies and species of fungi developed from oak leaves from calcareous mull (loose mixed litter and mineral matter) than from those from mor (usually compact litter layer abruptly distinct from underlying soil; without free calcium). Fungal plate counts, mycelial growth and concentration from soil under calcareous mull were lower and plate counts of bacteria and actinomycetes higher than those from mor; those from acid mull were usually intermediate. The characteristics of the fungal flora seemed influenced by water and calcium content through the chemical composition of the vegetation and its litter, and secondly by the physical factors of soil, the saprophagous soil fauna and the non-fungal microflora. The numbers of micro-organisms and mycelial growth in the mineral soil were influenced by temperature, moisture and added fresh litter. Maximum mycelium concentrations in oak soils were in autumn or winter, but not in pine soils.Mycelium was decomposed almost equally fast in mull and mor. The mull had 4-10 times as much chitin-decomposing and mycolytic micro-organisms than mor; mor had more mycophagous oribatid mites, consuming individually 3 times as much in summer than in winter. Fruiting bodies of toadstools were most frequent (partly dependent on soil moisture content) about 2.5 months before mycelium reached maximum concentration. The toadstools were mostly humus and litter fungi in mull, and mycorrhizal fungi in acid mull and mor. Litter fungi occurred in all types. en G.W. van der Wiel application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/seasonal-fluctuations-of-the-fungusflora-in-mull-and-mor-of-an-oa https://edepot.wur.nl/183360 forest litter forestry litter (plant) microbial flora microorganisms soil flora soil science trees bodemflora bodemkunde bomen bosbouw bosstrooisel micro-organismen microbiële flora strooisel Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic forest litter
forestry
litter (plant)
microbial flora
microorganisms
soil flora
soil science
trees
bodemflora
bodemkunde
bomen
bosbouw
bosstrooisel
micro-organismen
microbiële flora
strooisel
forest litter
forestry
litter (plant)
microbial flora
microorganisms
soil flora
soil science
trees
bodemflora
bodemkunde
bomen
bosbouw
bosstrooisel
micro-organismen
microbiële flora
strooisel
spellingShingle forest litter
forestry
litter (plant)
microbial flora
microorganisms
soil flora
soil science
trees
bodemflora
bodemkunde
bomen
bosbouw
bosstrooisel
micro-organismen
microbiële flora
strooisel
forest litter
forestry
litter (plant)
microbial flora
microorganisms
soil flora
soil science
trees
bodemflora
bodemkunde
bomen
bosbouw
bosstrooisel
micro-organismen
microbiële flora
strooisel
Witkamp, M.
Seasonal fluctuations of the fungusflora in mull and mor of an oak forest
description On agar plates more colonies and species of fungi developed from oak leaves from calcareous mull (loose mixed litter and mineral matter) than from those from mor (usually compact litter layer abruptly distinct from underlying soil; without free calcium). Fungal plate counts, mycelial growth and concentration from soil under calcareous mull were lower and plate counts of bacteria and actinomycetes higher than those from mor; those from acid mull were usually intermediate. The characteristics of the fungal flora seemed influenced by water and calcium content through the chemical composition of the vegetation and its litter, and secondly by the physical factors of soil, the saprophagous soil fauna and the non-fungal microflora. The numbers of micro-organisms and mycelial growth in the mineral soil were influenced by temperature, moisture and added fresh litter. Maximum mycelium concentrations in oak soils were in autumn or winter, but not in pine soils.Mycelium was decomposed almost equally fast in mull and mor. The mull had 4-10 times as much chitin-decomposing and mycolytic micro-organisms than mor; mor had more mycophagous oribatid mites, consuming individually 3 times as much in summer than in winter. Fruiting bodies of toadstools were most frequent (partly dependent on soil moisture content) about 2.5 months before mycelium reached maximum concentration. The toadstools were mostly humus and litter fungi in mull, and mycorrhizal fungi in acid mull and mor. Litter fungi occurred in all types.
author2 Oort, A.J.P.
author_facet Oort, A.J.P.
Witkamp, M.
format Doctoral thesis
topic_facet forest litter
forestry
litter (plant)
microbial flora
microorganisms
soil flora
soil science
trees
bodemflora
bodemkunde
bomen
bosbouw
bosstrooisel
micro-organismen
microbiële flora
strooisel
author Witkamp, M.
author_sort Witkamp, M.
title Seasonal fluctuations of the fungusflora in mull and mor of an oak forest
title_short Seasonal fluctuations of the fungusflora in mull and mor of an oak forest
title_full Seasonal fluctuations of the fungusflora in mull and mor of an oak forest
title_fullStr Seasonal fluctuations of the fungusflora in mull and mor of an oak forest
title_full_unstemmed Seasonal fluctuations of the fungusflora in mull and mor of an oak forest
title_sort seasonal fluctuations of the fungusflora in mull and mor of an oak forest
publisher G.W. van der Wiel
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/seasonal-fluctuations-of-the-fungusflora-in-mull-and-mor-of-an-oa
work_keys_str_mv AT witkampm seasonalfluctuationsofthefungusflorainmullandmorofanoakforest
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