Reprint

Marine Fungus

Edited by
July 2022
246 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-4718-3 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-4717-6 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Marine Fungus that was published in

Biology & Life Sciences
Public Health & Healthcare
Summary

Most of the available studies on marine fungi are based on the isolation and identification of fungi from different surfaces (e.g., submerged wood, sediments, macrophytes), mostly in coastal benthic environments. However, recent evidence suggests that fungi are also present in the oceanic water column, most likely mainly associated to particles, with the genomic potential to significantly contribute to marine biogeochemical cycles. Still, we lack even basic information on the ecology of the oceanic mycobiome, precluding us from determining the ecological role of this enigmatic kingdom in our oceans. The aim of this book and Special Issue was to focus on the ecology of marine fungi. Topics include, fungal abundance, distribution, activity, and phylogenetic and/or functional diversity in coastal to open ocean environments, including seawater column and sediments, derived both from laboratory and field studies.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
marine fungi; oxygen minimum zone; nitrous oxide; diversity; 15N tracer; size-fractioned; eastern tropical North Pacific; metagenome; emergency disposal of raw of sewage; seaside air; bioaerosol; mold; yeast-like fungi; marine fungi; mycology; fungal diversity; Antarctica; bioprospecting; psychrophiles; cold-adapted enzymes; industrial applications; blue biotechnologies; mycobiome; marine sponge; marine fungi; Agelas; mesophotic; halophytes; marine fungi; marine mycology; salt marsh fungi; worldwide distribution; marine fungi; chloroform-methanol extraction; HPLC-UV; LC-MS/MS; ergosterol; pelagic fungal biomass; marine fungi; fluorescence in situ hybridisation; mycoplankton; fungal cultures; pelagic; fluorescence; marine fungi; novel lineages; phylogeny; genetic markers; antimicrobial; anti-cancer; comparative genomics; marine fungi; metabolites; whole genome sequencing; deep-sea sediments; fungal diversity; trophic conditions; Antarctica; Ross Sea; marine fungi; total extracellular enzymatic activity; kinetics; maximum velocity; half-saturation constant