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Recent progress in marine mycological research in different countries, and prospects for future developments worldwide

Authors :
Pang, Ka-Lai
Jones, E. B. Gareth
Abdel-Wahab, Mohamed A.
Adams, Sarah J.
Alves, Artur
Azevedo, Egídia
Bahkali, Ali H.
Barata, Margarida
Burgaud, Gaëtan
Caeiro, Maria Filomena
Calabon, Mark S.
Devadatha, Bandarupalli
Dupont, Joëlle
Fryar, Sally C.
González, Maria C.
Jin, Jing
Mehiri, Mohamed
Meslet-Cladière, Laurence
Prado, Soizic
Rämä, Teppo
Reich, Marlis
Roullier, Catherine
Sarma, Vemuri Venkateswara
Tibell, Leif
Tibell, Sanja
Velez, Patricia
Walker, Allison K.
Pang, Ka-Lai
Jones, E. B. Gareth
Abdel-Wahab, Mohamed A.
Adams, Sarah J.
Alves, Artur
Azevedo, Egídia
Bahkali, Ali H.
Barata, Margarida
Burgaud, Gaëtan
Caeiro, Maria Filomena
Calabon, Mark S.
Devadatha, Bandarupalli
Dupont, Joëlle
Fryar, Sally C.
González, Maria C.
Jin, Jing
Mehiri, Mohamed
Meslet-Cladière, Laurence
Prado, Soizic
Rämä, Teppo
Reich, Marlis
Roullier, Catherine
Sarma, Vemuri Venkateswara
Tibell, Leif
Tibell, Sanja
Velez, Patricia
Walker, Allison K.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Early research on marine fungi was mostly descriptive, with an emphasis on their diversity and taxonomy, especially of those collected at rocky shores on seaweeds and driftwood. Subsequently, further substrata (e.g. salt marsh grasses, marine animals, seagrasses, sea foam, seawater, sediment) and habitats (coral reefs, deep-sea, hydrothermal vents, mangroves, sandy beaches, salt marshes) were explored for marine fungi. In parallel, research areas have broadened from micro-morphology to ultrastructure, ecophysiology, molecular phylogenetics, biogeography, biodeterioration, biodegradation, bioprospecting, genomics, proteomics, transcriptomics and metabolomics. Although marine fungi only constitute a small fraction of the global mycota, new species of marine fungi continue to be described from new hosts/substrata of unexplored locations/habitats, and novel bioactive metabolites have been discovered in the last two decades, warranting a greater collaborative research effort. Marine fungi of Africa, the Americas and Australasia are under-explored, while marine Chytridiomycota and allied taxa, fungi associated with marine animals, the functional roles of fungi in the sea, and the impacts of climate change on marine fungi are some of the topics needing more attention. In this article, currently active marine mycologists from different countries have written on the history and current state of marine fungal research in individual countries highlighting their strength in the subject, and this represents a first step towards a collaborative inter- and transdisciplinary research strategy.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1428024294
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1515.bot-2023-0015