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Wildfires play a critical role in maintaining biodiversity and shaping ecosystem structure in fire-prone regions, and successional patterns involving numerous plant and fungal species in post-fire events have been elucidated. Evidence is growing to support the idea that some post-fire fungi can form endophytic/endolichenic relationships with plants and lichens. However, no direct observations of fire-associated fungal-moss interactions have been visualized to date. Therefore, physical interactions between a post-fire fungus, , and a moss, , were visually examined under laboratory conditions. Fungal appressoria were visualized on germinating spores and living protonemata within two weeks of inoculation in most growth chambers. Appressoria were pigmented, reddish gold to braun, and with a penetration peg. Pigmented, reddish gold to braun fungal hyphae were associated with living tissue, and numerous mature rhizoids contained fungal hyphae at six months. Inter-rhizoidal hyphae were pigmented and reddish gold to braun, but no structures were visualized on mature gametophyte leaf or stem tissues. Based on our visual evidence and previous work, we provide additional support for having multiple strategies in how it obtains nutrients from the environment, and provide the first visual documentation of these structures in vitro.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/life11060518 | DOI Listing |
J Ultrasound
August 2025
Department of Dermatology, Venereology and Dermatooncology, Semmelweis University, Budapest, 1085, Hungary.
Angiomas and blue nevi are common benign skin lesions with overlapping clinical appearances that can mimic malignancy, such as melanoma. This study evaluates the role of dermoscopy-assisted high-frequency ultrasound (DA-HFUS) in characterizing these lesions. Five cases (2 angiomas, 3 blue nevi) were examined using the Dermus SkinScanner, a handheld 33 MHz device with integrated optical guidance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Evol
August 2025
Section of Environmental Biology Faculty of Environmental Earth Science, Hokkaido University Sapporo Hokkaido Japan.
Whales of the superfamily Physeteroidea, which includes the genera and , exhibit a unique visual defense mechanism involving the release of dark reddish-brown feces (locally called "tsunabi-ink" in Japan) into the water to obscure themselves from predators and other threats. However, the mechanism underlying pigmentation remains unknown. Because physeteroids possess an enlarged distal colon that retains fecal material, a possible explanation is that symbiont microbial metabolism contributes to the feces pigmentation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFoods
July 2025
Department of Agricultural and Food Sciences (DISTAL), Alma Mater Studiorum-University of Bologna, Piazza Goidanich 60, 47521 Cesena, FC, Italy.
The colour evolution of malvidin-3--glucoside (Mv-3--glc) elicited by caffeic acid (CAF), (+)-catechin (CA), or syringic acid (SI) was spectrophotometrically monitored in model wine solution, modulating the malvidin-to-polyphenol molar ratio (1:1 to 1:20) and the pH (2.8-3.8).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Syst Evol Microbiol
July 2025
Department of Life Science, Dongguk University-Seoul, Goyang 10326, Republic of Korea.
Three Gram-negative, facultatively anaerobic, rod-shaped, non-motile and reddish-pigmented bacterial strains, designated GW2-5, WM1 and Tmos10, were isolated from distinct environments in the Republic of Korea. Phylogenetic analysis based on 16S rRNA gene sequences revealed that the three strains belonged to the genus . The type strain GW2-5ᵀ grew at temperatures of 10-35 °C (optimum: 25 °C), pH levels of 6.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Dis
July 2025
Central South University of Forestry and Technology, Changsha, Changsha, China, 410004;
Camellia oleifera, known as the tea-oil tree, is a multifunctional woody oil crop renowned as the "Oriental olive". During 2023-2024, in Jishou City (28°17'N, 109°29'E), Hunan Province, China, 100% of tea-oil tree plants and over 40% of the leaves on each plant exhibited typical anthracnose symptoms. Initially, infected areas displayed yellowish regions.
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