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Mycologia, 95(1), 2003, pp. 11-18.
© 2003 by The Mycological Society of America

Microhabitat distribution of protostelids in a Tropical Wet Forest in Costa Rica


Donna L. Moore 1

     Biology/Chemistry Division, Corning Community College, Corning, New York 14830

Steven L. Stephenson

     Department of Biology, Fairmont State College, Fairmont, West Virginia 26554

A microhabitat study of protostelids was carried out in a Tropical Wet Forest at the La Selva Biological Station in Costa Rica. Nine species were recorded from sterile wheat straws placed out and then re-collected over a period of six weeks from two different litter microhabitats in an area of primary forest. All nine species were present on straws placed in the aerial litter microhabitat, but only six species were present on straws placed in the forest floor litter microhabitat. Total colonies, percent of straws colonized, and mean number of species per straw increased significantly over time. One species (Schizoplasmodiopsis pseudoendospora) typical of temperate litter was the overwhelming dominant on the forest floor litter, while Echinostelium bisporum, a species rare in temperate litter microhabitats, was the single most abundant species in the aerial litter microhabitat. Both of these species had significantly increased frequencies over time. Two species abundant in temperate aerial litter microhabitats and one species abundant in temperate forest floor litter were rare at La Selva. Our data conform to those obtained in an earlier study carried out in tropical forests in the mountains of Puerto Rico and provide additional support towards developing a model of microhabitat distribution of protostelids in terrestrial ecosystems.

Key words: ecology, mycetozoans, protoctists, slime molds, tropics




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D. M. Powers and S. L. Stephenson
Protostelids from tropical forests, woodlands and deserts in Australia.
Mycologia, March 1, 2006; 98(2): 218 - 222.
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