Identification by DNA barcode of culturable, airborne, environmental fungi isolated from the Shepherd University campus

Authors

  • Jessica Kellison
  • Elizabeth Rea
  • Laura Robertson Shepherd University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.55632/pwvas.v95i2.954

Keywords:

fungi, DNA barcode

Abstract

Diverse fungi are abundant within soil communities and commonly found in association with many plant and tree species.  This study investigates the culturable, airborne fungi found in the outside environment of the Shepherd University campus.  Viable fungi were captured in two different locations on two different culture media, using the open plate method.  Captured fungi were isolated and putative species identified by sequencing the internal transcribed spacer region (ITS) of the ribosomal RNA (rRNA) gene cassette.  Due to insufficient sequence variability within the ITS region, most isolates could not be identified to species.  15 fungal isolates were identified to order, family, genus, or species complex: Dothideales (1 isolate), Didymellaceae (4 isolates), Aureobasidium (1 isolate), Cladosporium (1 isolate), Mucor (3 isolates), Nigrospora (1 isolate), Pestalotiopsis (2 isolates), and Penicillium (2 isolates), including Penicillium thiersii (1 isolate).  These isolates are similar to those isolated from inside a teaching laboratory on the Shepherd University campus; Didymellaceae, Cladosporiaceae, and Penicillium fungi were isolated multiple times within the teaching laboratory.  This research was supported by the Shepherd University Biology Department, a student fellowship from NASA-WVSGC (J. Kellison), and a research enhancement award from NASA-WVSGC (L. Robertson).

Author Biography

Laura Robertson, Shepherd University

Biology Department

Associate Professor

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Published

2023-04-18

How to Cite

Kellison, J., Rea, E., & Robertson, L. (2023). Identification by DNA barcode of culturable, airborne, environmental fungi isolated from the Shepherd University campus. Proceedings of the West Virginia Academy of Science, 95(2). https://doi.org/10.55632/pwvas.v95i2.954

Issue

Section

Meeting Abstracts-Poster