Human Beach Use Affects Abundance and Identity of Fungi Present in Sand

2012 
Abstract Stevens, J.L.; Evans, G.E., and Aguirre, K.M., 2012. Human beach use affects abundance and identity of fungi present in sand. To determine whether abundance and diversity of fungal species differed among very low use, residential, and commercial beaches and whether human use had a measurable effect on sand fungi, samples were collected for two consecutive years from South Carolina beaches along a continuum of human use. For both years, more fungi (colony-forming units [CFUs] per gram dry weight sand) were isolated from high-use beach sand samples than low-use beach sand samples (analysis of variance, p < 0.05), but there was no evidence of accumulation of fungi over a tourist season or from year to year. In fact, fungal abundance was greatest for all three sites in May and July and significantly decreased in September. A positive correlation was found between census of beach-goers and fungal CFUs. Potential pathogens (fungi which grew at 37°C) were selected, and DNA-based sequence identifications...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    23
    References
    4
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []