Our study highlights that fungal biosorption capacity is highly dependent on the sampling area (roadside vs jungle) with roadside fungal strains showing significantly higher copper (Cu) biosorption capacities using living biomass compared to fungal strains originating from plants collected in virgin jungle (P < 0·05). It also highlights that different biosorption mechanisms (alive - metabolic dependent and dead biomass - metabolic independent) result in different amounts of Cu being removed from the solutions. The living biomass possessed a better biosorption capacity than the dead biomass (P < 0·05).
In July 2015, diseased leaves of black chokeberry (Aronia melanocarpa) were observed in Danyang and Gochang, Korea. The symptoms appeared as circular or irregular brown leaf spots, from which Alternaria tenuissima was isolated. The isolates were cultured on potato dextrose agar, and their morphological characteristics were observed under a light microscope. The colonies were whitish to ash colored. The pathogenicity test on healthy black chokeberry leaves produced circular brown spots, in line with the original symptoms. Molecular analyses of the ITS, GPD, RPB2, and TEF genes were conducted to confirm the identity of the pathogen. The phylogeny of the multi-gene sequences indicated that the causal agent was A. tenuissima. This study is the first report of A. tenuissima leaf spot on black chokeberry (A. melanocarpa).
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