Advertisement

Abstract

Information on responses of higher organisms to climate change is dominated by events in spring. Far less is known about autumnal events and virtually nothing about communities of microorganisms. We analyzed autumnal fruiting patterns of macrofungi over the past 56 years and found that average first fruiting date of 315 species is earlier, while last fruiting date is later. Fruiting of mycorrhizal species that associate with both deciduous and coniferous trees is delayed in deciduous, but not in coniferous, forests. Many species are now fruiting twice a year, indicating increased mycelial activity and possibly greater decay rates in ecosystems.
Get full access to this article

View all available purchase options and get full access to this article.

Already a Subscriber?

Supplementary Material

File (gange.som.pdf)

References

1
C. Parmesan, G. Yohe, Nature421, 37 (2003).
2
A. Menzel, P. Fabian, Nature397, 659 (1999).
3
D. Schröter et al., Science310, 1333 (2005); published online 27October 2005 (
4
Materials and methods are available as supporting material on Science Online.
5
T. L. Root et al., Nature421, 57 (2003).
6
A. H. Fitter, R. S. R. Fitter, Science296, 1689 (2002).
7
F. T. Last, J. Pelham, P. A. Mason, K. Ingleby, Nature280, 168 (1979).
8
We are extremely grateful to all those who collected fungi, especially I. Gange, the late J. Hindley, A. McKee, W. Freemantle, R. Nicholls, and R. Chapman.

Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Science
Volume 316 | Issue 5821
6 April 2007

Submission history

Received: 13 November 2006
Accepted: 8 January 2007
Published in print: 6 April 2007

Permissions

Request permissions for this article.

Authors

Affiliations

A. C. Gange*
School of Biological Sciences, Royal Holloway, University of London, Egham, Surrey TW20 0EX, UK.
E. G. Gange
Belvedere, Southampton Road, Whaddon, Salisbury, Wilts SP5 3DZ, UK.
T. H. Sparks
Natural Environment Research Council Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, Monks Wood, Cambridgeshire PE28 2LS, UK.
L. Boddy
Cardiff School of Biosciences, Cardiff University, Main Building, Museum Avenue, Cardiff CF10 3TL, UK.

Notes

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: [email protected]

Metrics & Citations

Metrics

Article Usage
Altmetrics

Citations

Export citation

Select the format you want to export the citation of this publication.

View Options

Get Access

Log in to view the full text

AAAS ID LOGIN

AAAS login provides access to Science for AAAS Members, and access to other journals in the Science family to users who have purchased individual subscriptions.

Log in via OpenAthens.
Log in via Shibboleth.
More options

Purchase digital access to this article

Download and print this article for your personal scholarly, research, and educational use.

Purchase this issue in print

Buy a single issue of Science for just $15 USD.

View options

PDF format

Download this article as a PDF file

Download PDF

Media

Figures

Multimedia

Tables

Share