Novel species of fungi discovered on bat carcasses in China

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A subterranean expedition conducted by researchers at World Agroforestry (ICRAF) East and Central Asia Program; Centre for Mountain Futures; and Kunming Institute of Botany (KIB) at the Chinese Academy of Sciences highlights the importance of understanding the ways in which the relationships between fungal species and other cave organisms may have serious ecological and economic implications.

The expedition discovered four novel fungal species growing on bat carcasses in an underground limestone karst system in China, illustrating the pressing need for more scientific work in caves, according to the researchers’ article, Discovery of novel fungal species and pathogens on bat carcasses in a cave in Yunnan Province, China, published in the journal Emerging Microbes and Infections in June.

In total, seven species were found across two carcasses. Three out of the four new species belonged to Mortierella, a genus of well-known saprophytic fungi (meaning they obtain nutrients through dissolving organic matter). The fourth new species, Neocosmospora pallidimors, is particularly important to science, as the Neocosmospora genus is known to contain numerous aggressive pathogens that can infect mammals.

Fusarium incarnatum, Mucor hiemalis and Trichoderma harzanium comprised the final three species. The inclusion of T. harzanium caught the eye of corresponding author Peter Mortimer of KIB. He speculated that T. harzanium, possessing fungal pathogen-suppressing capabilities, might have contributed to protecting the bat and its community against other infectious fungi.

‘This may be a totally new ecology’, he said.

Greater research into the interactions of these fungal species may yield results with practical applications for the fungicide market. Accordingly, there is now renewed urgency to understand cave ecosystems as reservoirs of biological diversity and frontiers of scientific exploration.

The role of bats — hypogean organisms uniquely adapted to their environments — has long been understudied. However, one study estimated that were bats to disappear from North America, it would result in a staggering USD 3.7 billion in agricultural losses. This is because they provide critical ecosystem services, such as feeding on pests and pollinating fruit varieties.

As the same time, they can also act as vectors for mammal and plant pathogens. White-nose syndrome, a fungal growth found on hibernating bats, has claimed upwards of 6 million bat lives since 2006, with potentially devastating economic and ecological repercussions.

‘Bats can asymptomatically carry the fungus,’ said Samantha Karunarathna, lead author of the study, who is affiliated with ICRAF and KIB. ‘Though it has caused many deaths among bats in North America, it has not ravaged other global regions. It is possible for it to appear in other places.’

Accordingly, after white-nose syndrome first began receiving major attention, an upswell in research led to new understandings about the pathogen. This study’s authors said they hoped the discovery of the four new fungal species, particularly N. pallidimors, can also trigger a wave of research into fungal species capable of decimating natural populations as well as the societal and environmental importance of bats.

The UN Convention on Biological Diversity will be held in Kunming, China in 2021. How to best conserve ecosystem services and limit human encroachment on natural habitats will be at the forefront of many discussions. Given these new discoveries, policymakers cannot overlook the role of fungi in cave ecosystems as well as the potential for bats to act as vectors of pathogenic fungal strains for humans, animals and crops.

 

 

 

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