The effects of u.v.-B radiation (280–315 nm) on the fungi
occurring on the lammas leaves of pedunculate oak
(Quercus robur L.) were examined using saplings that were
exposed at an outdoor facility to supplemental levels of
u.v.-B radiation under treatment arrays of cellulose diacetate-filtered
fluorescent lamps, which also produce u.v.-A
radiation (315–400 nm). Saplings were also exposed to u.v.-A radiation
alone under control arrays of polyester-filtered lamps, and to ambient
levels of solar radiation under arrays of unenergized lamps. The u.v.-B treatment
corresponded to a 30% elevation above the ambient level of erythemally-weighted
u.v.-B radiation. The fungi
were examined weekly over a 4-month-period in summer and autumn 1995 using
two techniques, the spore fall
and leaf impression methods, which differentiated between those fungi
occurring on the upper (adaxial) and lower
(abaxial) surfaces of the leaves. The abundances of Aureobasidium
pullulans (De Bary) Arnaud and Sporobolomyces
roseus Kluy. et van Niel, two leaf yeasts which had
adaxial[ratio ]abaxial ratios of <1 under ambient levels of u.v.-B
radiation, were negatively correlated with increasing ambient levels of
u.v.-B radiation and were significantly
reduced on adaxial leaf surfaces by supplemental levels of u.v.-B.
There were few effects of supplemental u.v.-B
radiation on the abundances of these yeasts on abaxial leaf surfaces.
The abundances of the dematiaceous
hyphomycetes, Cladosporium spp. and Epicoccum nigrum
Link., species with adaxial[ratio ]abaxial ratios of [ges ]1 under
ambient levels of u.v.-B radiation, were not correlated with ambient
levels of u.v.-B radiation, nor were they
usually affected on either leaf surface by supplemental u.v.-B radiation.
Alternaria spp. and Microdochium nivale
(Fr.) Samuels & Hallet showed consistent responses on adaxial
leaf surfaces to u.v.-A radiation applied under
control and treatment arrays. Our results suggest that current levels
of shortwave radiation already influence the
distribution of fungi on leaf surfaces and that future increases in
u.v.-B radiation will directly affect the abundances
of specific phylloplane fungi.