More from spores: How they spread — Harvard Gazette (2024)

Long before geese started flying in chevron formation or cyclists learned the value of drafting, fungi discovered an aerodynamic way to reduce drag on their spores so as to spread them as high and as far as possible.

One fungus, the destructive Sclerotinia sclerotiorum, spews thousands of spores nearly simultaneously to form a plume that reduces drag to nearly zero and even creates a wind that carries many of the spores 20 times farther than a single spore could travel alone, according to a new study by mathematicians and biologists from Harvard University, the University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley), and Cornell University.

“In the Tour de France, riders form a peloton that can reduce air drag by 40 percent,” said Marcus Roper, co-lead author and a postdoctoral researcher in the Department of Mathematics at UC Berkeley and at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. “The ascospores of Sclerotinia do the peloton perfectly, reducing air drag to zero and sculpting a flow of air that carries them even farther.”

Agnese Seminara, a co-lead author as well as a postdoctoral researcher and theoretical physicist in Harvard’s School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, added: “I realized that the spores behaved much like cloud droplets. To follow their paths, I adapted algorithms I had developed to describe cloud formation.”

Presumably, the strategy helps the fungi get their spores off the ground into the foliage of their host plants, or into airstreams that can carry them to host plants, the scientists said.

Roper, Seminara, and colleagues report the findings in the early online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

“These findings could have implications for methods of controlling the spread of fungal pathogens,” said senior author Anne Pringle, associate professor of organismic and evolutionary biology at Harvard. “Sclerotinia alone costs U.S. farmers $1 billion annually, including costs of controlling the fungus, and crop losses. Research directed at understanding how to disrupt the cooperative ejection of spores may provide novel tools for the control of these fungal pathogens.”

Researchers in the field of bioballistics — the study of how plants, fungi, and animals accelerate seeds, spores, or even parts of their body to high speed — have found an amazing variety of techniques that overcome friction with the air, the main limitation for small spores and seeds.

“Understanding how Sclerotinia is discharging its spores and getting them onto the plants will eventually lead us to new ways of looking at plant architecture,” said co-author Helene Dillard, a plant pathologist who heads Cornell University’s Cooperative Extension program and is associate dean of Cornell’s College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.

Scientists have recognized for more than a century that many spore-producing fungi — the ascomycetes — release their spores in plumes that carry them long distances. More than 50 years ago, scientists noted that these spore plumes create a wind of their own, but the physics of the plumes was not understood, Roper said. In addition, little work has been done on how seeds or spores cooperate to improve dispersal to new environments.

With training in the mathematics and physics of fluid flow, Roper and Seminara decided to investigate. The work began when Roper was a researcher in Pringle’s laboratory at Harvard.

The current paper used high-speed video to clock the speed of spores ejected by Sclerotinia, finding that they are expelled at a speed of about 8.4 meters per second (19 miles per hour). However, because the spores are so small (10 microns long), air drag brings them to a stop in a mere 3 millimeters. When thousands of spores are ejected at the same time, however, some can travel more than 100 millimeters, or 4 inches.

These high-speed video images enabled Roper and Seminara to model spore plume movement precisely, with standard equations of hydrodynamics. They showed that the thousands of spores ejected at the same time quickly eliminate all drag and allow the spores to travel about a centimeter, by which time the wind generated by the spores captures and whisks them to a speed of 60 centimeters per second. Their upward motion is stopped only by gravity, Roper said.

The added range from “hydrodynamic cooperation” allows fungi on the ground to shoot their spores into flowers or plant wounds, where they can quickly spread throughout the plant and kill it.

Often called white mold, Sclerotinia rot, or wilt, the fungus attacks more than 400 species of plants, Dillard said, including beans, sunflowers, soybeans, canola, and peanuts, and can wipe out entire fields. In spring and summer, the fungus produces cups (apothecia) about one-half centimeter across that spew spores into the air to infect plants. The fungus produces overwintering seedlike bodies called sclerotia on the infected plant tissues.

“It grows across a cabbage head and produces these small sclerotia that look like mouse droppings,” Dillard said. “The sclerotia fall on the ground, and are then in position to initiate the infection process the following year.”

The researchers were also curious how fungi manage to eject their spores simultaneously. To investigate this phenomenon, they grew another mold, a coprophilic fungus from the genus Ascobolus, on horse dung and focused their high-speed video camera on the 2-millimeter, cup-shaped fruiting body containing tens of thousands of spore sacs (asci), each containing eight spores. They found that, while the spore sac that ejects first seems to be random, after the first one or two go off, a wave of ejection travels outward as successive rings of spore sacs rupture in sequence. Because this happens in one-tenth of a second, the ejection seems simultaneous.

“What looks like a plume is actually a series of sheets going off,” Roper said.

By tweaking their mathematical model to account for this finding, Roper and Seminara discovered that cooperative ejection in sheets is a highly effective method for shooting spores long distances. The scientists continue to investigate how spore ejection is initiated, and whether and how spores can cheat to make sure that they get ejected farther than their companions.

Other authors of the paper are Mahesh M. Bandi of Harvard and Ann Cobb of Cornell. The work was funded by a Miller Institute for Basic Research in Science Fellowship to Roper, by a Marie Curie Fellowship from the European Union Framework 7 to Seminara, and by Harvard University.

— Steve Bradt, Harvard Staff Writer, and Bob Sanders, UC Berkeley

More from spores: How they spread — Harvard Gazette (2024)

FAQs

More from spores: How they spread — Harvard Gazette? ›

They found that, while the spore sac that ejects first seems to be random, after the first one or two go off, a wave of ejection travels outward as successive rings of spore sacs rupture in sequence. Because this happens in one-tenth of a second, the ejection seems simultaneous.

How can spores be spread? ›

Fungi have adapted to the problem posed by the boundary layer by either shooting their spores through it, or evading it entirely by utilizing vectors (animals or water or wind) for dispersal. Once spores are caught by the wind they can be carried very long distances.

How do spores get transferred? ›

Dry spores and wet spores are puffed and splashed from the surface of their colonies by raindrops. Spores can be splashed over short distances by this mechanism or can be carried over longer distances by wind either as free spores or associated with water droplets.

What are 3 ways spores are dispersed? ›

Fungal spores and pollens can be dispersed in a number of ways: by animals and insects; by water; by wind or by rain. This paper concentrates on the effects of wind on the dispersal of spores and pollen grains and the effects of rain on spore dispersal.

How do spores multiply? ›

Under favourable conditions, the spore can develop into a new organism using mitotic division, producing a multicellular gametophyte, which eventually goes on to produce gametes. Two gametes fuse to form a zygote, which develops into a new sporophyte. This cycle is known as alternation of generations.

How are spores transmitted? ›

Spores are transmitted via the fecal-oral route and are very easily spread by health care workers. C. difficile is a toxin-producing extracellular pathogen. Typically, the treatment of a patient with antibiotics for an unrelated infection negatively affects the normal flora within the gut.

How do you stop spores from spreading? ›

Prevent Mold to Keep it from Spreading

It's recommended to keep your home or office below 60 percent humidity level, so spores don't have enough moisture to begin colonization.

How fast do spores spread? ›

The current paper used high-speed video to clock the speed of spores ejected by Sclerotinia, finding that they are expelled at a speed of about 8.4 meters per second (19 miles per hour). However, because the spores are so small (10 microns long), air drag brings them to a stop in a mere 3 millimeters.

What are the modes of transmission of spores? ›

Spores of the organisms are acquired by the following routes of infection: Ingestion. Inhalation. Direct contact with the conjunctiva.

How do mold spores spread? ›

Molds, like most fungi, break down plant and animal matter in the environment. They can grow almost anywhere there is moisture and organic material such as in soil, on foods and plants, and in people's homes. To reproduce, molds release spores, which can spread through air, water, or on animals.

Which is the most common form of spore dispersal? ›

Two of the most common ways that fungal spores are dispersed in a forest are by wind (via air currents) and by mammals (through scat); new research shows that these two methods complement each other. The fungi dispersed by each method differ in composition.

How are spores released? ›

Fungal spore release into air is either driven by an active mechanism when the energy is provided by the fungi, or by a passive mechanism when the energy is provided by external sources (like air currents or a physical force).

What can happen to spores after they are released? ›

We find that timing of spore release dictates how long spores remain in the atmosphere before returning to the ground: Spores released at night are likely to travel for hours while spores released during the day may linger for days. Drivers are stronger in lower, warmer latitudes.

What method kills spores? ›

A process called sterilization destroys spores and bacteria. It is done at high temperature and under high pressure.

Can spores be spread by rain? ›

Discharge of ascospores starts with the fall rains and continues through the following spring. Early research concluded that ascospores were dispersed in splash droplets from rain hitting on the cankers.

What are the disadvantages of spores? ›

These spores can be produced quickly and in large numbers to enable many individual fungi to develop. A disadvantage of these spores is that they generate offspring that are unlikely to be resistant to unfavourable conditions because they are all genetically identical.

Can spores be airborne? ›

Notably, spores of fungi are present in the air throughout the year in virtually every cubic meter of air collected. Many studies and reviews highlight their presence in outdoor, as well as indoor air (among them Mullins and Flannigan, 2011; Flannigan, 2011; Fradkin et al., 1987).

What are the sources of spores? ›

Spores form from certain types of bacterial cells when their survival is at stake. And bacteria are EVERYWHERE on Earth. In the soil, rocks and oceans. Bacteria also live in and on plants and animals, including humans.

How do spores infect humans? ›

Fungal spores can be inhaled or land on surfaces of the body, infecting only one area of the body, such as the skin or mouth, or multiple organs, including the lungs, eyes, and brain.

Top Articles
Historical Markers and War Memorials in Merced County, California
199 Lotus Ave, Smithfield, NC 27577 - MLS 10031181 - Coldwell Banker
My E Chart Elliot
Celebrity Extra
Teenbeautyfitness
Localfedex.com
Free VIN Decoder Online | Decode any VIN
Routing Number 041203824
Hallowed Sepulchre Instances & More
Needle Nose Peterbilt For Sale Craigslist
Amateur Lesbian Spanking
4156303136
Synq3 Reviews
Sports Clips Plant City
Dumb Money
Colts seventh rotation of thin secondary raises concerns on roster evaluation
4156303136
Pac Man Deviantart
Bfg Straap Dead Photo Graphic
Procore Championship 2024 - PGA TOUR Golf Leaderboard | ESPN
Straight Talk Phones With 7 Inch Screen
Sonic Fan Games Hq
Craigslist In Visalia California
Zoe Mintz Adam Duritz
Curver wasmanden kopen? | Lage prijs
Dover Nh Power Outage
About My Father Showtimes Near Copper Creek 9
Thick Ebony Trans
How to Make Ghee - How We Flourish
City Of Durham Recycling Schedule
13301 South Orange Blossom Trail
Unreasonable Zen Riddle Crossword
Lindy Kendra Scott Obituary
Pioneer Library Overdrive
5 Star Rated Nail Salons Near Me
Uky Linkblue Login
Shiftwizard Login Johnston
B.k. Miller Chitterlings
CARLY Thank You Notes
Discover Wisconsin Season 16
Colorado Parks And Wildlife Reissue List
Andrew Lee Torres
Acts 16 Nkjv
Saline Inmate Roster
Random Animal Hybrid Generator Wheel
How to Connect Jabra Earbuds to an iPhone | Decortweaks
Big Brother 23: Wiki, Vote, Cast, Release Date, Contestants, Winner, Elimination
Lightfoot 247
Michaelangelo's Monkey Junction
What Does the Death Card Mean in Tarot?
Naughty Natt Farting
Ark Silica Pearls Gfi
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Barbera Armstrong

Last Updated:

Views: 6091

Rating: 4.9 / 5 (79 voted)

Reviews: 94% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Barbera Armstrong

Birthday: 1992-09-12

Address: Suite 993 99852 Daugherty Causeway, Ritchiehaven, VT 49630

Phone: +5026838435397

Job: National Engineer

Hobby: Listening to music, Board games, Photography, Ice skating, LARPing, Kite flying, Rugby

Introduction: My name is Barbera Armstrong, I am a lovely, delightful, cooperative, funny, enchanting, vivacious, tender person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.