Living in the dark: bat caves as hotspots of fungal diversity
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Bat caves are very special roosts that harbour thousands of bats of one or more species.
Such sites may hold an incredible “dark fungal diversity” which is still underestimated. We
explored the culturable fungal richness in the air, on bats, and in the guano in a bat cave in
Brazil’s Caatinga dry forest. Fungal abundance was 683 colony-forming units (CFU) in the
guano, 673 CFU in the air, and 105 CFU on the bats. Based on morphological and phyloge netic analysis of ITS, LSU, and TUB2 sequences, fungal isolates of 59 taxa belonging to 37
genera in the phyla Ascomycota (28 genera, including Aspergillus, Penicillium, Cladospor ium, and Talaromyces), Basidiomycota (eight genera, including Rhodotorula and Schizo phyllum), and Mucoromycota (only Rhizopus) were identified. The fungal richness in the air
was 23 taxa (especially Aspergillus taxa), mainly found at 15 m and 45 m from the cave
entrance; on the bodies of bats it was 36 taxa (mainly Aspergillus taxa), especially on their
wing membranes (21 taxa, nine of which were exclusively found in this microhabitat); and in
guano 10 fungal taxa (especially Aspergillus and Penicillium) were found. The fungal rich ness associated with guano (fresh and non-fresh) was similar from bats with different eating
habits (insectivorous, frugivorous, and haematophagous). Sampling effort was not sufficient
to reveal the total fungal taxa richness estimated. Eight (21.6%) of the 37 genera and 17
(53.1%) of the 32 identified fungal species are reported for the first time in caves. Our results
highlight bat caves in Brazil as hotspots of fungal diversity, emphasizing the need to protect
such special roosts.
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CUNHA, Aline O. B. et al. Living in the dark: bat caves as hotspots of fungal diversity. Plos One, San Francisco, v. 15, n. 12, e0243494, 2020. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0243494. Disponível em: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7717564/. Acesso em: 27 jun. 2025.