The Australian Wine Research Institute, Glen Osmond, PO Box 197, Adelaide, SA, 5064, Australia.
Department of Wine and Food Science, University of Adelaide, Glen Osmond, Adelaide, SA, 5064, Australia.
Sci Rep. 2020 Sep 7;10(1):14716. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-71663-x.
Over the course of human history and in most societies, fermented beverages have had a unique economic and cultural importance. Before the arrival of the first Europeans in Australia, Aboriginal people reportedly produced several fermented drinks including mangaitch from flowering cones of Banksia and way-a-linah from Eucalyptus tree sap. In the case of more familiar fermented beverages, numerous microorganisms, including fungi, yeast and bacteria, present on the surface of fruits and grains are responsible for the conversion of the sugars in these materials into ethanol. Here we describe native microbial communities associated with the spontaneous fermentation of sap from the cider gum Eucalyptus gunnii, a Eucalyptus tree native to the remote Central Plateau of Tasmania. Amplicon-based phylotyping showed numerous microbial species in cider gum samples, with fungal species differing greatly to those associated with winemaking. Phylotyping also revealed several fungal sequences which do not match known fungal genomes suggesting novel yeast species. These findings highlight the vast microbial diversity associated with the Australian Eucalyptus gunnii and the native alcoholic beverage way-a-linah.
在人类历史和大多数社会中,发酵饮料都具有独特的经济和文化重要性。在第一批欧洲人到达澳大利亚之前,据报道,原住民制作了几种发酵饮料,包括来自 Banksia 开花球果的 mangaitch 和来自桉树树液的 way-a-linah。在更常见的发酵饮料的情况下,包括真菌、酵母和细菌在内的许多微生物存在于水果和谷物的表面,负责将这些材料中的糖转化为乙醇。在这里,我们描述了与苹果桉树 sap 的自发发酵相关的本地微生物群落,苹果桉树是一种原产于塔斯马尼亚偏远中央高原的桉树。基于扩增子的系统发育分析显示,苹果桉树样本中有许多微生物物种,真菌物种与酿酒相关的真菌物种有很大的不同。系统发育分析还揭示了几个与已知真菌基因组不匹配的真菌序列,这表明存在新的酵母物种。这些发现强调了与澳大利亚苹果桉树和本地酒精饮料 way-a-linah 相关的巨大微生物多样性。