We investigated, by field and laboratory experiments, the effects of aluminium lit an acid sti earn (pH 5.0) on the growth and sporulation of aquatic hyphomycete fungi which degrade organic litter. The stream water had monomeric aluminium (Al-m) concentrations of 9.1-13.4 mu M - fifty times higher than a nearby circumneutral stream. Alder leaves submersed in the stream accumulated Al, most of which was tightly bound. Growth rates of four species of aquatic hyphomycetes were altered by inclusion of Al-m in the culture medium. On a polypectate substrate, and on low-phosphate medium with glucose, growth rates increased significantly. On a low-nutrient substrate of homogenized alder leaves, growth rates were inhibited by aluminium. The pattern of mycelial growth was found to be different on a polypectate medium including Al-m, compared with a control without aluminium. There was a significant increase in hyphal radial growth and a decrease in the hyphal growth unit. The effect resembled the growth of a starved fungal colony. Treatment with Al-m, decreased pectinase production It the four fungal species tested. The capacity of these species to sporulate Mas reduced by flooding culture plates with Al-m solution. These deleterious metabolic effects were most severe in isolates taken from circumneutral streams and less marked, though significant, in species originating from acid streams. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science Ltd.