@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref28312,
author = {Steve Leavitt},
title = {A phylogenetic perspective into mycobiont diversity in cobblestone lichens (Acarospora, Ascomycota), including a new species from the Intermountain West (USA)},
year = {2018},
keywords = {Acarospora nevadensis, A. strigata, A. tintica sp. nov., Great Basin, integrative taxonomy },
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {The Bryologist},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {A broad range of morphological variation is known to occur within the lichen-forming fungal genus Acarospora (Acarosporaceae, Ascomycota). In this study, we investigated the relationships of a number of interesting Acarospora collections from western North America using morphological, chemical, and molecular sequence data. Our results revealed patterns of apparent convergence of some morphologies traditionally considered a single taxon, coupled with a striking range of morphological disparity within other lineages. Based on these results, a species of lichen-forming fungi, Acarospora tintica sp. nov., is formally described as a new to science, occurring on hard limestone substrates in the Great Basin of western North America. This species belongs to a well-supported clade comprised of morphologically diverse species-level lineages. Furthermore, a number of additional candidate species are recognized and merit additional research before formal taxonomic recognition. This study highlights the importance of implementing an integrative taxonomic approach, incorporating a broad range of data, including molecular sequence data, for diagnosing evolutionarily independent species-level lineages in lichen-forming fungi.}
}
Citation for Study 22510
Citation title:
"A phylogenetic perspective into mycobiont diversity in cobblestone lichens (Acarospora, Ascomycota), including a new species from the Intermountain West (USA)".
Study name:
"A phylogenetic perspective into mycobiont diversity in cobblestone lichens (Acarospora, Ascomycota), including a new species from the Intermountain West (USA)".
This study is part of submission 22510
(Status: Published).
Citation
Leavitt S. 2018. A phylogenetic perspective into mycobiont diversity in cobblestone lichens (Acarospora, Ascomycota), including a new species from the Intermountain West (USA). The Bryologist, .
Authors
Abstract
A broad range of morphological variation is known to occur within the lichen-forming fungal genus Acarospora (Acarosporaceae, Ascomycota). In this study, we investigated the relationships of a number of interesting Acarospora collections from western North America using morphological, chemical, and molecular sequence data. Our results revealed patterns of apparent convergence of some morphologies traditionally considered a single taxon, coupled with a striking range of morphological disparity within other lineages. Based on these results, a species of lichen-forming fungi, Acarospora tintica sp. nov., is formally described as a new to science, occurring on hard limestone substrates in the Great Basin of western North America. This species belongs to a well-supported clade comprised of morphologically diverse species-level lineages. Furthermore, a number of additional candidate species are recognized and merit additional research before formal taxonomic recognition. This study highlights the importance of implementing an integrative taxonomic approach, incorporating a broad range of data, including molecular sequence data, for diagnosing evolutionarily independent species-level lineages in lichen-forming fungi.
Keywords
Acarospora nevadensis, A. strigata, A. tintica sp. nov., Great Basin, integrative taxonomy
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S22510
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- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref28312,
author = {Steve Leavitt},
title = {A phylogenetic perspective into mycobiont diversity in cobblestone lichens (Acarospora, Ascomycota), including a new species from the Intermountain West (USA)},
year = {2018},
keywords = {Acarospora nevadensis, A. strigata, A. tintica sp. nov., Great Basin, integrative taxonomy },
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {The Bryologist},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {A broad range of morphological variation is known to occur within the lichen-forming fungal genus Acarospora (Acarosporaceae, Ascomycota). In this study, we investigated the relationships of a number of interesting Acarospora collections from western North America using morphological, chemical, and molecular sequence data. Our results revealed patterns of apparent convergence of some morphologies traditionally considered a single taxon, coupled with a striking range of morphological disparity within other lineages. Based on these results, a species of lichen-forming fungi, Acarospora tintica sp. nov., is formally described as a new to science, occurring on hard limestone substrates in the Great Basin of western North America. This species belongs to a well-supported clade comprised of morphologically diverse species-level lineages. Furthermore, a number of additional candidate species are recognized and merit additional research before formal taxonomic recognition. This study highlights the importance of implementing an integrative taxonomic approach, incorporating a broad range of data, including molecular sequence data, for diagnosing evolutionarily independent species-level lineages in lichen-forming fungi.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 28312
AU - Leavitt,Steve
T1 - A phylogenetic perspective into mycobiont diversity in cobblestone lichens (Acarospora, Ascomycota), including a new species from the Intermountain West (USA)
PY - 2018
KW - Acarospora nevadensis
KW - A. strigata
KW - A. tintica sp. nov.
KW - Great Basin
KW - integrative taxonomy
UR - http://dx.doi.org/
N2 - A broad range of morphological variation is known to occur within the lichen-forming fungal genus Acarospora (Acarosporaceae, Ascomycota). In this study, we investigated the relationships of a number of interesting Acarospora collections from western North America using morphological, chemical, and molecular sequence data. Our results revealed patterns of apparent convergence of some morphologies traditionally considered a single taxon, coupled with a striking range of morphological disparity within other lineages. Based on these results, a species of lichen-forming fungi, Acarospora tintica sp. nov., is formally described as a new to science, occurring on hard limestone substrates in the Great Basin of western North America. This species belongs to a well-supported clade comprised of morphologically diverse species-level lineages. Furthermore, a number of additional candidate species are recognized and merit additional research before formal taxonomic recognition. This study highlights the importance of implementing an integrative taxonomic approach, incorporating a broad range of data, including molecular sequence data, for diagnosing evolutionarily independent species-level lineages in lichen-forming fungi.
L3 -
JF - The Bryologist
VL -
IS -
ER -