@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref19071,
author = {Anders Nordin and Sanja Savić and Leif Tibell},
title = {Phylogeny and taxonomy of Aspicilia and Megasporaceae},
year = {2010},
keywords = {Ascomycota, Aspilidea, Bayesian, Circinaria, Lecanoromycetes, Lichen- forming fungi, Lobothallia, mtSSU, nuLSU, Pertusariales, Sagedia},
doi = {10.3852/09-266},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycologia},
volume = {102},
number = {6},
pages = {1339--1349 },
abstract = {Phylogenetic analyses based on nuLSU and mtSSU indicate that Megasporaceae is monophyletic. Aspicilia species were distributed among three main well supported groups and one group with low support that included the type species; a division of the family into five genera is proposed. The old names Circinaria and Sagedia are reintroduced for groups not including A. cinerea, the type of Aspicilia. The monotypic Megaspora is closely related to Circinaria, while Lobothallia is the sister group of the other Megasporaceae genera. Aspicilia recedens and A. farinosa are transferred to Lobothallia. Species of the ?Sphaerothallia group? are nested in Circinaria. Aspilidea is not a member of Megasporaceae but seems to be more closely related to Ochrolechiaceae. Aspilidea myrinii is neotypified, and lectotypes are designated for Aspicilia gibbosa, A. leprosescens and Lecanora gibbosula.}
}
Citation for Study 10678
Citation title:
"Phylogeny and taxonomy of Aspicilia and Megasporaceae".
Study name:
"Phylogeny and taxonomy of Aspicilia and Megasporaceae".
This study is part of submission 10668
(Status: Published).
Citation
Nordin A., Savić S., & Tibell L. 2010. Phylogeny and taxonomy of Aspicilia and Megasporaceae. Mycologia, 102(6): 1339-1349 .
Authors
-
Nordin A.
-
Savić S.
-
Tibell L.
Abstract
Phylogenetic analyses based on nuLSU and mtSSU indicate that Megasporaceae is monophyletic. Aspicilia species were distributed among three main well supported groups and one group with low support that included the type species; a division of the family into five genera is proposed. The old names Circinaria and Sagedia are reintroduced for groups not including A. cinerea, the type of Aspicilia. The monotypic Megaspora is closely related to Circinaria, while Lobothallia is the sister group of the other Megasporaceae genera. Aspicilia recedens and A. farinosa are transferred to Lobothallia. Species of the ?Sphaerothallia group? are nested in Circinaria. Aspilidea is not a member of Megasporaceae but seems to be more closely related to Ochrolechiaceae. Aspilidea myrinii is neotypified, and lectotypes are designated for Aspicilia gibbosa, A. leprosescens and Lecanora gibbosula.
Keywords
Ascomycota, Aspilidea, Bayesian, Circinaria, Lecanoromycetes, Lichen- forming fungi, Lobothallia, mtSSU, nuLSU, Pertusariales, Sagedia
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S10678
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref19071,
author = {Anders Nordin and Sanja Savić and Leif Tibell},
title = {Phylogeny and taxonomy of Aspicilia and Megasporaceae},
year = {2010},
keywords = {Ascomycota, Aspilidea, Bayesian, Circinaria, Lecanoromycetes, Lichen- forming fungi, Lobothallia, mtSSU, nuLSU, Pertusariales, Sagedia},
doi = {10.3852/09-266},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycologia},
volume = {102},
number = {6},
pages = {1339--1349 },
abstract = {Phylogenetic analyses based on nuLSU and mtSSU indicate that Megasporaceae is monophyletic. Aspicilia species were distributed among three main well supported groups and one group with low support that included the type species; a division of the family into five genera is proposed. The old names Circinaria and Sagedia are reintroduced for groups not including A. cinerea, the type of Aspicilia. The monotypic Megaspora is closely related to Circinaria, while Lobothallia is the sister group of the other Megasporaceae genera. Aspicilia recedens and A. farinosa are transferred to Lobothallia. Species of the ?Sphaerothallia group? are nested in Circinaria. Aspilidea is not a member of Megasporaceae but seems to be more closely related to Ochrolechiaceae. Aspilidea myrinii is neotypified, and lectotypes are designated for Aspicilia gibbosa, A. leprosescens and Lecanora gibbosula.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 19071
AU - Nordin,Anders
AU - Savić,Sanja
AU - Tibell,Leif
T1 - Phylogeny and taxonomy of Aspicilia and Megasporaceae
PY - 2010
KW - Ascomycota
KW - Aspilidea
KW - Bayesian
KW - Circinaria
KW - Lecanoromycetes
KW - Lichen- forming fungi
KW - Lobothallia
KW - mtSSU
KW - nuLSU
KW - Pertusariales
KW - Sagedia
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.3852/09-266
N2 - Phylogenetic analyses based on nuLSU and mtSSU indicate that Megasporaceae is monophyletic. Aspicilia species were distributed among three main well supported groups and one group with low support that included the type species; a division of the family into five genera is proposed. The old names Circinaria and Sagedia are reintroduced for groups not including A. cinerea, the type of Aspicilia. The monotypic Megaspora is closely related to Circinaria, while Lobothallia is the sister group of the other Megasporaceae genera. Aspicilia recedens and A. farinosa are transferred to Lobothallia. Species of the ?Sphaerothallia group? are nested in Circinaria. Aspilidea is not a member of Megasporaceae but seems to be more closely related to Ochrolechiaceae. Aspilidea myrinii is neotypified, and lectotypes are designated for Aspicilia gibbosa, A. leprosescens and Lecanora gibbosula.
L3 - 10.3852/09-266
JF - Mycologia
VL - 102
IS - 6
ER -