@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref19787,
author = {Melissa Jane Day and Jocelyn C Hall and Randolph S Currah},
title = {Phialide arrangement and character evolution in the helotialean anamorph genera Cadophora and Phialocephala.},
year = {2011},
keywords = {character reconstruction, Phialocephala, Cadophora, phialides, rDNA ITS sequences},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycologia Aplicada International},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {The dematiaceous hyphomycete genera Cadophora and Phialocephala are anamorphs associated with mollisoid inoperculate discomycetes (Helotiales) and are delineated based on the complexity of the phialide arrangement, with members of Cadophora producing solitary phialides and species of Phialocephala producing complex heads of multiple phialides. A third, phylogenetically related taxon, Leptodontidium orchidicola, produces mostly indehiscent conidia that may represent non-functional phialides. Morphological characteristics of both sexual and asexual states of these and other fungi in a focal group of helotialean taxa were re-examined, in light of relationships shown by molecular phylogenetic analyses of rDNA ITS sequences, to determine the evolutionary significance of phialide arrangement. The focal species of Phialocephala formed a monophyletic clade while five of six species of Cadophora, including the type, were in a separate clade along with L. orchidicola. C. finlandica was placed in a third clade with species of Meliniomyces and Rhizoscyphus. We hypothesized that the ancestral state for species in Cadophora and Phialocephala is the production of sclerotium-like heads of multiple phialides, which has been retained in most species assignable to Phialocephala. A reduction to solitary phialides occurred in the lineage leading to the clade containing most of the Cadophora species. Two possible reductions to non-functional phialides were identified: one in the Meliniomyces-C. finlandica-Chloridium paucisporum clade and another in the L. orchidicola and Mollisia ?rhizophila?clade. A reversion to increased phialide complexity may have occurred in the clade containing C. finlandica and Ch. paucisporum. Our data and analyses also show a previously unrecognized relationship between teleomorph and anamorph morphology, in that Mollisia species with smaller asci would be expected to have Phialocephala states, while those with larger asci would be expected to have Cadophora states. Based on morphology and phylogenetic placement, L. orchidicola and C. hiberna are transferred to Cadophora and Phialocephala respectively. }
}
Citation for Study 11612

Citation title:
"Phialide arrangement and character evolution in the helotialean anamorph genera Cadophora and Phialocephala.".

Study name:
"Phialide arrangement and character evolution in the helotialean anamorph genera Cadophora and Phialocephala.".

This study is part of submission 11602
(Status: Published).
Citation
Day M.J., Hall J.C., & Currah R.S. 2011. Phialide arrangement and character evolution in the helotialean anamorph genera Cadophora and Phialocephala. Mycologia Aplicada International, .
Authors
-
Day M.J.
(submitter)
-
Hall J.C.
-
Currah R.S.
Abstract
The dematiaceous hyphomycete genera Cadophora and Phialocephala are anamorphs associated with mollisoid inoperculate discomycetes (Helotiales) and are delineated based on the complexity of the phialide arrangement, with members of Cadophora producing solitary phialides and species of Phialocephala producing complex heads of multiple phialides. A third, phylogenetically related taxon, Leptodontidium orchidicola, produces mostly indehiscent conidia that may represent non-functional phialides. Morphological characteristics of both sexual and asexual states of these and other fungi in a focal group of helotialean taxa were re-examined, in light of relationships shown by molecular phylogenetic analyses of rDNA ITS sequences, to determine the evolutionary significance of phialide arrangement. The focal species of Phialocephala formed a monophyletic clade while five of six species of Cadophora, including the type, were in a separate clade along with L. orchidicola. C. finlandica was placed in a third clade with species of Meliniomyces and Rhizoscyphus. We hypothesized that the ancestral state for species in Cadophora and Phialocephala is the production of sclerotium-like heads of multiple phialides, which has been retained in most species assignable to Phialocephala. A reduction to solitary phialides occurred in the lineage leading to the clade containing most of the Cadophora species. Two possible reductions to non-functional phialides were identified: one in the Meliniomyces-C. finlandica-Chloridium paucisporum clade and another in the L. orchidicola and Mollisia ?rhizophila?clade. A reversion to increased phialide complexity may have occurred in the clade containing C. finlandica and Ch. paucisporum. Our data and analyses also show a previously unrecognized relationship between teleomorph and anamorph morphology, in that Mollisia species with smaller asci would be expected to have Phialocephala states, while those with larger asci would be expected to have Cadophora states. Based on morphology and phylogenetic placement, L. orchidicola and C. hiberna are transferred to Cadophora and Phialocephala respectively.
Keywords
character reconstruction, Phialocephala, Cadophora, phialides, rDNA ITS sequences
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S11612
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- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref19787,
author = {Melissa Jane Day and Jocelyn C Hall and Randolph S Currah},
title = {Phialide arrangement and character evolution in the helotialean anamorph genera Cadophora and Phialocephala.},
year = {2011},
keywords = {character reconstruction, Phialocephala, Cadophora, phialides, rDNA ITS sequences},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycologia Aplicada International},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {The dematiaceous hyphomycete genera Cadophora and Phialocephala are anamorphs associated with mollisoid inoperculate discomycetes (Helotiales) and are delineated based on the complexity of the phialide arrangement, with members of Cadophora producing solitary phialides and species of Phialocephala producing complex heads of multiple phialides. A third, phylogenetically related taxon, Leptodontidium orchidicola, produces mostly indehiscent conidia that may represent non-functional phialides. Morphological characteristics of both sexual and asexual states of these and other fungi in a focal group of helotialean taxa were re-examined, in light of relationships shown by molecular phylogenetic analyses of rDNA ITS sequences, to determine the evolutionary significance of phialide arrangement. The focal species of Phialocephala formed a monophyletic clade while five of six species of Cadophora, including the type, were in a separate clade along with L. orchidicola. C. finlandica was placed in a third clade with species of Meliniomyces and Rhizoscyphus. We hypothesized that the ancestral state for species in Cadophora and Phialocephala is the production of sclerotium-like heads of multiple phialides, which has been retained in most species assignable to Phialocephala. A reduction to solitary phialides occurred in the lineage leading to the clade containing most of the Cadophora species. Two possible reductions to non-functional phialides were identified: one in the Meliniomyces-C. finlandica-Chloridium paucisporum clade and another in the L. orchidicola and Mollisia ?rhizophila?clade. A reversion to increased phialide complexity may have occurred in the clade containing C. finlandica and Ch. paucisporum. Our data and analyses also show a previously unrecognized relationship between teleomorph and anamorph morphology, in that Mollisia species with smaller asci would be expected to have Phialocephala states, while those with larger asci would be expected to have Cadophora states. Based on morphology and phylogenetic placement, L. orchidicola and C. hiberna are transferred to Cadophora and Phialocephala respectively. }
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 19787
AU - Day,Melissa Jane
AU - Hall,Jocelyn C
AU - Currah,Randolph S
T1 - Phialide arrangement and character evolution in the helotialean anamorph genera Cadophora and Phialocephala.
PY - 2011
KW - character reconstruction
KW - Phialocephala
KW - Cadophora
KW - phialides
KW - rDNA ITS sequences
UR - http://dx.doi.org/
N2 - The dematiaceous hyphomycete genera Cadophora and Phialocephala are anamorphs associated with mollisoid inoperculate discomycetes (Helotiales) and are delineated based on the complexity of the phialide arrangement, with members of Cadophora producing solitary phialides and species of Phialocephala producing complex heads of multiple phialides. A third, phylogenetically related taxon, Leptodontidium orchidicola, produces mostly indehiscent conidia that may represent non-functional phialides. Morphological characteristics of both sexual and asexual states of these and other fungi in a focal group of helotialean taxa were re-examined, in light of relationships shown by molecular phylogenetic analyses of rDNA ITS sequences, to determine the evolutionary significance of phialide arrangement. The focal species of Phialocephala formed a monophyletic clade while five of six species of Cadophora, including the type, were in a separate clade along with L. orchidicola. C. finlandica was placed in a third clade with species of Meliniomyces and Rhizoscyphus. We hypothesized that the ancestral state for species in Cadophora and Phialocephala is the production of sclerotium-like heads of multiple phialides, which has been retained in most species assignable to Phialocephala. A reduction to solitary phialides occurred in the lineage leading to the clade containing most of the Cadophora species. Two possible reductions to non-functional phialides were identified: one in the Meliniomyces-C. finlandica-Chloridium paucisporum clade and another in the L. orchidicola and Mollisia ?rhizophila?clade. A reversion to increased phialide complexity may have occurred in the clade containing C. finlandica and Ch. paucisporum. Our data and analyses also show a previously unrecognized relationship between teleomorph and anamorph morphology, in that Mollisia species with smaller asci would be expected to have Phialocephala states, while those with larger asci would be expected to have Cadophora states. Based on morphology and phylogenetic placement, L. orchidicola and C. hiberna are transferred to Cadophora and Phialocephala respectively.
L3 -
JF - Mycologia Aplicada International
VL -
IS -
ER -