@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref16604,
author = {Patrick Brandon Matheny and Else C Vellinga and Neale L. Bougher and Oluna Ceska and P. A. Moreau and Maria Alice Neves and Joseph F. Ammirati},
title = {Taxonomy of displaced species of Tubaria},
year = {2007},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycologia},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {A taxonomic treatment of vinaceous and reddish species of Tubaria (Agaricales) is presented based on morphology and nucleotide sequences. Accessions from western North America, Europe, Central America, the Caribbean, and Australia are compared. Phylogenetic analysis of the 25S rRNA gene and internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions demonstrates that Tubaria is not monophyletic. However, the autonomy of six brown-spored, saprotrophic speciesNaucoria vinicolor, Pholiota serrulata, Phaeomarasmius confragosus, Pholiota punicea, Tubaria rufofulva, and T. bispora sp. nov.is affirmed. All six species form a strongly supported monophyletic group that we label section Confragosae in the genus Tubaria. This section is related to T. dispersa, T. albostipitata, and numerous representatives of the T. furfuracea complex. Tubaria minima is related to other lineages of dark-spored Agaricales. Taxonomic descriptions, illustrations, and a key to confirmed species of section Confragosae are provided. Four new combinations are proposed and one new species, T. bispora, is described as new from Costa Rica and Martinique.}
}
Citation for Study 1778
Citation title:
"Taxonomy of displaced species of Tubaria".
This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S1750
(Status: Published).
Citation
Matheny P.B., Vellinga E., Bougher N., Ceska O., Moreau P., Neves M., & Ammirati J. 2007. Taxonomy of displaced species of Tubaria. Mycologia, null.
Authors
-
Matheny P.B.
865-974-8896
-
Vellinga E.
-
Bougher N.
-
Ceska O.
-
Moreau P.
-
Neves M.
554899199673
-
Ammirati J.
Abstract
A taxonomic treatment of vinaceous and reddish species of Tubaria (Agaricales) is presented based on morphology and nucleotide sequences. Accessions from western North America, Europe, Central America, the Caribbean, and Australia are compared. Phylogenetic analysis of the 25S rRNA gene and internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions demonstrates that Tubaria is not monophyletic. However, the autonomy of six brown-spored, saprotrophic speciesNaucoria vinicolor, Pholiota serrulata, Phaeomarasmius confragosus, Pholiota punicea, Tubaria rufofulva, and T. bispora sp. nov.is affirmed. All six species form a strongly supported monophyletic group that we label section Confragosae in the genus Tubaria. This section is related to T. dispersa, T. albostipitata, and numerous representatives of the T. furfuracea complex. Tubaria minima is related to other lineages of dark-spored Agaricales. Taxonomic descriptions, illustrations, and a key to confirmed species of section Confragosae are provided. Four new combinations are proposed and one new species, T. bispora, is described as new from Costa Rica and Martinique.
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S1778
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref16604,
author = {Patrick Brandon Matheny and Else C Vellinga and Neale L. Bougher and Oluna Ceska and P. A. Moreau and Maria Alice Neves and Joseph F. Ammirati},
title = {Taxonomy of displaced species of Tubaria},
year = {2007},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Mycologia},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {A taxonomic treatment of vinaceous and reddish species of Tubaria (Agaricales) is presented based on morphology and nucleotide sequences. Accessions from western North America, Europe, Central America, the Caribbean, and Australia are compared. Phylogenetic analysis of the 25S rRNA gene and internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions demonstrates that Tubaria is not monophyletic. However, the autonomy of six brown-spored, saprotrophic speciesNaucoria vinicolor, Pholiota serrulata, Phaeomarasmius confragosus, Pholiota punicea, Tubaria rufofulva, and T. bispora sp. nov.is affirmed. All six species form a strongly supported monophyletic group that we label section Confragosae in the genus Tubaria. This section is related to T. dispersa, T. albostipitata, and numerous representatives of the T. furfuracea complex. Tubaria minima is related to other lineages of dark-spored Agaricales. Taxonomic descriptions, illustrations, and a key to confirmed species of section Confragosae are provided. Four new combinations are proposed and one new species, T. bispora, is described as new from Costa Rica and Martinique.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 16604
AU - Matheny,Patrick Brandon
AU - Vellinga,Else C
AU - Bougher,Neale L.
AU - Ceska,Oluna
AU - Moreau,P. A.
AU - Neves,Maria Alice
AU - Ammirati,Joseph F.
T1 - Taxonomy of displaced species of Tubaria
PY - 2007
KW -
UR -
N2 - A taxonomic treatment of vinaceous and reddish species of Tubaria (Agaricales) is presented based on morphology and nucleotide sequences. Accessions from western North America, Europe, Central America, the Caribbean, and Australia are compared. Phylogenetic analysis of the 25S rRNA gene and internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions demonstrates that Tubaria is not monophyletic. However, the autonomy of six brown-spored, saprotrophic speciesNaucoria vinicolor, Pholiota serrulata, Phaeomarasmius confragosus, Pholiota punicea, Tubaria rufofulva, and T. bispora sp. nov.is affirmed. All six species form a strongly supported monophyletic group that we label section Confragosae in the genus Tubaria. This section is related to T. dispersa, T. albostipitata, and numerous representatives of the T. furfuracea complex. Tubaria minima is related to other lineages of dark-spored Agaricales. Taxonomic descriptions, illustrations, and a key to confirmed species of section Confragosae are provided. Four new combinations are proposed and one new species, T. bispora, is described as new from Costa Rica and Martinique.
L3 -
JF - Mycologia
VL -
IS -
ER -